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  • Indie Adorbz: TAKIO

    Indie Adorbz features WNI contributor Benjamin Bailey and his four-year-old son, Milo, reviewing all-ages comic books. Milo’s reaction is left unaltered and unedited. 

    TAKIO

    Benjamin
    Takio is good, and it oughta be, seeing how it is created by two of the biggest stars in the comic book industry. Brain Michael Bendis and Michael Avon Oeming have crafted a fun, cute (yes, cute), little superhero tale that anyone and everyone can should enjoy. Frankly, more superhero books should be following it’s formula. There’s action, but not violence. It’s funny without being (overly) crass. There’s no skimpy costumes, graphic language or bloody deaths. It’s character driven, instead of worrying about merely jumping from action sequence to action sequence. Read more

    Indie Adorbz: RUST

    Indie Adorbz features WNI contributor Benjamin Bailey and his four-year-old son, Milo, reviewing all-ages comic books. Milo’s reaction is left unaltered and unedited. 

    RUST:  Visitor in the Field

    Benjamin
    Rust: Visitor in the Field is the kind of book that feels familiar, in a good way. It feels like the books you read in school, the tales of simpler times when people had simple beliefs. It’s about a farm and the young man that struggles to keep it afloat.

    It also happens to feature giant robots and jetpacks.

    The story takes place in a world very much like our own, in a time after a great war. It could be the United States in the 1920s. Only, in the world of Rust, wars were won by armies of robots, killing machines that turned the tides of battle. It’s like a fable, a twist on a story we all know. Read more