The incredible story of Project Superpowers concludes here! Collecting Project Superpowers: Chapter Two #7-12 of the acclaimed series, creators Alex Ross and Jim Krueger clear the decks and set the stage for more thrilling adventures to come! In these issues you'll find out the ultimate fate of our heroes, witness the re-birth of the Claw, and watch as the mad god Zeus wreaks havoc across the world! Plus: the birth of a new world order and a shocking twist in the story of The Supremacy!
This was an OK ending. Ross and Krueger should have edited out some of these characters. It's almost impossible to keep track of all of them, especially when they haven't been seen for the better part of a century.
Amazing this mess of a series could even get published.
Part of a large graphic novel Humble Bundle I got a while back, trying to justify the buy and actually read it rather than just forgetting it to the dusty disk in the corner. Great value plus support charity. Thank you Humble Bundle!
This volume concludes 20 issue storyline, and yet feels rushed by the end. The Project Superpowers saga started out really strong with volume 1, but both volumes of Chapter 2 felt mediocre. The entire story is worth reading, but it feels like it fell short of its ambition.
I'm out. The fact that things had to build up for 8 trades (line wide) to get to this point in the story, which is a sizable investment of time and money, is pathetic.
Much is finally explained and everyone lives happily ever after. Questions are answered about the 'Devil, the Claw, and how the heroes were affected by their time in the urn. Much of the story is centered around two separate battles against two separate, gargantuan, invulnerable, all-powerful beings. Which makes these battles basically pointless. Don't want to get into spoilers but the same tactic is repeated to the same effect, and there's a group hug. Not the most satisfying ending but at least most loose ends are tied up.
Decent ending to the second Chapter of the chronicles of this superhero world. Still nothing absolutely blowing me away, though... except Alex Ross' covers.