This was okay. Very busy. Aside from Cyborg (and Wonder Woman's narration at the start) there really wasn't a lot of characters getting to show off their unique talents specific to the crisis. I guess Superman, though he was off-panel and we found what he did from third-parties, which is fine but it did not mesh at all with the rest of the events in the story. And in that vein, Cyborg's self-narration/connection of football in stopping a train (we never saw the reason WHY the train needed to be stopped. Were the tracks wrecked? Were there people trapped on the line and the brakes dysfunctional? We don't know. He shows up, talks himself into a football pep talk, and throws himself into a moving train, which totally wouldn't cause injuries to no one, nope) seemed out of place for the same reason. All the other characters had different kinds of scenes/genres/feelings surrounding their progress. It felt like ten different writers got together and made a quilt out of a battle scene. Batman getting close to the alien crash ship and NOT telling his team "oh, I have the source" because he needs to get close to it first just to be sure.
Alright. Well, in the process of writing this review I went from three to two stars. I feel like Hitch has done better work, not only with massive team stories, but with the Justice League specifically. And I'm not sure what happened here. Crisis. Crisis is shown to be so awful. The worst kind of awful. Earth has never been this awful. And our heroes are disorganised and we should still believe they're credible and united. I don't buy it.