A Better World, the fourth in our series of free digital comic shorts, follows Symmetra as she embarks on an unexpectedly dangerous endeavor in corporate espionage.
In "A Better World," when the Vishkar Corporation's proposal to remodel a Brazilian city center is blocked by the mayor, the company calls on Symmetra—the secret identity of Vishkar architech Satya Vaswani—to get the contract by any means necessary. But when events explode out of control, Symmetra finds herself in over her head… and winds up questioning her mission.
Andrew R. Robinson is a writer at Blizzard Entertainment. He co-authored the comic book StarCraft: Soldiers, and has also written for the Overwatch and Warcraft franchises.
This is the weakest of the Overwatch comics that I've read so far. Symmetra wants to do good, but doesn't because her company is the one behind the destruction. In other words, the story in this comic raises doubts in Symmetra's mind about her situation. So, it sets up a possibly interesting story to come, but that story doesn't happen here.
Overwatch #4 by Andrew Robinson is a digital short comic starring the super power Symmetra. Her alias, Satya, is told to get a special city contract. It consist of where the poor live. Things happen and she questions her feelings about the plan. Great pics and easy to read fonts.
I must hand it to the creators of Overwatch for creating a diverse cast for their game. The game seems to have a multiracial cast that all players can feel a part of this universe.
It’s hard to rate this without knowing the overall game lore very well, so I’m giving it the benefit of the doubt. I don’t like where it ends, but I do like the character it introduces, and the kind of questions raised in this brief comic.
Rewritten review; old review incorporated into new
In the issue of Overwatch Digital Comics, we follow Symmetra in her own mini adventure, A Better World. The true enemy of the world is disorder. A Better World follows Symmetra as she embarks on a dangerous mission into corporate espionage. When the Vishkar Corporation's model for a new Brazilian city centre is blocked by the major, Symmetra is called upon to get the plans accepted by any means necessary. However, when the plan erupts, Symmetra finds herself in over her head - and questioning her mission.
I was expecting action, a little bit of violence and beautiful artwork. I was not expecting a young woman having a small crisis over everything that was going on in the town she works in. This was a rollercoaster of emotions in 10 damn pages. Even after reading this a second time, it was still so emotional and I think that's really beautiful. To produce a comic that can bring you to tears after reading it twice... that takes skills.
This was beautiful. We really saw into Symmetra's soul in just a few pages of comic and the author(s) have done such an amazing job with this. Honestly, I teared up at one point. This took my breath away. I need so much more into this one comic book alone; I need to know more about Symmetra, how the plans from this comic issue go, I need to know where it goes on from this comic. I have to know the aftermath of everything that happened. I need to know about Symmetra.
I don't think I've ever been so enamoured by a character I knew nothing about before with only ten pages of beautiful artwork and stunning story lines. This issue of the Overwatch Digital Comics series has stolen my heart away and I'm trying not to cry as I type this.
This was absolutely stunning. Absolutely stunning.
Since all of the Overtwatch comics are about 10 pages long I'll only be doing mini reviews for them.
To start off; this comic made me love Symmetra more than I already did. It really helps to give her more character development, and this fill in a bunch of gaps that the game has when it comes to her personality. I also somehow managed to miss that she was canonly on the OCD spectrum until this comic, and this finding that out makes me SO happy. Please, read this, it's worth the few minutes of your time.
The art was pretty and the new character interesting. I’m just wondering how these Overwatch comics all fit together. They seem completely unrelated. Do they ever converge?
I have this 2.5stars. I think the story should be more reasonable and easy to understand. Lot more things happen and we don't know why. A girl breakdown, people protest, a new building opening and everything. We don't know why those things happen. The only thing I understood was the little adorable girl who helped to find way was in forever and the girl helped her to get out of fire. I don't know anything else other than that. I really like this art style and that's what makes me keep reading. Yet I think there are so many unsolved things. I know it's a small book and we can't solve everything in that. Yet I think some scenes need some explanation. Just because there are some scenes, we can't understand the whole situation without really telling it.
Esta si es una buena historia, informativa, con lore, algo que nos lleva mas a dentro de un personaje. Te lleva a comprender un diálogo interactivo entre dos personajes y su disgusto. No solo es una mini aventura como los otros cómics pasados, este es diferente y por eso me gusta, me agrada! No me cae bien este personaje en el juego, y ahora hasta cierto punto siento que empaticé y le agarre un verdadero motivo para que me caiga mal.
Lovely short comic about the hero Symmetra in the Overwatch game. Personally, one of my favorite characters to play. I love her so much.
Also, I realize this is where the info comes from that Symmetra (real name: Satya Vaswani) is on the autism spectrum. The representation that comes out of Overwatch is one of the biggest reasons I love the game and overall lore of the world.
I like seeing Symmetra using all her weapons, and i like how you learn about her as a person and character. The story was pretty basic though. It leaves the hint that something bad happened but doesnt follow through in explaining if what it leads you to believe, actually is true or not. Maybe in futute comics.
Art wasn't really my style (Lotta flats and not enough lines) nor was the story up to the same par as the last few issues- it was a smidgen confusing from where I'm proppred and Symmetra ain't exactly a favorite character of mine. But it's head was in the right place and the pace was substantially 👌
Unlike (my experience with) some other comic books I've sampled recently, I finished this one interested enough at least to read more. Broader frame of reference (both politically and psychologically) for example.
In about ten pages, the creative team has managed to (a) present a woman with a morals who kicks ass (b)said woman is also good at her job (c)a dicussion about slums. All this from a comic book based on a video game. This is what art is.
The writing was really good. I think the book was ended too soon. I'm not sure if this is a series, being a new reader. If it is I will continue reading it. If not, I don't like the ending. Too much left unexplained.
This one feels a little cold compared to the three that came before, but I don't think that's a fault of the book. It's more the subject matter feels unresolved and unsatisfying because that's just the way the world works, even in reality. Wish I could love it more.