What if, instead of focusing on the Stranger Things kids, or some brand new original characters, we instead focus on the antagonists of the first season? No, not Doctor Brenner, or the Demogorgon - the other, worse antagonists. Yeah, let's tell a story from the point of view of the kids that pick on Will and his friends. That sounds like a GREAT idea.
Spoiler alert: it's not. At all. The story spends 90 pages threading its way through the aftermath of the first season and then into the second, showing us a few plot points we know from a different perspective, but it does so with the most unlikeable main character I've read in a long time. Is it mean to call a 12 year old unlikeable? Yeah, but it's apt too.
Pak goes to some lengths to explain why Troy is the way he is by giving us a look into his home life (his dad's just him, but older), and then tries to shove in a redemption arc in the last few pages, but by that point it comes entirely out of left field so it rings completely hollow. You can't spend 90 pages saying this kid's an asshole (for whatever reason) and then give him a change of heart at the last second and expect it to work. There isn't even any impetus for said change of heart, the kid just decides to apologise before leaving town forever. Sure, why not.
The artwork's alright - Valeria Favoccia's got a cartoony style, but it works for the most part. There are a few pages that skimp out on the backgrounds, but it does the job. It's perhaps a little too cartoony for the darker parts of the book like the woods section with the Demodogs, but the art's nowhere near as poor as the plotting.
A flawed premise and a complete lack of any likeable characters makes this almost a complete waste of time. It's still readable, but I wouldn't recommend it, especially with many other, better, Stranger Things comics out there.