I rate it all as a whole because, although I personally prefer to analyze each issue separately, this story feels so complete that deserves to be seen as a whole.
The connection between its five parts is fluid, coherent, and each piece adds to the final impact.
I finished reading the last Wreckers story and it honestly left me shattered. It even left me teary-eyed from the impotence at the end.
It's amazing how a fictional story, originally based on toy sales, can so starkly and realistically portray the cruelest face of war: the dehumanization, the unjust sacrifice, and the manipulation of truth for political purposes.
This story goes beyond the typical conflict between two sides. It tells us about idolatry, nationalism, and how love for a cause can be used against you, turning you into a mere disposable instrument.
The imprisoned Decepticons, turned into a spectacle. Overlord's obsession to get Megatron's attention, recreating the struggles of the Kaon pits, distorts the original ideal of the decepticon cause into a tyrannical parody. And most cruel: that false “choice” that offered the prisoners after all the mental abuse - to die or fight him - an illusion of control, torture disguised as opportunity. There was no difference; only horror.
And the new cadets... so full of enthusiasm for their first mission, so admiring of the most intrepid group of Autobots, being sent straight up on a carnage (with Perceptor being *aware* that one of them would have to be a sacrificesince the begging?). No one would tell the truth. Prowl-or rather, the Autobot higher-ups-hid everything to protect their faction's image. The official story was a lie.
I felt pain for all those who died, even if I don't know their names. Their dreams, their hope, were extinguished before they could even begin. I felt sorrow also for the Decepticons, used and eliminated without mercy.
I deeply appreciate that, unlike other volumes or the G1 series, this story does not glorify war. It forces us to face what many would rather ignore: how power and politics can drain meaning from life itself.
Thank you very much Nick Roche for writing this, maybe I would have liked the story to have a little more length to continue enjoying it, I really enjoyed every emotion this made me convey.