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So volume one was frustrating. At first I had trouble with Harley Quinn perspective and it got confusing around the time that Deathstroke and Cyborg are on the Watchtower. Then Harley going from a real badass to punching bug was really lame, but the second volume made up for all of that. Volume two packed a lot into a small amount of pages when volume one dragged out very little plot over what felt like an unedning amount of pages.Skim Volume 1, read Volume 2.
The second volume of “Injustice: Ground Zero,” a spin-off series covering the events of the first Injustice game from Harley Quinn’s perspective, is significantly stronger than the first, packing more emotional impact. The highlights are the Harley/Shazam moments, though it would’ve been nice if the comic had shown more of (view spoiler)[her reaction to Superman murdering him, (hide spoiler)] an emotional scene we were sadly deprived of in both the regular Injustice comics and the first video ga...
not seeing the point so clearly anymore with this continuation... It seems like the story is all over the place...I'm seeing this through till the end, but I hope the ending has more to offer than this .
Overall a good entertaining graphic novel. Having not read volume one it was, in places, hard to pick up the pieces, That being said it has a good story line with all the characters you would expect in this series. The premise is a good one and as it is told from the point of view of Harley it does have its odd moments.The graphics are good and the story moves along at a good pace.
In which I am the Harley at the end of the book who was kinda, sorta paying attention. Not as strong as Tom Taylor's work on the prequel comic series/
Continuing the story of Harley Quinn's role in the time between Injustice and its sequel, this Volume mostly deals with Harley's interactions with Joker (including overthrowing his hold on her), the rescue of Bruce Wayne, and the continuing fight between the Regime and Insurgency. Overall, it's a fine story, but I'm kind of over it. Recommend, but with slight hesitation.
Again so different to the others. Some of the characters personality changed are confusing. Also was hard to tell at times which alternate character was who.
I kind of liked the first volume of this series - seeing the story told from Harley's point of view offered an interesting perspective. That didn't carry over to the second volume. Instead, it's like a Cliff's Notes version of the story, trying to summarize everything from multiple volumes in single issues, and jettisoning any semblance of context or depth for poor jokes and a cast of characters whose presence wasn't missed in the first place. And it all builds up to one of the most anti-climact...
The 2nd volume of Ground Zero is just as unimpressive as the 1st. Once again Harley is the narrator and while she reconciles her feelings about the Joker, Superman and his Regime are fighting duplicate heroes from a different dimension. Because of the disjointed story telling 2 really important deaths lose impact.
The second volume of the INJUSTICE: GROUND ZERO comic is an adaptation of the events of INJUSTICE: GODS AMONG US by DC and Netherrealm Studio (i.e. the people who do Mortal Kombat) from the perspective of Harley Quinn. This is an odd person to do the story from as she is a fairly minor character in the story with Batman and Superman being the primary protagonists (and antagonists).In general, the book spends most of the time with Harley either in love or in hate with the Joker. This has been the...
So the whole thing ended up being just Harley's dull rehash of the events of the video game. Only vaguely worth it in the scenes Harley actually had a direct part in, and I'm not at all sure what the point of was of having her narrate, say, Superman fighting Batman when she wasn't even around for it. There's slight payoff when her audience is finally revealed, but only slight.
What a fantastic series. Injustice raises the bar on Justice league comics to a totally new level. Its complicated, witty, soulful and action pack across the whole of year one and the progression of Superman across the years superbly developed. Harley Quinn is a brilliant POV in this edition and its impossible not to fall in love with her. The Ground Zero volume though could have done with more of a JL story line than such a large Harley POV just so that we could have a more satisfying end when
So it was the finale of Injustice as told by Harley. It helped refresh my memory of what happened in the game and prepared me to play and read Injustice 2. However it just felt a bit lack luster, the big Supe vs Supe fight just seem too quick, 3 punches boom, bad supe done. Harvey's Horde however was fantastic, loved that crazy weirdo doing good with her little family 🥰 .
Well, that was awful. The book is told first person from Harley Quinn which get's tedious real fast. Batman brought over the JLA from another dimension and I couldn't tell them apart. Their costumes weren't different enough for me to differentiate who was from which dimension. I with they'd given the bad guys all goatees or something like Star Trek. Half of the book was devoted to Harley and Joker's twisted relationship. Who cares about that, as part of this story?Superman was COMPLETELY out of
Wasn't bad or boring.... I Just stopped caring
WOOF.Spoilers below!Now that the other dimension's Justice League and Lex and Deathstroke is here, I have no idea which character is from which dimension at any point in time and that is not played for any sort of plot like a switch'em'up. Still told from Harley's point of view, which is very boring because all she does is make a gang and deal with whether she likes the other dimension Joker or not. Pointless to the main story. Also, the amount of pills anyone can take at anytime is ludicrous, e...
Meh. it seems like the author doesn't really want to commit to telling Harley's "story" (somewhat minimal) and the main story from the videogame (already pretty well fleshed out.) Like a lot of other media, it treats a serious problem as simply a matter of will. If only people in abusive relations said "No?" Really? I'm not sure if there's a better way to resolve this. Universally acknowledged, the Harley-Joker relationship is really problematic once you understand that Harley is more than an ac...
So Harley comes out on top and alive, and with a new sense of self as she overcomes what may be the greatest downfall of them all, her own inner demons. Which are fueled by an outer demon, mainly the Joker. In the last volume, we were left with the disappointment that Harley once again, had fallen in with the Joker. But everyone has their breaking point. And Harley's was when the Joker messed with her new "family" and killed her favorite henchman. A bit convoluted, but it somehow worked. the int...
This vol showed how a smaller person can do a great deed threw the smallest action. It showed how to end the decision poor decision making process and how even the most random of people could be the hope someone needs to change the direction of the future. There was a good deal of action but I couldn’t go with 4 stars. A can go with a little more then 3 but not 4. It just wasn’t there. But it was a solid three and I think it got there because of the back story of vol 1. It would still be solid a...
Ah, conflicted.4/5 because it's got a beautiful message.3/5 because it's definitely not the ending we deserved. Everything was from Harley's POV, so we miss out on a lot of the main action and the interactions between the main characters.But in hindsight now that the series is complete, this isn't the end, we've got Injustice 2.So, going to stick with 4/5.