This was a lot of fun to read. It's basically a Wolverine story, mostly teamed up with Spider-Man. I've seen a few of those team-ups, in Ultimate Spider-Man, and I always loved them. This is a particularly good one. It's the first time in this series that Wolverine's past has really been dealt with in any way. And the set up does indeed make sense. When you think about the highly trained foot soldiers in Weapon X whose only jobs were to make Wolverine's (and, later, other mutants') lives miserable... why should we assume that they'd stop? Best of all, in my opinion, is giving Dum Dum Dugan the takedown at the end, criticizing the X-Men's MO. Sure, they got the bad guy of the moment. But they didn't get the bad guy behind the bad guy, and because of how they approached things, they won't. It's nice to sometimes get the reminder that literally blowing the front door open is probably not always going to be the optimal way to handle things. The biggest downfall of the book as a whole is that the visible bad guy is bland at best. Sure, she's a legitimate threat, but she isn't very interesting, either, and she's a literal nobody.