• Spider-Gwen is on Battleworld and face-to-face with Norman Osborn.
• This can't end well.
• But what's going on with the rest of the Web-Warriors?
Rated T
Spider-Verse #2 is a pretty good comic. Despite the few problems with the art, the story keeps up with main event series in a way that we don't need to see them say Doom instead of God to get the characters are in Battleworld. The way the characters interact with each other is interesting to the point that I actually want to see more of them after Secret Wars is done with. If you're on the fence with the Secret Wars tie ins, you could do far worse than this one. Check out Spider-Verse. Read Full Review
Worth a buy for all Spider-fans and certainly worth a look for those on the fence looking to jump in. Read Full Review
This book may not have many direct ties to the recent big crossover, but it maintains the same wacky team-up appeal. That said, it wold be nice to have a clearer sense of the book's overarching conflict, rather than simply seeing these heroes pitted against one Spider-Man rogue after another. Read Full Review
Spider-Verse #2 slows things down a bit and suffers for it. Though the central mystery and characterization are still really gripping, and will easily entice me back for part three, this issue, on its own, is not a must buy. Weighed down by a mishandled fight scene and art that works for certain components of the series far better than others, this chapter will come down to personal preference. A return to a standard price point, a sense of individual identity amidst the chaos of "Secret Wars", and refreshingly fun and engaging character work keep Spider-Verse #2 in the running, but it primarily serves to gather our heroes and connect issue #1 to next month's installment. A fine issue, but likely to be the least memorable of a strong miniseries. Read Full Review
While a slight improvement on the first issue, Spider-Verse #2 still does little more than exist to take money from readers. Araujo's drawings do little to sell a script written by Mike Costa that fails to inspire. Read Full Review