THE WAR FOR THE FUTURE IS NOW!
BECAUSE WE'RE IN THE FUTURE!
Jamie Madrox - the X-Man you tell people is your favorite to seem cool - is trapped and his allies are dropping like flies! With the enemy closing in, Jamie has time to make one last desperate move... But he'll need Forge's help to evade a familiar new villain that threatens the future, the present and the past of the Marvel Universe!
Rated T+
A wonderful addition to the mutant titles that is funny and heartwarming while telling a very engaging story. Read Full Review
Matthew Rosenberg's creative humor, witty dialogue, and funny situational comedy drive the issue through the maniacal destruction of the evil Emperor Jamie Madrox Prime. Sure, some of the timey-whimey time-travel pieces are a bit confusing but Rosenberg does a fantastic job masking them with action scenes, and over the top, jaw-dropping revelations. Read Full Review
Rosenberg has managed to keep the reader on edge with this series and this issue especially by crafting moments that are a complete surprise to the reader and injecting those moments with humor that works. Read Full Review
MULTIPLE MAN #3 shares many of the same flaws its predecessor maintained. However, its more direct focus on Jamie's character development in addition to a shocking end make for a better issue. Read Full Review
"Multiple Man" #3 is filled with non-stop action and laughs but after the first two issues, we're left waiting for more. Read Full Review
This issue may be a touch overly indulgent, but it's still a fun read. Read Full Review
The time travel shenanigans of Multiple Man finally start to make sense, making for the strongest issue yet in the mini-series. Read Full Review
Man! M. R. Is killing it with this series! can't wait to read Uncanny X-Men !
It's like Rosnberg write words on a dice, throws it and pick each pages dialogue from it. Randomly awesome.
"Literally none of this makes any sense to me but I am fascinated."
All of Jamie's time-travel shenanigans come to naught and a lot of violence puts our protagonist face-to-face with his evil dictatorial dupe. Either this plot is starting to make sense or I'm coming down with Stockholm syndrome. Absurd Madrox-on-Madrox violence and a palace stuffed with "I conquered the Marvel universe" trophies are fertile subject matter for the art, which I found more impressive than in the previous issues. I'm still not convinced we're seeing anything meaningful - for either the character or the Mighty Marvel Status Quo - but this episode was definitely more enjoyable.
Poor writing but also a lot of fun in the end.
Way to much time travel and future and alternative reality stuff