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  • Penultiman Vol 1

    From the pages of the AHOY interactive sensation STEEL CAGE! Penultiman, The Next-To-Last-Stage In Human Evolution, is the greatest, best-looking, and most admired super-hero in the world! So how can he stop hating himself? His android understudy, Antepenultiman, thinks he knows the answer! Created by Tom Peyer (THE WRONG EARTH) and Alan Robinson (PLANET OF THE NERDS).

    As with most books that nether overwhelm, nor underwhelm, I don’t have a ton to say about this series about a super hero that’s been kicked back to our more primitive time period from a far future where he was created by mistake by a confused parental unit. The story is solid enough, though I’m not sure I’m on board with exactly how the entire thing was laid out. Perhaps more words would have portrayed his inner emotional state better, but I found myself not caring about the character at all by the end of the series, wishing instead that he had disappeared into the woods and permitted his robot companion to take over superhero duties.

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    hmmm

    Tokyo, Japan

    Here I am

    Sarah Hyland


  • Derriere

    pregnant clippy

    tik tok and me

    COUPE

    Free Man

    Carla Howe

    Nerf Star Wars

    Oblivion Song

    A decade ago, 300,000 citizens of Philadelphia were suddenly lost in Oblivion. The government made every attempt to recover them, but after many years, they gav

    I stopped buying single comics that didn’t have “Star Trek” in their title right as this series was wrapping up and I just finally got the time to read through the final couple issues, and boy howdy do I wish I had stuck with the series when it was being published, just so I could have taken part in the discussions that were happening at the time about the resolution of the story. It ends about how I expected it to, now that I’ve seen how Kirkman ends his stories, in that he doesn’t seem to want to have finality at the end of the series, but instead wants a sense that the story continues on without us as an audience, though several pages are dedicated to catching up with the main characters several years down the line. This is less of a complaint than it is an observation, as I’m perfectly happy with the entire series, including how it concluded. There’s three tradepaper backs out now that collect the entire thing, so if you have the opportunity, I’d highly suggest checking it out.

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    rate the fits