Khonshu VS. Khonshu! Fist of Khonshu fights Fist of Khonshu as the new Moon Knight brings the fight to the Midnight Mission and Hunter's Moon - but what could drive brothers to battle? And with the Mission a battleground, what of those who seek aid?
The book leaves plenty of questions, but right now the ride itself is so thrilling that I really don't mind waiting a while longer for those answers. Read Full Review
Vengeance of the Moon Knight #2 is a stunning sophomore issue, extending the tone and structure of the debut to its natural continuation. MacKays script balances tone and plot to walk the fine line of engaging mystery while Cappuccios art illustrates the oscillating emotion and action of the issue. Layered with Rosenbergs subversive use of coloring to contrast the palette and the emotion, the issue digs deep into the tortured pain and brutal fighting at the core of Moon Knight (the character and title alike). Read Full Review
The story's structure is a big reason why Vengeance of the Moon Knight continues to be a fun read that's never boring. MacKay is exploring a specific character while letting the art team run rampant with great action. What more can you want in a character-focused superhero comic? Read Full Review
Vengeance Of The Moon Knight #2 delivers solid character work, strings along an interesting mystery concerning the new Moon Knight's identity, and presents visually amazing art. That said, readers may feel shortchanged with the lack of Moon Knight in favor of another Dr. Sterman therapy session. Read Full Review
Fuck the reviewer GhostDemon
MacKay and Cappuccio continue to be a fantastic duo. Cappuccio's art is absolutely gorgeous, which is already evident on the very first page of this issue. As for MacKay, he did a great job of giving us a compelling, character-driven story with some good action as well throughout. That line from Tigra about why Marc didn't return hit me like a truck. I'm really hoping MacKay continues this trend of focusing on a single character for the next few issues.
MacKay just continues his amazing work with Tigra in this issue.
Jed Mackay is slowly becoming one of my favorite Marvel writers, and this is why. I love his characterization and Tigra's therapy session, and I highly reccomend people read this book. Moon Knight is slowly edging out to beating Deadpool as my favorite comic anti-hero at this point.
I'm really liking this series so far. I like the mystery of who is beneath the mask and the pace of the comic is very well done with the flipping back and forth between the action and Tigra talking to the psychicatrist. Finally to reveal the reason she thinks Marc is not coming back this time. The house expels him leaving the reader still wondering of the identity of Moon Knight. Good stuff.
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It's another interesting issue to the series. It's different, and doesn't have a lot of the new Moon Knight. But dang this issue did a good job of making me care about the mystery.
It's okay.