NO/ONE #10 (BLACK MARKET NARRATIVE/IMAGE COMICS)

Welcome to an all new edition of Parlay Points!

For this entry, the Massive-verse’s biggest mystery has arrived at its’ concluding chapter. Pittsburgh has been a city on the edge. The “Accountability Killer” saga has vice gripped the Steel city residents. Rising Body Counts. Political manipulation. Secrets exposed. These actions have been building to a breaking point.

Led by the “Who Is No One” podcast, the series has transcended traditional storytelling. This is nothing new for Kyle Higgins and the Black Market Narrative team. From QR codes, voting on who takes the Radiant Black mantle and more, they find ways to re-invent the creative wheel.

That said, the bar has been set very high for this series finale. Will readers finally get the answer to the lingering question: Who Is No/One?

NO/ONE #10 by Kyle Higgins, Brian Buccellato, Geraldo Borges, Mark Englert & Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou looks to deliver a show-stopping conclusion.

Let’s take a deeper dive and see how the “Accountability Killer” case is decided.

NO/ONE #10 by Kyle Higgins, Brian Buccellato, Geraldo Borges, Mark Englert & Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou (Black Market narrative/Image Comics)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

At its’ core, “No/One” has unveiled many elements of truth and perception. The finale wastes little time ramping up the broken vision of Aaron Kern. Higgins and Buccellato delve into his madness flawlessly. The “Accountability Killer” comes across unhinged and egotistical. It plays into the deadly showdown he orchestrated. With every action tormenting his hostages, readers can’t help but become further invested. The vicious demeanor portrayed by arguably The Massive-verse’s best villain steals this chapter.

Just as readers sense they know what’s going on, Higgins and Buccellato prove they have more tricks up their sleeves. A major player finally crashes the scene and the pace rapidly moves. This builds towards a strong conclusion and greater fallout. With a series based on mystery and truths, the residents of Pittsburgh expose their range of feelings. Their mood is best defined by a quote: “How are any of us supposed to move on?” Powerful words to illustrate the hold Kern’s actions had on the city.

Even with this payoff, readers are treated to two well-placed moments before closing the chapter. As the theories start forming, Higgins and Buccellato give one last salvo of questions for the audience. With all the moving parts, this story couldn’t have been structured any better.

Since this series’ beginning, Borges and Englert have balanced the high tension landscape of Kern’s manipulations with brilliant action imagery. Rest assured, there was no falter for this ending. The final showdown is presented with a dire, intense half page panel. Julia Paige’s terrified reaction reflects the readers witnessing events.

Kern’s mayhem is enhanced with the disturbing actions he flaunts on his prisoners. The lettering of Otsmane-Elhaou takes these difficult moments to new levels. This all ushers into the wild battle between the issue’s main rivals. Borges goes for a three-panel look for this encounter and doesn’t miss. In its’ aftermath, the art conveys the sense of uncertainty of trying to recover and press onward. This leads into some very intriguing panels. It leaves a new sense of wonder for the future of Pittsburgh and its’ residents. The art team set an extremely high bar that is nothing but wins for the readers.

FINAL POINT: 10

The Massive-Verse’s biggest mystery delivers an intense close with a masterful class in story-telling. Higgins and Buccellato’s writing weave a thrilling showdown with personal scars. Borges, Englert and Otsmane-Elhaou bring out the multi-layered themes of the “Accountability Killer” saga with phenomenal art. Added with the complementary podcast and No/One defines what an event should be.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on No/One #10. Thanks for reading!