• Nomad stands his ground; the teachings of Steve Rogers endure.
• With the world crashing down on top of him, Ian Rogers struggles to get home.
• Who is Poison and why is she willing to help Nomad?
Rated T+
This book is a strong lesson in taking what you're given and putting your all into it. Read Full Review
So much of this boils down to the big problem that this series has no way of embedding its ideas into an actually compelling plot, characters, or world. Hail Hydra is a story that wants to be all about legacy and parents and genes and choices but all those big complicated ideas are just dumped on the reader in relentless panel after panel while the characters and plot are left as these horribly uninteresting vestigial limbs. The messages may be interesting but they aren't worth engaging with if there's no story or characters to get invested in, Hail Hydra is just someone's personal philosophy blog post with more steps. Read Full Review
Wow what a story. It has everything. Comedy, Drama and Action!!! Nomad has one final plan for Zola and its a dozy. The story can be a little too melo-dramatic at times and a bit wordy but what Zola isn't wordy and melo-dramatic? It's a solid read. The art can be a little uneven at points but overall Boschi is doing a solid job. I really can't wait to see how this ends. :)
There were some nice moments this issue where Ian remembers Steve’s teachings, and the fight with his doppelgänger was cool, but other than that not much happened