![]() ![]() GeekDad received this comic for review purposes. To find reviews of all the DC issues, visit DC This Week. ![]() ![]() However, it’s a fun, fast-paced read that gets me more interested in the Masters of the Universe than I was during any of their solo comics. It feels like there may be a bit too much set up here initially, with Superman, Skeletor, and Darkseid all being set up as major threats. There are a lot of really fun moments, such as the communion between Swamp Thing and Moss Man, and the way He-Man defeats Faker and exposes him in the opening segment. With hateful villains and flawed heroes, this first issue is a lot more compelling than it has any right to be. The term Web 2.0 suggests a major shift in online communication, positioning these dynamic, interactive applications as something completely new in. The evil Eternian found himself in the Injusticeverse after his last defeat and wasted no time building a new powerbase. Once you have downloaded our newest Injustice 2 Mod + OBB Data Immortal v2.1.2 Android, you will be able to get in your account unlimited resources. The heroes from the Injusticeverse include Harley, Zatanna, Constantine, and Swamp Thing, as well as a young Batman who is definitely not Bruce Wayne – Jason, maybe? The timeline here doesn’t really match up with the current events in Injustice 2, as Superman is still in charge, and in fact is consolidating his hold on the world via a new pre-crime system that he acquired from his new ally – Skeletor. Despite his mother’s encouragement, he begins to doubt himself – just as he’s contacted by a mysterious band of rebels from another dimension. Despite defeating the villain, he finds that many of his subjects resent him and preferred Faker’s dictatorship. He-Man is coming off one of the worst periods of his life, after he’s been replaced by the evil robotic Faker, who impersonated him for weeks. He manages to infuse both sides of the equation with some genuine character development and pathos. This could have easily been something completely ridiculous, but the writer at the helm is top-tier DC writer Tim Seeley, coming off acclaimed runs on Nightwing and Green Lanterns. Now, though, they’re crossing the ’80s cartoon legends over with the DCU proper for the first time – specifically, the brutal, dystopian Injustice universe. DC’s been publishing He-Man comics on and off for years now, including a Thundercats crossover a few years back. Ray: DC’s been doing a lot of oddball crossovers lately, but this may be the oddest of them all – and it’s technically an internal crossover. Masters of the Universe #1 – Tim Seeley, Writer Freddie Williams II, Artist Jeromy Colwell, Colorist Ray – 8/10 Masters of the Universe #1 cover, credit to DC Comics. ![]()
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