Weird how a 12-issue run is the default for a chunky statement, but 15 can end up feeling truncated, interstitial. There's little here that's bad - maybe a slight tendency for an initially principled antagonist to devolve into flat villainy, but that one's endemic to the form. More often, though, it's just that we've seen it before, usually from T'challa himself and fairly recently at that (assembling a new black superteam), occasionally from another paranoid character Ridley has written (the contingency plans to take down his fellow heroes which then run out of his control). By the end, this can no longer be ignored, characters obliged to acknowledge that yes, this isn't the first time they've seen T'challa exiled, but it feels much more final this time, honest. Still, it's hardly the first superhero run to feel like a greatest hits rerecording, and there's fun stuff along the way, not least the Emancipated. Plus, the line would definitely have worked better from America's last/next president than Biden, but I still cracked up at "This is the United States of America. Nobody tells us to live freely and in peace. I want these people taken out."