Epilogue. The Fallout Of The Forever And Doom Storylines. A New Direction For The Future Foundation And Marvel’s First Family.
Steve Epting and Nick Dragotta do a terrific job showcasing the different members of the large and flavorful cast by using varied layouts and paneling. Everyone gets some spotlight, even those adorable Moloid children. They also offer up some impressive visuals, including the self-repairing Baxter Building, the aforementioned bit in space that creates tremendous scale and depth, and the spine-tingling end scene. But more than any of those, it is the glaring looks on little Valeria's face that enhance Hickman's writing and make the issue work. Read Full Review
This is a Fantastic book. As the months pass, I continue to wonder whether or not FF could keep up with its sibling F4. Surprisingly, not only has it kept up, but I would say that may pages from FF are better than F4. Even with Hickman's reign coming to an end, I hope they stick with the "one author for both books" mentality. I adds a level of cohesiveness that is not possible with a disjointed creative team. And while the art could stand to be more consistent from arc to arc and series to series, it is not as important as the underlying stories being told. Nevertheless, I continue to be pleasantly surprised and always look forward to the upcoming issues for both these series. Read Full Review
You might think "FF" is a nice companion piece for readers looking for more Fantastic Four action from Jonathan Hickman, but this issue proves that it has the capability to stand all on its own. A nice interlude between bigscreen adventures that also openly welcomes readers into the fantastic worlds these imaginauts traverse, "FF" is a book with big ideas and fun adventures. Read Full Review
A comfy, ho-hum issue, nothing much to see here until BAM….smashing you in the face with awesomeness in its last few pages. Read Full Review
I love Nick Dragotta's art.