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G**9
Justice/doom war
An awesome story that is an event itself with everything that it has going for it, multiple teams going to the future and the past, multiple villains reaching for the same goal, but also a lead up to an event that will then lead up to a bigger badder event. It's cool not just cause justice league stories are fun but in here you get the extended justice league almost everyone that has been a member as well as the justice society and even with all those heroes working together eventually they will lose. I would definitely give this story a read for the right price.
J**S
Justice League
Great book, really enjoyed it. Loved the artwork and story line. Can't wait to read the next chapter, Death Metal.
A**Z
Great condition and price👍
Great read.
E**O
Excellent
The conclusion of this part of the story was great, now death metal awaits. The draws and the story were impeccable.I didn't rate with 5 stars because I was missing one page of the book. Don't know how can that happen. But was all red.
J**H
DOOM goes the dynamite
They way dc ended this book is freaking crazy. Now this is a two part book , first part is justice and the second part is doom. Now with the second part being called doom......... means its ending on the bad side of the bed. This leads up to dc death metal which I highly recommend also!!
B**B
interesting story line
Interesting story line brought to a somewhat conclusion
C**R
lazy Writing
I loved the exciting beginning, but it started to slide stupid from book two. I did like Hawkworld, book #3 and it renewed my faith in the story, but then along came #4. Book 4, 6th Dimension just seemed like a drunken discussion the writers had one night and does this sound cool kind of thing because it was just ridiculous and it wasted a tremendous amount of pages they could have used to fill in like the last 3 cosmic powers they just forgot to get in. On to the finale and this book #5 - They under power characters to the point of silliness and over power others just for a single use and it's all just lazy. A mish mash of big stuff that I guess they think is cool but in the end just cheapens the entire event. I started this event going back to Crisis on Infinite Earths and read forward. This series ended in a rush and poorly thought out and even more poorly executed. Coming up with a lot of crazy ideas and barfing them down on a page doesn't make it "comics", it makes it stupid. It cheapens all the powerful characters to the point of B-list villains. Oh, wow, look what I pulled out of my butt now! This is not the New 52 Batman run which I did love. So many characters do so many stupid things it makes me despise them. It's just stupid for the sake of being stupid so the story works out, because it's lazy writing.
D**E
Epic saga has gone too long
Individually, each of the Justice League comics in this series is good, but it has just gone too long. It has read like an Infinite Crisis series, but far longer. From bad to worse at the end of each arc of a now 39-issue saga, our hopes are dashed repeatedly. I'm about ready to give up - especially since the story is continuing in another separate series!On the other hand I respect the creators, who do fine work. And they have in some ways mirrored the divisions in the U.S. and around the world. I loved the appeal for the world to join together, rather than live as isolated individuals grubbing away for our own benefit only.
J**S
Un gran cierre para un gran escritor
El envío fue en tiempo y forma, la historia genial para dar paso a Dark Nights: Death Metal. Todo perfecto, lo único de lo que me quejaría es que en la descripción del cómic dice que contiene los números 26-39 cuando en realidad solo tiene del 29-39 y si me dolió que faltarán esos 3 números. Fuerabde ese detalle todo perfecto.
M**E
Great comic!
Great storyline!!! Great art great writing. Item came in brand new condition.
A**A
Possibly the greatest DC Universe story I had ever laid eyes on
There aren't enough words in the English dictionary that could possibly allow me to express the amount of utter JOY Scott Snyder, Jorge Jimenez and Francis Manapul have sparked in me with their last two Justice League volumes. Although I was not particularly fond of Snyder's run when he first started (I thought his story was incomprehensible; I did not enjoy his reboot of the DC multiverse canon; and I avoided Dark Knights Metal like the plague because of its "Batmanizing" of the entire universe), I changed my position when he came up with the Sixth Dimension storyline and completely made me fall in love with DC again. He reintroduced color, humor,wacky ideias, and a fun and relaxing atmosphere that I'd missed for so long back into DC comics. It honestly felt like reading an old JLA book from the sixties or watching an episode of Justice League on T.V. in the early 2000s. Suffice to say, it made me really nostalgic for my childhood. Unlike Dark Knights Metal, this time the entire DC canon gets some spotlight. From the Justice League to the Justice Society to even characters that appeared in Crisis on Infinite Earths (alongside some smaller cameos like Batman Beyond and Komandi), Scott and Tynion's love for all things DC really shows. The story this time around was a lot more comprehensible and his reboot of the DC universe canon was a lot more well established, so much so that this is probably the best and most consistent rendition of the DC universe to date. This book could easily be enjoyed by people who have never picked up a DC universe book in their lives (although they may still be a bit lost with some of the more hardcore aspects of the world). Snyder made sure to streamline the story as much as possible and to focus it solely on the core team, which means that someone who never even knew that a Star Man even existed would still be able to enjoy the story. There is a lot of heart at play here, so much so that you can't help but smile when you see Batman hug his adopted son who is also a starfish. That being said, this book is definitely NOT for those who enjoy the darker and edgier DC comics' stories. If you're a major fan of the Final Crisis/New 52 adult era Justice League (which I personally despise), avoid this book like the plague. This is a wacky ride through and through, featuring some of the brightest colors you could ever imagine. Jorge Jimenez's art is legendary. He clearly took inspiration from both Avengers: Endgame and various anime while illustrating (there is a very clear reference to Naruto if you could find it). His characters are beautifully stylized and his action set pieces are incredibly fluid and detailed, while at the same time never overwelming (such is the case with art found in Final Crisis). I bring up Grant Morrison's seminal book because I feel like this is Snyder's final say to the universe as a whole - his Endgame so to speak (even though I know it really isn't). That being said, I would like to say that even though we never got DC's Endgame on the big screen, at least we got it here with this wonderful, bombastic and utterly ridiculous work of art rightfully titled Justice/Doom War.
J**D
Good plot but sickening dialogue
While the over arching story is quite interesting, going for a more mythical take on the DC multiverse, Scott Snyder has lost one of his most desirable writing qualities, which is that of relatable and character focused dialogue. While this problem doesn't rear it's head much in the earlier installations of the series, Luthor's interactions with Perpetua and the Monitor, Anti-Monitor and World Forgers interactions all are absolutely cringe-worthy and take you out of the story. Luthor is not a snivelling lackey to a higher power, which has been shown in various other stories such as Final Crisis, and yes while his faith is much more invested in Perpetua than any other crisis harbringer, his dialogue falls seriously out of character, and is Luthor in all but name. Similarly, the brother's 3's interactions are similarly cliqued, rather than taking the opportunity to inject some character to these higher beings, they use the same tired dialogue as Luthor. Miniature conflicts between them could've been explored and distinct personalities could've emerged for the reader to digest, yet they feel like cardboard cutouts, running on dialogue that is the basic mimimum for such entities. This falls short of Synder's earlier works, such as the malevolent character of Barbatos and his dark knights, each that feel like they have a story to tell, or the Court of Owls, or any of his earlier works. This is an unfortunate nitpick, which might seem small in the grand scheme of things, with an interesting and compelling story (which does get quite dense to digest at some times), but this should be something that comes naturally to such a writer, so it is a shame that it has manifested in this story.
C**R
the paper quality is bad
The story is fine however the paper quality is terrible, its unlike anyother comic i havea idk why its like this, wouldnt recommend
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