LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #3 (MASKED REPUBLIC/MASSIVE PUBLISHING)

Rey Mysterio. Tinieblas Jr. The Lucha Bros. Solar. Super Astro. Luchadors who have amazed fans inside of the squared circle for years. These individuals have now opened up the doors on a brand new comic universe. For its’ final chapter, another star that always “keeps it 100” has entered the game.

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #3 by Marco Lopez, Ivan Plaza, Kevin Klienrock, Diego Valenzuela, Puis Calzada, Javier Caba, Bryan Arfel Magnaye, Jacob Bascle and Micah Myers (Masked Republic/Massive Publishing) welcomes KONNAN into the lead story of the event finale.

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #3 by Marco Lopez, Ivan Plaza, Kevin Klienrock, Diego Valenzuela, Puis Calzada, Javier Caba, Bryan Arfel Magnaye, Jacob Bascle and Micah Myers (Masked Republic/Massive Publishing)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

The first story of this finale gives readers a crystal clear picture of what Konnan is bringing to this universe. From the start, it’s big action. Lopez and Plaze give a greater context of the previous issues fallout. Readers watch as the threat hits Konnan and his team directly. The action spirals through his base of operations. During the sequence, there’s a quick flashback before bringing the timeline back with a bang.

Fans will be very excited to see the battle unfold with many surprises. The writing mixes in various looks before coming to a thunderous boom. After the smoke clears, the closing act ties up events cleanly as the next phase takes over.

Caldaza and Magnaye creates the earth shattering fallout instantly in the opening pages. This is capped off with a full splash page starting the conflict off right. Pacing moves the action along at a solid speed. Readers never get lost in the shuffle as Konnon shows off his skills. Once the smoke clears, a full page image sets the epilogue in gear. The result leads perfectly into the companion story.

Interludium” completes the loose threads of the previous two chapters to set forth the next phase on a strong note. The writing gives just enough page time to the Luchaverse leads to weave their stories into one cohesive path moving forward. The pacing helped to balance out the moving parts extremely well. Readers should be very energized about where things lead from here.

FINAL POINT: 8.6

Phase one of the Luchaverse leaves readers on a high note as their next favorite universe is now complete. Solid writing introduces a definite fan favorite into the mix while capping off separate stories along the way. Readers will have their fill of action due to the action panels crafted by the art teams. This is truly the start of something special at the comic shops.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Luchaverse: Catalyst #3. Thanks for reading!

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #2 (MASKED REPUBLIC/MASSIVE PUBLISHING)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay Points!

For this entry, a new universe is expanding. Combining the world of Lucha Libre wrestling and superheroes, the “Luchaverse” kicked in the door at the LCS. Rey Mysterio and Tinieblas Jr. led the first charge. Their stories gave readers a dose of adventure and horror.

Now it’s time for the next wave of luchadores to move the universe forward! Readers will be excited to see a certain pair of brothers jump into the fray for this next go around.

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #2 by Marco Lopez, Ivan Plaza, Javier Caba, Alessandro Micelli, Bryan Arfel Magnaye, and Micah Myers welcome the Lucha Brothers (Rey Fenix & Penta Zero M - Currently wrestling in AEW), Solar and Super Astro into the heroic ring.

Let’s see how the latest heroes weather the storm!

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #2 by Marco Lopez, Ivan Plaza, Javier Caba, Alessandro Micelli, Bryan Arfel Magnaye, and Micah Myers (Masked Republic/Massive Publishing)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

The Lucha Bros. story kicks off events in this chapter. It gives readers a fair mix of action and supernatural elements. Penta and Fenix’s relationship is defined b their distinct personalities. Penta is more aggressive and cunning. Fenix leans into the more heroic aspect. Readers are given a solid backstory before the main event starts.

In this portion, Lopez and Plaza set up great action while dabbling in the mystic realm. This builds up the closing act where readers get more than they bargained for. Pacing goes move briskly through this section. Ultimately it leads to a few key moments before the conclusion. Once at the final stop, the writing indicates the layers haven’t been pulled back enough to decipher where these two are heading next.

Solar and Super Astro’s story stretches into many different areas. The writing dabbles into various time areas to off a more global feel to their tale. Adding in the time jumps helped to make this stand out more. Events are spaced out for a good duration to lock in with readers. The closing act throws a solid curve into the mix. With the last page surprise, this story is anything but over and done with.

The art mixes in a fair amount of wrestling into each story. Caba brings forth the conflicting personalities of Fenix and Penta to show off their differing opinions. There’s a great full page splash of the brothers standing off with Heaven and Hell that plays out more as things progress. This is also complemented once the brothers come in contact with its’ mystic ending.

Micelli mixes in reactions with the building chaos for some entertaining visuals. Seeing Solar and Astro in heroic fashion suits well for the latter conflict. The Roswell scenes are overflowing with disdain for their capture. Art moves into their new adventures with ease. Stepping into the closing moments, the main adversary is given a big full intro page spread, This can also be said for the final page. Both art teams handled the challenge presented for an easy win here.

FINAL POINT: 8.6

The next wave of luchadores pick right up with a sense of the dramatic blended with action. Penta and Fenix’s quest brings out the tense nature with the writing. Solar and Astro carried a more traditional superhero feel built by the art. Factor both together and fans won’t want to kick out at 3 for this fast rising universe and line.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Luchaverse : Catalyst #2. Thanks for reading.

HARD STYLE JUICE #4 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay points!

For this entry, the mystery of Rey Castro’s death takes a shocking turn! Since his untimely death in the ring, there has been many questions surrounding what happened. Mona Castro has picked up the case and wrestling to find the guilty party. However, new evidence points her into a direction she doesn’t want to go.

Is the guilty party actually her father?!

HARD STYLE JUICE #4 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, and DC Hopkins (Comixology Originals) brings readers one step closer to learning the truth.

Let’s get in the ring and see what’s happening now!

HARD STYLE JUICE #4 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, and DC Hopkins (Comixology Originals)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

Has Mona bitten off more than she can chew? That is the question McCormick poses to the reader. Her plan to work through the wrestling business for answers has backfired. Renault comes across as shrewd and cold. He is all about the business and little time for feelings. Getting his take on Rey’s death puts many themes into perspective.

Mona’s reaction comes off as a doomed attempt for hope. She sinks further into the world she was ill-prepared to deal with. This rings especially true in the final act. Seeing who is working who is a solid reveal. The behind-the-scenes look offers a dire picture for what lies ahead. It is one that will have readers on edge waiting for the conclusion to drop.

López-Ortiz and Moore brings their electric style to key pivotal points throughout this chapter. The opening panel of Mona’s reaction to Renault’s news is one that hits readers hard. It spirals into the shifty ways of a wrestling promoter used to “working” the room they’re in.

Mona’s response is filled with rage that adds to some fighting panels. None more jump off the page that a near full page “Blade job” leading into a fast-moving middle act. Once the story comes to its’ closing rounds, the emotions pour of King and Mona’s faces. Knowing the trouble she’s in weighs heavy. It all boil to a show stopping final panel that mic drops the chapter.

FINAL POINT: 8.5

The Pen-ultimate chapter of Rey Castro’s murder mystery delves into the shady side of the wrestling business. McCormick walks readers through the dirty dealing with great writing. López-Ortiz brings worth the gravity of secrets revealed with incredible art. This series has been nothing but a championship win thus far and looks to head there entering its’ final fall!

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Hard Style Juice #4. Thanks for reading!

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #1 (MASKED REPUBLIC/MASSIVE PUBLISHING)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay points!

For this entry, the worlds of comics and pro-wrestling mark a new chapter in their vast joint history. From WWE adaptations, Do a Powerbomb to most recently Hard Style Juice, the two mediums have crossed paths to give fans of both something to remember. There are more similarities in the fandoms and creativity that most might not realize.

The latest entry into the cross-medium looks poised to carve its’ own place into that history. Mixing in the wrestling culture of Lucha Libre into a shared comic universe, Masked Republic and Massive Publishing present a fresh new concept for readers to jump on board with.

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #1 by Marco Lopez, Ivan Plaza, Ben Harvey, Bryan Arfel Magnaye, Diego Simone and Micah Myers sets the card for a main event debut!

Let’s see how things kick off for the Luchaverse!

LUCHAVERSE: CATALYST #1 by Marco Lopez, Ivan Plaza, Ben Harvey, Bryan Arfel Magnaye, Diego Simone and Micah Myers (Masked Republic/Massive Publishing)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

Right from the start, the new Luchaverse gives multiple genres & wrestlers a new reader friendly spotlight. Rey Mysterio and Tinieblas Jr. are the featured leads for this issue. Each story gets a synopsis page before diving into their chapters.

Mysterio’s story is centered in adventure and mystery. The writing mixes in key flashbacks while walking readers through the big action. Anyone looking for in-ring action will get a very small dose. This makes for a better play to separate Rey the wrestler from Rey the Action Hero.

Mysterio being paired with “The Ambassadors” gives off “Expendables” vibes. Their mission appears very straight forward. Once the flashbacks start happening, the story becomes much wide-scale in danger and depth. The closing act speeds into a new stat quo for Rey and the Luchaverse as a whole. It plays into its’ strength: big Hollywood-esque action. With a impactful parting image, events are passed off to the next story.

The writing for Tinieblas Jr. carries a different feel than Rey’s story. Heading into a more supernatural detective feel, Plaza and Lopez puts the protagonist on an ever-twisting journey. Tinieblas Jr. comes across as a captivating enigma. This is raised up a few levels by the creatures he encounters.

Combining the fantasy aspect with some combat made this portion stand out. It’s something readers won’t be expecting as things progress forward. That said, it makes complete sense to the legacy it crosses with. The ending shifts gears yet again to a puzzling stop. Readers will have some theories forming before the next time they see Tinieblas Jr. but that’s always how you want to leave the audience: wanting more.

Harvey and Magnaye handle art duties for Mysterio’s chapter. They waste no time launching Rey into action with the opening page. Leading in with a strong start, the flashback sequences play into the youthful days of a hero in training. As previously said, there is a touch of pro-wrestling added in the adventure.

However, the chase of the first Mysterio mask locks readers in. The feel is tense as one wrong move could destroy everything. This builds into a direct full page splash redefining the lead’s role. Its’ fallout slowly reveals Rey’s new stat quo. Readers will be pleased with the action and the final image kickstarting the new era of hero in the Luchaverse.

Diego Simone gives Tinieblas Jr. a more eerie tone as he descends Las Vegas. Within a few panels, the unsettling feel quickly grows as Tinieblas Jr. begins his hunt. The full page image of his discovery of creatures jumps off the page. The art moves things swiftly into another flashback before quickly resuming.

Simone’s vision of Koreshan City is filled with despair and trouble. Solid fighting is thrown into the panels before a switch of direction. The final act is short but leaves readers with a full page close that will have them talking.

FINAL POINT: 8.7

With elements of adventure and mystery abound, the Luchaverse debuts on a strong foundation that will only grow forward from here. Solid writing and energetic art keep readers engaged as their combination of wrestling and heroes delivers a monster win. This universe has all the makings for becoming a new showcase of the immortals at the LCS and beyond.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Luchaverse: Catalyst #1. Thanks for reading.

HARD STYLE JUICE #3 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay Points!

For this entry, the mystery of Rey Castro’s death continues to lock readers in. His sister Mona is determined to solve the case. A big gamble is taken at the end of last issue. Will it pay off or is the show over before it began?

HARD STYLE JUICE #3 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals) looks to take things into the dangerous world of Deathmatch Wrestling!

Let’s take a closer look ringside at all the action!

HARD STYLE JUICE #3 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

Ramonita “Mona” Castro is a risk taker. Going into the family business of pro wrestling isn’t easy. Choosing that path to solve who killed her brother is a whole other story.

Last issue, Mona chose to challenge Gianni Thunders (a possible suspect) “to a f&^%$#!g DEATH MATCH!”* CREDIT: Emil Jay (GCW Announcer) After starting with a sequence with Mona confronting “Burly Bill”, the action gets rolling.

Mona is ready for the challenge as Gianni isn’t taking her too seriously. One head chair shot changes things quickly. If readers are not used to the deathmatch style, they will become familiar quick. The search for answers drives Mona to cross some lines. When the pinfall happens, there is no turning back.

Mona is forced to pivot directions in the bloody aftermath. With little options left, Mona appears to have one last place to go. Upon arrival, trouble finds her very quickly. Judging by the final page, a heartbreaking break may have happened…but at what cost?

HARD STYLE JUICE #3 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

HARD STYLE JUICE #3 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

McCormack brings out the pent-up frustration and anger building in the first few chapter in Mona’s match. Going into business for herself, Mona transforms into a vengeful combatant. The writing never steers away from the rage fueling her actions. Its’ fallout strikes a cord with her dad for many reasons.

Knowing what she’s done to the business itself is costly. Losing her to the path of revenge is another loss. King Castro comes across more of a businessman than father in this chapter. the lack of compassion leads Mona into a new combustible path. Pacing leads her and the audience into a confrontation of truth she may not be ready for. It’s a solid build that lights the match for an unescapable finale.

One thing to keep in mind, Deathmatch Wrestling is an acquired taste for fans. López-Ortiz and Moore present the style in a very accessible and pleasing way. The match between Mona and Gianni holds nothing back. It brings out the best and brutal side of the genre. With a half panel introducing the weapons, the tone switches to an ultra-violent manner with the art. It mirrors Mona’s rage as she shakes down Gianni for answers.

The emotional ride is one that readers will be locked in for. Post-match, there is a range of reactions Mona goes through. The art features them in a manner that takes the story out of the ring and back to where it all began: at home. The closing moments drift into some areas before crashing back to Earth with a final panel that screams volumes with little words. Another amazing job on the visuals.

FINAL POINT: 8.8

Mona’s quest for vengeance leads her into a familiar and dangerous realm. McCormack’s writing brings out the pain through the violent backdrop. López-Ortiz, Moore and Hopkins spotlight the depths of Mona’s pain as the incredible art will make readers want to pull up a ringside seat for what happens here. This story needs to be in your collections ASAP.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Hard Style Juice #3. Thanks for reading!

HARD STYLE JUICE #2 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS)

Welcome to an all new edition of Parlay Points!

For this entry, we are heading into the second fall of a championship story. The mysterious death of Rey Castro has shaken his sister. The levels Mona is willing to go looking for answers is huge. The question now becomes what will she do when she unlocks the truth?

HARD STYLE JUICE #2 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals) dives further into the complex world of the Castros.

Let’s get ringside and see how things shape up now.

HARD STYLE JUICE #2 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

Ramonita “Mona” Castro is on a mission. Her brother Rey dies in an accident inside the squared circle. Mona knows this is no accident and seeks out to find the truth.

Mona tracks down “Burly Bill”, who was last in the ring with Rey. In the interrogation, Bill becomes unresponsive. Mona becomes frustrated and touches her forehead. It is no coincidence of the place of contact.

The story flashes back to when Mona was in school. At lunch, other students are gossiping about her and her brother. They claim how wrestling is fake. They also say her brother really isn’t dead. Mona snaps the tab of her soda can and blades her forehead. She winds up covering the rude students in her blade job.

Being suspended for her actions, Mona confronts her father. “King” Castro is happy she defended her brother but advises her to be better. When Rey’s “accident” is mentioned, Mona echoes it was no accident.

The tone shifts to a more downward note as a “Past Due” notice is discovered. It is revealed after Rey’s death, KCPW is struggling to survive. An idea is thrown out to try saving it but one not without a great weight.

Readers watch as a new star appears to enter the world of professional wrestling. The story time jumps a bit but not without great cause. Mona’s quest for the truth takes another turn as a suspect emerges. The closing act features Mona taking matters into her own hands once again. This time, the final image sets the stage for a very different style of investigating. “Business has just picked up.”

HARD STYLE JUICE #2 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

HARD STYLE JUICE #2 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

McCormick never let the family aspect stray too far as the main point of the story. Mona’s new persona is given a proper origin. Knowing how fiercely she will defend her family is arguably her strongest attribute. The initial banter with her and her dad ranges from overbearing to loving. Seeing the sacrifices Mona makes will instantly make her a face in front of the readers.

The time jump is ideal for where the story needs to go next. Mona’s growth in character benefits from the move. She is shown to be tougher emotionally while retaining her anger over Rey. This leads into a great closing act. Mona’s parting words carry that same fire heading into the next chapter. Strong work.

López-Ortiz and Moore never shy away from the “realness” of the Castro family profession. The sequence of blading works on a few levels. Non wrestling fans won’t get it and arguably will be squeamish. Ones who know will appreciate the details put into the scene.

The in-ring action later is electric yet again. The imagery locks in the intensity of the in-ring work. Paired with the post-match fallout, the panels give a vivid picture of the workings of the business. Prime example is when two wrestlers are talking their match out via Full page with staged panels. This all leads to a solid ending page where the lettering of Hopkins steals the show. This will be a huge win for fans.

FINAL POINT: 8.9

Mona’s quest for justice leads into a new direction with the latest chapter of HSJ. McCormick’s writing leans directly into the family dynamic. López-Ortiz balances the insides and outs of the business with exceptional artistry. Make sure to tag yourself into this series on NCBD!

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on Hard Style Juice #2. Thanks for reading.

HARD STYLE JUICE #1 (COMIXOLOGY ORIGINALS)

Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay Points!

For this entry, we’re checking out a brand new title on Comixology Originals. The world of Pro-Wrestling has always had a place in comics. The WWE dipping in here and there. Do A Powerbomb by Daniel Warren Johnson. Benjamin J Grimm actually wrestling in the Marvel Universe. The relationship between the two mediums are closer than some might think. Now entering the ring is a story that hides a deeper mystery in-between the action.

HARD STYLE JUICE #1 by Clay McCormack (Batman White Knight Presents: Red Hood), Ricardo López-Ortiz (Black Panther vs Deadpool), Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals) welcomes readers into the dangerous and thrilling world of KCPW.

Let’s not wait for the hot tag and get in the ring to check this out!

HARD STYLE JUICE #1 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

It’s Fight Night! There’s a conversation in the back while the action unfolds in the ring. The promotor is pulling a “The House is Light, brutha” on a performer. With money being an issue, the promoter offers a way to make more money. He wants the wrestler to handle a problem due to his reputation.

As he goes to his car, readers quickly sees it’s been vandalized and robbed. Suddenly, the wrestler is struck down with a barbed-wire baseball bat. Wielding it is someone claiming to be a ghost.

The story jumps to the past. A packed arena is at a fever pitch. Working a merch table is Ramonita "Mona" Castro. Standing in the ring is "King" Castro. Castro is announcing the KCPW World Champion: REY CASTRO!

Post match, it’s revealed Rey is on the verge of getting a major federation contract. With one more match left, The tensions are raised in KCPW.

What happens next spirals the story into a completely new direction. Readers see a moment that turns everything on its axis. The closing moments ties everything back leaving fans with a question that will haunt them until the next chapter. Get ready as this saga has a few more falls to go before declaring a finish.

HARD STYLE JUICE #1 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

HARD STYLE JUICE #1 by Clay McCormack, Ricardo López-Ortiz, Heather Moore, DC Hopkins, and Jasmine Amiri (Comixology Originals)

McCormack sets the early stages of a mystery that shows no holds barred. The dynamic of the Castro family is complex at its’ core. Mona and Rey’s bond is a connecting point to the audience. It carries the story into the latter portion of the book to its shocking ending.

As someone who’s been around the behind the scenes of an indie fed, the writing captures the good and bad reality. It gives more weight to the deeper mystery at the core of this drama. Once readers arrive at the close, McCormack bookends events with a solid ending point. It will catch readers with a hold that they won’t be able to escape from until the overall finale.

López-Ortiz, Moore, and Hopkins give fans electric pro-wrestling images in-between the drama. Right from the opening page, the art establishes the fast paced in-ring work. It also catches “the Ghost” fighting “Burly Bill” later. The lettering for “SUPER KICK” mixed with the bright coloring pops the panel.

The near full page introduction of Rey Castro comes off like a monster event. It plays into the pro-wrestling theme perfectly as being larger than life. The ensuing drama gives a balance to Rey’s “day job”. The moments with Mona only add to the tragic closing act. With a show-stopping final image, the art will have readers talking after the final bell hits.

FINAL POINT: 8.8

The family drama of the Castro family jumps off the top rope and connects for a huge win. With fine writing calling the action on the page, the art team brings exceptional imagery fitting for the pro-wrestling landscape. After the closing page, readers will want this series to be their new fight forever.

Hit me up on ODPHpod social media and let me know your thoughts on HARD STYLE JUICE #1. Thanks for reading.

DO A POWERBOMB #7 (IMAGE COMICS)

Welcome to an all new edition of Parlay Points, the comic book book to the ODPH Podcast. For this entry, we’re checking out the conclusion of one of the best mini-series of 2022. DO A POWERBOMB #7 by Dainel Warren Johnson (Murder Falcon, Beta Ray Bill), Mike Spicer and Rus Wooton for Image Comics hits the final bell on a story that has combined the worlds of comics and pro wrestling. Each issue has felt like an event. The series has been an emotional roller coaster while building towards the main event. Let’s not waste any more time and RING THE BELL to kick this blog off, shall we?

DO A POWERBOMB #7 - On Sale Decemeber 7th

Creative: Dainel Warren Johnson, Mike Spicer and Rus Wooton

Photo Credit: Image Comics

*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***

In case you’re new to this comic, the story centers around Lona Steelrose. Lona is the daughter of Yua Steelrose. On a fateful match vs. Cobrasun, Yua is fatally injured when Cobrasun is performing a move and slips. 10 Years later, Lona wants to become a pro wrestler, determined to follow in her mother’s footsteps. Her family doesn’t want her to do it, but when approached by Willard Necroton, a necromancer with a proposal Lon can’t say no to: enter and win my tournament and her mother will be brought back to life!

This becomes a no-brainer for Lona as she enters the “Deathlyfe Tag Team tourney”. There’s one hangup: Lona needs a partner. The solution becomes reconnecting with the man who wrestled Lona in her final match…. COBRA SUN!!!! Since we last saw Cobrasun, the masked wrester has now dabbled into the pro wrestling deathmatch scene. When Necroton presents the tourney idea to Cobrasun, he’s reluctant to take on Lona as a partner, but does. Readers are hit with a HUGE reveal when Cobrasun is revealed to be Lona’s father and Yua’s husband!

DO A POWERBOMB #7 - On Sale Decemeber 7th

Creative: Dainel Warren Johnson, Mike Spicer and Rus Wooton

Photo Credit: Image Comics

From this point, the pair enters the supernatural tournament. Readers are taken thru one hell of a range of emotions as the pair fights their way to get to the main event! Much in the vein of great pro wrestling (LONG LIVE GCW), there are swerves thrown in the story but there’s nothing short of the incredible action going on between the ropes. Through some luck and timing, the pair winds up winning the tag team titles after initially losing the tourney. Unfortunately, Necroton’s promise turns out to be false as he can’t bring Yua back. He does enter one final option that can though. The pair must now face GOD in a 2 on 1 handicapped match! Get ready for the ultimate main event!

This issue kicks off at Heaven’s Gate Pro Wrestling with a packed arena waiting for this main event! From the opening bell, Lona and Cobrasun are giving their all against the “architect of creation”. Readers are in for an intense battle as the pair is literally pulling out all the stops to win this bout. The action is non-stop and pulls from many styles of pro-wrestling. Can the pull off the impossible? How will they hold up against GOD? Readers won’t be expecting the outcome but trust me when I say, they will be more than satisfied with the ending. The issue will leave readers will a final image that will carry them forward post match.

DO A POWERBOMB #7 - On Sale Decemeber 7th

Creative: Dainel Warren Johnson, Mike Spicer and Rus Wooton

Photo Credit: Image Comics

Incredible issue and series from start to finish. One thing Daniel Warren Johnson has become well known for is the big action and big emotions from his books. Do a Powerbomb lived up to that label and then some. As an avid pro-wrestling fan (Check out the ODPH or 607 TWS podcasts for proof), Johnson’s attention to the wrestling styles made for some fantastic visuals. Mixing in Lucha Libre, Strong Style, and Deathmatch to name a few, Johnson demonstrates how wrestling can literally tell a story. Seeing great tag teams like ORANGABANG & The Knights of Rhyne made for some memorable matches. This issue captures the “big figt feel” as the tag team faces off in a match they shoudn’t be in but readers are fully invested on every near fall till it’s conclusion. Johnson books a match that lives well up to the hype.

However, the theme that will hook readers (regardless of their wrestling fandom) is Lona’s determination to get her mother back. Johnson crafts Lona’s quest with sheer determination and will. Readers can’t help but pull for her and Cobrasun to win. Johnson also keeps the surprises coming and this issue was no exception. Each issue shows how much Lona puts on her shoulders as she strives to win the tourney. The match’s conclusion will throw some readers off but it nails the landing for the series. The final moments deliver on tying up the journey at hand and the final image is guaranteed to hit all the emotional buttons on every reader who sees it. Johnson doesn’t let the action sway away from this. The whole series has been about various stages of feeling and never misses that mark to close on.

DO A POWERBOMB #7 - On Sale Decemeber 7th

Creative: Dainel Warren Johnson, Mike Spicer and Rus Wooton

Photo Credit: Image Comics

FINAL POINT: Do A Powerbomb #7 caps off a series that defines how emotional the world of pro wrestling can be. Johnson, Spicer & Wooton present readers with a story of perseverance while pressing forward in dealing with loss. This only comes together with the spectacular storytelling and thrilling art that comes with any project with Daniel Warren Johnson’s name attached to it. Highest possible recommendation this week. Make sure you get to the Local Comic Shop and pick this issue up

Hit me up on ODPH Social media and let me know what you thought of Do A Powerbomb #7. Thanks fr reading.