THE BIGGEST EVENT IN MARVEL HISTORY CONTINUES!
• It's an all-out monster brawl on the streets of Manhattan as LEVIATHONS, GOLIATHONS and MARVEL HEROES clash!
• KID KAIJU's powers are put to the test, as ELSA BLOODSTONE and MOON GIRL back him up...
• ...little does anyone know that their true enemy is on her way - and is more than ready for a fight!
• Brought to life by the sensational Salvador Larroca (STAR WARS, DARTH VADER), this action-packed chapter is sure to make your pulse beat faster.
Rated T+
The setup for the final issue hits some slow points among some amazing monster clobbering scenes. Enjoyable, but not the strongest issue of the series. Read Full Review
Monsters Unleashed really finds its feet again in this issue with a solid balance of action, humour and spectacle that promises an exciting final chapter. Read Full Review
This series has the ability to revert me back to my younger days where kaiju ruled. Add them battling Marvel's best and I am in comic heaven. I only hope when the series is over the monsters find a permanent place in the Marvel U. Read Full Review
Monsters Unleashed #4 is the unabashed action frenzy your inner 12 year old will love. It's the kind of comic you buy knowing full well good art and big action is all that matters. You can't get books like this everyday so I say let your inner 12 year old out! Read Full Review
It seems like no matter what happens in Monsters Unleashed, it just can't rise above the initial idea of Marvel's superheroes fighting a bunch of giant monsters. If mindless action is all you want out of a comic, then you would still be out of luck. Most of the time, Monsters Unleashed #4 reads like a clip show that cuts away too quickly to truly get invested in what's happening here. Read Full Review
Better pacing, more hero involvement and a villain reveal.
So many monsters. So...meh. This is all-action, and it's all-boring.
Half of Marvel's heroes protect/cheerlead Kid Kaiju while the other half punch monsters. This event has a nice premise, but the main title has barely any more narrative backbone than Marvel's 90s swimsuit specials. Salvador Larroca's art is great but his talents are spread too thin; every panel is a completely separate monster fight. Random heroes shouting out the names of random Kirby monsters does not equal a thrilling global catastrophe story.