This week: Renee Montoya faces the past and in Question: Keep following the watchtower #6.
Note: The comments below contain the spoilers. If you want a quick, spoiler-free purchase/pass suggestion on comics, check out the bottom of the article for our final ruling.
Question: Keep following the Watchtower #6
writer: Alex Secure
artist: Cian Tormey
Colorist: Romulo Fajardo Jr.
letter: Willie Schuber
Covering the Artist: Cian Tormey and Romulo Fajardo Jr.
Question: Keep following the watchtower Renee Montoya walks among the infinite giants of Justice League. A street detective, without any authority, is responsible for managing the security department at the JLU Senior Satellite Headquarters, an incredible premise that this series develops only within the scope of Renee, an unexpected threat to the Phantom Zone, thus threatening the alliance. The last issue of this week comes from the team of creative writers Alex Secure,artist Cian Tormeycolorist Romulo Fajardo Jr.and letters Willie Schuberfurther boosting the ante with the attention of Renee and her journey in an engaging and satisfying way.
In many ways, Along the watchtower It is a book about engraving one’s own identity. Renee is the character with the second name. She works with Jaime Reyes, the second Batwoman, and Kate Kane, instead of the two old blue beetles, Ted Kord and Jaime Reyes. Renee’s mentor and the first question, Vic Sage, also made a major appearance in the book. The big bad guy in the series, Cyborg Superman, was one of the replacement supermans of the 90s, and another villain in the series is Eradicator.
While you can’t shake the sticks in the DC universe without hitting the legacy character, the inclusion of these specific characters is sharp at the angles of writer Alex Segura. Ted, Jaime and Kate attribute little to their ex apart from adopting their names, and Cyborg’s Superman and Eliminator have never been able to leave completely in the shadow of Iron Man. Renee fell somewhere in the middle – she owed debts with her ex, but her own person. Her personality serves her security chief on the watchtower, a position that separates her from the rest of the heroes around her, Segura does a great job of expressing the complexity of her background and her role in this series.
Because the series and this issue are both character-centric, but there is still a lot of action and excitement, it’s all skillfully brought to life by the art team of Cian Tormey and Romulo Fajardo Jr. Tormey. Sometimes it’s hard to follow what’s going on, but Tome’s page layout is clear and his storytelling arrangement is always solid. Fajardo Jr. It’s a torn superhero story and it’s great to see.
Comprehensive Question: Keep following the watchtower #6 ended the series nicely while allowing further stories from Renee and her less ugly League driver to open the door. If there are gaps in some sci-fi logics (still uncertain how Cyborg Superman uses Phantom Zone to control the mind control of a person), they can be compensated by the power of the character work on display. In this issue, at least one unresolved development needs to be addressed in a later story. Hopefully Segura, Tormey, Fajardo Jr. and Schuber have a chance to do so soon.
Final judgment: purchase.
round up
- Week 5 means there are not many new versions of DC this week, but it’s very interesting. Batman/Superman: The Best in the World 2025 #1 continues the storyline of “We Yesterday” and has some backstory about how Grode brought the Legion of Doom together in the past and how he brought them to the future without anyone knowing it. Christopher Cantwell From him and Mark Wyderand Dan McDaid and John KaliszThe art is full of vitality and stylization. Halfway through this storyline, things start to blend together well. A backup story Morgan Hampton,,,,, Clayton Henryand Neeraj John Stewart was able to look at this issue well as early as the Green Lantern era.
- In other Batman news, Detective comics 2025 Year #1 offers a pair of mystery for the Dark Knight. The main story of the writer Al Ewing,artist Stefano Raffaele,,,,, John McCreaand Fico Ossiocolorist Lee Loughridge,,,,, Triona Farrelland Ulises Arreolaand letters Tom Naples Filled with entertaining twists and side adventures, adding enough nonsense because you don’t forget that this is a superhero comic. From Joshua Hale Fialkov,,,,, Mike Norton,,,,, Nick Fieldyand Troy Peter Batman is a lightweight and scented cleaner for a story when he solves a mystery at his kid’s school. The shadow of Gotham Academy is very good here.
- Electric Power Company: Charging #1 continues the formation of the new electric company, this time starting in February, and this time with an increased dose of Jace Fox Batman. The writer’s story Bryan Edward Hill,artist Khary Randolph,,,,, Alitha Martinez,,,,, Norm Rapmund,,,,, Ray Anthony Heightand Studio Skye Tigercolorist Emiel Lolsonl Anozlooz and Alex Guimaraesand letters and world design It feels more like a Batman story, with some guest appearances from Power Company, which doesn’t say why Jace needs to join the team. As a Batman story, it’s really solid, but as a team story, it’s a little bland. Visually, the book’s coherence is excellent, given the five credits artists – in that respect, to Lopez and Gimaras. Definitely interested in seeing more new power companies and hope to be more of a story as a team in one story.
miss Did our early comments? Check out our Complete fileWoolen cloth