• Doreen Green (A.K.A. the super hero Squirrel Girl) and her friend Nancy Whitehead (an unrelated civilian) have had a great idea: Let's get some friends together and play an escape room! Escape rooms are those real-life games where you get locked in a room and have an hour to escape before you die!
• In the game, I mean. It's not like if you die in the game you die in real life! Hah hah.
• They gather KOI BOI, CHIPMUNK HUNK, BRAIN DRAIN and, as a special guest...their good friend KRAVEN THE HUNTER.
• BUT WHEN THEY ENTER THE ROOM IT TURNS OUT THAT IF YOU DIE IN THE GAME YOU more
UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #32 is a comic full of fun times with good friends! Ryan North gives us a better look at Doreen Green. Derek Charm and Rico Renzi create a fun and simplistic tone for the issue. This comic is a great addition to the series! Read Full Review
Inviting Kraven into an escape room game produces a nice full-cast adventure - eventually. New artist Derek Charm lands not with a bang but a smooth upward curve, taking the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl we know and love and enhancing it in welcome ways without changing its core style. Though the road to the main plot meanders a little, the entire journey is funny and the cliffhanger is full of promise. Read Full Review
We will miss you, Erika, but, if this issue is any indication, Squirrel Girl is in the right hands. Paws. Whatever. Read Full Review
If you're not sold on Squirrel Girl, this won't change your mind, but if you just want to have some fun and smile you really can't go wrong. Read Full Review
Unbeatable Squirrel Girl welcomes a new artist with a really fun issue, which features a uniquely Squirrel Girl approach to crime-fighting. Read Full Review
Doreen and Nancy have a brainstorm: Kraven needs non-super-powered activities to keep him on the straight and narrow. So that's how Kraven ends up running an escape room with Doreen and friends. It all turns deadly, because comics. It's a solid adventure and the debut of a new artist goes pretty well, but there are a few weak points. The visual portrayal of action, particularly in the issue's double spread, is not so hot. The first act is charming, but it takes a long time to "organically" produce the story's premise. Overall this is tons of fun, though.