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The dysfunctional family/team soap opera continues. Myriad, the shape changer, gets the most interesting character developments, especially when he has to impersonate another team member. The other highlight is the repetitive but always enjoyable cliffhanger endings to each issue. Jay Faerber knows how to write ongoing melodramas. It'd be nice if the team faced more compelling villains--they get an uninspired bad guy team up here--but he doesn't seem to be slowing down.
Asrar's art is good enough for superheroes, though it'd be nice to more detailed or inventive storytelling.
Asrar's art is good enough for superheroes, though it'd be nice to more detailed or inventive storytelling.
Even better than the last and with an incredible ending. I'm greatly enjoying this series and can't wait to keep reading.
Good, but not great, story, and at one part they used the exact same frame twice. Still, gonna pick up vol 3.
Embracing the tropes makes the tropes less predictable, paradoxically. If you know that we might, you still don't know if we might not, and that becomes fresh and interesting again. A righteous continuation of the previous volume, with more conflict externally (with a burgeoning cadre of villany assembling and dark plots behind the scenes) and internally, with revelations of possible racism and xenophobia coming to light. Begins to turn in on the soap opera elements of comics, but not necessarily in a bad way.