Civil War II #7 – REVIEW
SPOILER WARNING: This review contains MAJOR spoilers for the Civil War II series. By now you’ve either avoided a deluge of spoilers about the end of Civil War II #7, or you’ve consumed
SPOILER WARNING: This review contains MAJOR spoilers for the Civil War II series. By now you’ve either avoided a deluge of spoilers about the end of Civil War II #7, or you’ve consumed
I’ve made no secret that Civil War II held zero interest for me as a reader, but when the outcome has now been revealed in the two (!) new Iron Man series
Seasoned (read: “Old”) readers will fondly recall comic books with their favorite teams engaging in “normal” activities – playing baseball, going camping, hanging out, or other similar activities. In Champions #2,
SPOILER WARNING: This review contains MAJOR spoilers for the Civil War II series. Nobody dies. Nobody fights anyone else. Not a single punch. It’s little more than playground clubs hurling insults
I loved this new twist to “Civil War II.” Of course, this Ulysses only sees the worst futures ever. Total pessimist. Would it be so hard to have a vision
Champions hits the shelves in the first set of the new wave of Marvel Now! comics. Written by Mark Waid, drawn by Humberto Ramos, inked by Victor Olazaba, colored by Edgar
SPOILER WARNING: This review contains MAJOR spoilers for the Civil War II series. I’ve lost track of when the last issue came out. Thankfully, what I do remember about Civil War II #4 is
There’s that fantastic line in Spider-Man #2 when Miles says, “I don’t want to be the black Spider-Man. I just want to be Spider-Man.” I loved that scene, and as I’d mentioned in
Cards on the table: I’m not interested in Civil War II and was dreading the plot gymnastics orchestrated to drag Miles into Marvel’s latest event. That’s why I was pleasantly surprised to
July certainly was an interesting month in the Marvel universe. “Civil War II” raged on, Spider-Man got an unlikely team-up partner, and Spider-Gwen found herself in combat with a monkey-turned-butler.