BRAWL IN THE FAMILY! As the fearsome HUNTER'S MOON, Yehya Badr is the brother to the fallen MOON KNIGHT, Marc Spector. But there's an impostor loose in the city, wearing his brother's face - and Badr intends to find out who they are, BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY!
Rated T+
In what feels like a very distinct, visually fascinating antithesis to the usual feeling of the book, explosive action is traded for lingering beats of peace before the return to action. Rosenbergs coloring helps to create that sense of momentary peace, before returning to the foundational palettes of the series. The two work in tandem to deliver the most visually stunning issue to date. Vengeance of the Moon Knight #4 offers a bit of everything for fans of the series new and old. With bits of seeding, the book not only is spinning one of the best, longer-tracked settings of modern Marvel but also feels like an organic beat towards the next summer event, Blood Hunt. Read Full Review
It will be intriguing to see where this goes, as that will be the true test, but as as a reveal and continue character study, Vengeance of the Moon Knight #4 is another home run. Read Full Review
Vengeance Of The Moon Knight #4 delivers powerful art and finally gets to the bottom of the imposter Moon Knight's identity. The technical execution of the writing is well done, but the time-wasting therapy gimmick has overstayed its welcome, and the imposter's identity lands with a shrug. Read Full Review
This has been a wonderful book about grief and those who live. While I'm skeptical of the title switch, especially since this issue upends the premise of the series, I do think the tone shift has been incredibly well done. I wonder what this title will be past its initial premise.
Another really good issue for the series. With the last three issues focusing on Reese, Tigra, and Soldier, respectively, I knew going in that this would be centered around Hunter's Moon. That said, this was another really good issue for this series. MacKay continues to do a really nice job writing Tigra, and I really liked how he delved into Hunter's Moon's real feelings and animosity towards the new Moon Knight. Speaking of which, the reveal of who that is is such a deep cut and I really appreciate that. Additionally, Cappuccino draws everything beautifully, as per usual. All things considered, this was another awesome read from MacKay & Cappuccio.
The storytelling mechanism of the psychologist is getting old now. I hope this is the last issue where Jed uses it. Come up with something new. We've seen for four issues now -- time to move on. Tigra continues to be a high-point of this series. I like the revelation of Hunters Moon's character about how he feels regard his service to Konshu. The revelation of the new Moon Knight's identity was lost on me. I'm not familiar with the character.
My Comic Review Channel - https://youtu.be/4K0npWN4TeQ
I liked the reveal and character work. Also the art is good as well. this is one of the few Marvel gems we have right now.
It's a good issue expanding the team that's continuing Marc's work. I've grown to really like Hunter's Moon.
I don't even know why I bother with marvel comics anymore, their just not that good.
Reveal was lame, some functional batman rip off (the creator of the character admits this and seems to show little love for the character). This issue was very weak. The past 4 issues have been on the weaker side but this reveal falls flat unless you like niche rip-off characters from long ago.