THE INUMANS FACE THE WRATH OF THEIR CREATORS!
The Royal Family has spent months tracking down Primagen, the element that birthed Terrigen and could save the Inhuman race from its slow extinction. But to get it, they confronted the Progenitors - beings older than the Earth itself. They stole fire from the gods. And the gods are angry. The fate of planet Earth once again sits in Black Bolt and Medusa's hands. The Progenitors are here to end their experiment once and for all - and our world with it. Who will be able to stand...on Judgment Day?
Rated T+
Inhumans: Judgment Day #1 is the ending that we all hoped for. Read Full Review
Inhumans: Judgment Day #1 is a stellar start to this story. The stage is set, the players are presented, and the conflict is epic. The characters get their moments to show what all this means to them, and the resulting tale is compelling. I highly recommend this one. Give it a read. Read Full Review
INHUMANS: JUDGMENT DAY #1 takes Medusa on a climatic journey to the astral plane where she saves humanity and regains her own inhumanity. Read Full Review
Ewing does a solid job providing just enough context for the events of other recent Inhumans series to make Inhumans: Judgment Day #1 somewhat new-reader friendly, though a refresher look at the stellar Black Bolt wouldn't hurt. This judgment comes easy, as this is a beautiful and emotional book worth checking out even if you haven't been following the overall Inhumans arc as of late. Read Full Review
If you are at all interested in seeing the end of a status quo for the Inhumans make sure to pick up this epilogue to Royals. Read Full Review
This one-shot felt like the end of the last few years' worth of Inhumans stories. The former royal couple can't simply resume their relationship, but "forward" seems a great note to leave them on. Read Full Review
Now this is the ending that Royals deserved. Fantastic wrap up story by Ewing highlighting how much our crew went through. You got your happy ending now .....well almost. How he managed Maximus, Medusa and Black Bolt voices deserves credit.
But ultimately the story is only bolstered by the art team of Libranda/Villarubia and DelMundo. Each delivered it in their own layers of the story and they complemented each other well. The DelMundo phase was just on another level of surreal which fit the tone of those pages well.
Anyway Floob!
Solid book. Great art, used well to separate the narration threads. Felt like the Inhumans of old, proud, a bit different, bound by tradition and duty and most importantly, powerful.
A last-ditch psychic gambit allows the Inhumans to send the Progenitors packing, and Medusa gets her hair back, hooray! This issue has a resonant core of outstanding character work as Medusa and Black Bolt reunite on the Astral Plane. It's wrapped in infuriating cheese and untapped potential, though. The Medusa & Black Bolt scenes are very sweet stuff. They're great on their own, but they do NOT draw enough water to fully redeem all the time and imagination wasted in the Royals series. The art echoes the script: Kevin Libranda's reality scenes are the dreary packing material safeguarding the luscious psychic core illustrated by Mike del Mundo.