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(B) 73% | More than SatisfactoryNotes: A slew of stakeless sizzle, it's all lazy, lax and leaden: no payoff's earned, just clash-concerned, generic Armageddon.
The art was nice, everything else was mediocre. Flip through but not worth sticking around. The dialogue is awful and the story (while not a complete mess like the previous volume), is lacking much substance beyond its blockbuster appeal.
Stop start, no real substance but great art. Read the full review here
Such a fun, badass deathstroke story
Meh. This didn't do much for me. It looks pretty, but the story is all but nonexistent. We open on a fight scene that isn't what it seems so that Slade can indulge in an inner monologue while showing off his moves. Whatever myriad faults this graphic novel has, each issue does begin with a fairly decent recap, which is good because I don't think I've read Deathstroke Volume 1. Oh, sure, I’ve read A Deathstroke Volume 1, but I’m pretty sure it wasn't the one that was supposed to come before this
Wow.Haven't read much on Deathstroke but I have seen him portrayed on TV and find him to be an incredible presence. Its pretty hard seeing him as a protagonist - an anti-hero assassin. He will always be a cold, twisted villain. I know he's popular but he shouldn't be a protagonist. Maybe if he was in the Suicide Squad.Still, this is a pretty awesome story. Slade is contacted to kill a Titan with a powerful weapon, a sword called The Godkiller that will help him do just that. Still, this does inv...
Something of a mixed bag when it comes to artwork, though on the whole pretty solid. Good to see some cameos from some of the bigger stars, though it obviously feels like a way to try and sell more comics by plastering them all over the covers.
not really DC fan, but do like deathstroke , Harleyquinn and nightwingStory line kept me intrigued, and definitely liked the art/graphics.Thought i saw cover of green arrow but he didn't appear in this or vol#3.
I never thought I'd read about Deathstroke weilding a magic sword and taking on a God, but that's exactly what you get in God Killer. Daniel makes it work, but I didn't find this as compelling as his last volume of Deathstroke.
Eh? This must be the "Newer than the New 52" retcon. I tend to read comics in no particular order, but rather by story or story arc, thus am never "current" with which version of events they are peddling (who's dead, who's not dead, who's been dead-but decided not to be anymore, etc). That's fine. I'll check out the story. Um..well..meh. Yeah that's my unreserved final judgement. Meh. I'm not trying to hard for this one.As far as retconning- Slade Wilson is 20 something and has his eye back. Som...
Quando saiu eu odiei a história. Mas relendo agora, eu tentei ver com outros olhos e até que funciona. É só ação mesmo com umas desculpas fracas mas tá aceitável.
Koniec rodzinnych niesnasek. Tym razem Slade dostaje zlecenie z Olimpu żeby pozbyć się Tytana. Jak to z bogami greckimi bywa, nie doprecyzowali kilku istotnych szczegółów...Jest to podręcznikowy akcyjniak bez głębszego zastanowienia, jednak tym razem brak ciągnących go na dno wad poprzednich części sprawia, że czyta się go przyjemniej.
Just as my personal opinion, I had very high expectations for this, because I completely fell head over heels for the first one, and this second one was just not what I expected it to be, or wanted it to be, but the art was still fantastic.
If any character could be the poster boy for DC’s New 52 editorial indifference, why not Deathstroke (aka Slade Wilson). Deathstroke, Vol. 1: Legacy was a slice and dice fest, but at least it stayed true to the unrepentant assassin schtick that he’s generally known for and was fun if you dig decapitations every other page (I do). In Deathstroke, Vol. 2: Lobo Hunt, Rob Liefeld took over, threw in Lobo, Hawkman, some growed-up Deathstroke kids, some weird back story stuff and promptly got the book...
This one actually includes Deathstroke 7-10 and Annual 1.I enjoyed this volume more than the first simply because it's more coherent. Deathstroke has taken on a contract to kill a "God", and has been equipped with a sword to do just that. To complicate matters, he has to journey to Themyscira to complete the contract. Then Superman shows up as well.I don't really like this new "young" Deathstroke, but this storyline was good and the art was above average. It was pretty cool to see Deathstroke in...
Tons of action! Picked up Vol 1 a few weeks ago and got hooked again on standard comics. I have been reading independent titles for the last couple of years. But the extreme action & good art of Deathstroke has brought me back to mainstream comics. So I picked up Vols 1 & 2, and started collecting Deathstroke starting with issue #11. Somewhere in my large collection of comics, I have the 1st appearance of Deathstroke way back in the Teen Titans (drawn by George Perez back then). Story: B, but th...
Basically just a book of nonstop limbs being cut off with very little story. In this volume, Deathstroke goes to Themyscira to kill a Titan. He inadvertently sets the Titan free, then fights Wonder Woman and Superman until they have to team up to stop the Titan.
Definitely different than the normal expected Slade Wilson story arc. I give the writing 4/5 simply due to how well it captures the characters and their motives. HAS LOADS OF INTENSE ACTION. The artwork was 12/10. Down right superb. I'm really starting enjoy this series and I hope it continues to get better even after Daniel stops writing/drawing it.
Poprzedni tom przygód najemnego mordercy, który lubi swoją pracę, przypadł mi do gustu, więc ochoczo sięgnąłem po kolejny tom. Nie zawiodłem się i nawet mam wrażenie, iż mimo, że Tony S. Daniel nie tworzy zbytnio lotnych historii, tak tutaj fabuła jest zaskakująco spójna przez większość czasu. A że dodano także świetnie wyglądającą Dianę, którą uwielbiam przez run Azzarello, więc tym bardziej zabrałem się za lekturę.W drugim tomie latorośl Slade'a odsunięto na drugi plan. Zabieg udany, bowiem po...
What a story! Deathstroke springs yet another trap when the Olympian God Hephaestus makes him an offer he can't refuse. What he asks of him is naturally an assassination but not of your everyday target, since his assignment is to kill a god-like creature, namely the Titan Lapetus, who is imprisoned in Themiscyra, the home of the Amazons. The Forger of the Olympian Gods, however, does not just leave Slade Wilson helpless in the Herculean labor he took on. He gives him a sword that he himself made...