AppSlappy #142: Waiting the big wait

mzl.acqwjiwk.320x480-75Scott and Eric have returned to bring AppSlappy goodness to your ear canal so that you too can contribute to the hoarding of apps. As promised, the crew is continuing to work on being able to bring you a live show. And hopefully we will all experience the awesome sauce together.

Scott’s Reviews
1001 Attempts - $0.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad – Highly Recommended
Book Worms Heroes - Free Universal on iPhone and iPad – Recommended

Eric’s Reviews
Fish Out of Water$0.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - Recommended
Trakor DJ $19.99 on iPad – Recommended

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Digital Ink: Review of “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe” (DC Comics)

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Every Wednesday, Chris Renshaw from the “Obsessive Comics Disorder” website (http://ocdcast.com) reviews some digital comics that you can read on your iOS devices via the comixology app. Do you have any suggestions? Feel free to email him at chris@ocdcast.com.

Surprisingly, on this holiday week, it was hard for me to find a comic to review. With all of the patriotical superheroes out there, I was sure to stumple upon some Captain America sales or something. Yet, there were not many sales on Comixology that I could see, and the few that there were either didn’t appeal to me or I already had those comics. However, there was a new #1 by DC Comics this past week that I knew many people would be interested in, given the recent sacking of the “Masters of the Universe” on the Nerdtacular live Film Sack. That comic is the new He-Man series by James Robinson/Philip Tan/Ruy Jose. I recognize two out of these three names, and have been impressed by their work in the past, so I downloaded this issue to give it a try. A disclaimer up front though – I am not a He-Man fan. The only TV series I saw was the revised 2000′s He-Man series, other than that I know next to nothing about the series.

This story takes place in what appears to be a post He-Man Eternia. From the first couple of pages, we are given the impression that something has happened in the past that stopped Adam from being He-Man — in fact he has no recollection of being the Prince of Eternia, let alone He-Man. He spends his life in a forest chopping down trees and taking care of his sick father, whose mumblings of a royal lifestyle are dismissed by Adam as his father becoming more and more senile. Yet, one day, events happen where Adam discovers he must journey away from the forest, to what he has no idea. Certain evil characters, however, do not wish for him to complete this journey…

First of all, my primary concern with this issue is that it does not start off strong. Here we have a major property from people’s childhoods — one who has not had a decent prescence as of late — and the issue does not take the time to lay out a better foundation of the setting and characters. There are quite possibly a large number of people out there who have only a vague sense of what “He-Man” is. This isn’t a book from IDW or Dark Horse where people are picking it up because they are familiar with the concept – this is DC Comics we are talking about! People are going to see this on the shelf next to Batman and Superman and going to pick it up out of curiousity — and the introduction of the book just falls flat! We spend the first part of the book learning about how boring Adam’s life is nowadays.

Secondly, not only does the introduction not hold up, the rest of the book feels just so mediocre. Adam gets into one fight with one of Skeletor’s minions, which along with Adam finding out he seems to be more skilled than he thought (go figure!) takes up all of the book. The only reason I would be complelled to buy more issues of this series is to find out what happened to He-Man. As far as the artwork goes, it is pretty well but does not make up for what the story lacks. It is of the caliber you expect of a DC Comics title.

CONCLUSION: Does not have the Power! (Sorry, had to make the joke). In my opinion, a good comic book is one where you get to the end and you are frustrated that the book is over so soon. You want the next issue because you want the awesomeness to continue – not because you aren’t getting anything so far and you are just waiting for “the good parts”. If you are a He-Man fan, I’m sure you will be picking this up, but if not, I would say that there are much better books to put your money on.

What are you guys reading right now? Tell me in the comments below, or email me at chris@ocdcast.com. I’d love to do a reader focused column in the future!

Digital Ink: Review of “Atomic Robo, Dogs of War Part 1″

Every Wednesday, Chris Renshaw from the “Obsessive Comics Disorder” website (http://ocdcast.com) reviews some digital comics that you can read on your iOS devices via the comixology app.  Do you have any suggestions?  Feel free to email him at chris@ocdcast.com.

Hello everyone, I’m back with another comic review for you guys.  This week, I noticed that Comixology was having an Atomic Robo sale.  Atomic Robo is a comic about a sentient robot built by Nicola Tesla.  Its a fun series that encorporates action, science, and humor all together and does it rather well.  Each story sits by itself, meaning that you can pick up any Part 1 issue and not be left in the dark.  I have the first story in Trade Paperback and I love it.  I’ve been meaning to pick up more stories, so I bought the first issue of the second storyline “Dogs of War”. As a robot, Atomic Robo (or just Robo for short) doesn’t really age.  Therefore, the author has all sorts of time periods starting with Tesla to tell stories involving Robo. 

In this series, it is the middle of World War 2 and Robo is helping the allied forces out, attempting to take out some advanced mechs that the German forces have gotten their hands on.  It is a job too big for soldiers to deal with, requiring a spine of steel, so Robo is dropped in; encountering a few surprises along the way.

I love this book.  I do not know why I haven’t gotten more Atomic Robo stories because they are all so great.  It is a book that you can’t take too seriously; if you do you will think it’s just dumb.  If you let yourself enjoy it though, you will discover a very entertaining comic.  Along with the amazing story the artwork blends itself to the comedic tone of the series, showing how out of place Robo can look sometimes.

IN CONCLUSION: Buy this book.  If you don’t quite get it at first, buy another issue or two and see if it grabs you.  The whole story is on sale today for $4, so how can you turn that down?!?

Got any other comic recommendations?  Am I just too much of a fanboy?  Leave a comment below or send me an email at chris@ocdcast.com.

Digital Ink: Review of “Star Trek: The Next Generation/Doctor Who #1″

Every Wednesday, Chris Renshaw from the “Obsessive Comics Disorder” website (http://ocdcast.com) reviews some digital comics that you can read on your iOS devices via the comixology app.  Do you have any suggestions?  Feel free to email him at chris@ocdcast.com.

This week, I’m venturing back into IDW territory and talking about another licensed property book.  When I heard that there was going to be a crossover between Doctor Who and Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG), I was really excited to read that book.  While I’ve read many people on the internet poopoo this book, I am a big fan of both of these properties and a one off story where the two universes come together sounded epic.  If this book took place in one of the main books or the other it would be stupid, but I can get behind a stand-alone “What if” story.

In the first issue, we start off in the Star Trek universe, with a planet being attacked from what appears to be the Borg.  As the leaders of the planet await a Starfleet task force to help them; they notice another species among the Borg.  They aren’t sure what they are, but us Doctor Who fans recognize them as the Cybermen.  We then switch to the Doctor Who job and in classic fashion find the Doctor in the middle of an adventure being chased.  After exposing some aliens hidden in plain sight, the Doctor and his compainions jump back into the Tardis and experience a rough ride, supposedly landing in the 1800′s on Earth.  Yet, the appearance of a certain TNG character leads us to believe that this is not the case.

I know I shouldn’t be surprised, but I was very disappointed in this issue.  I think the premise of the story is great: the Borg and the Cybermen have very similar philosophies and I can see them joining forces.  However, too much time is spent setting up the story in this issue.  The two “crews” if you will, don’t even really meet each other in this issue.  Half of the story is spent tieing up the end of the Doctor’s previous adventure — was that really needed?  I’m buying the book to find out THIS adventure.  Unless that story comes into play later on down the line, it was totally not needed.

One problem I have with mini-series/events in comics is the timing between issues.  Too often, a series will take too long setting things up and then wrap up the story super quickly.  Or, they will move fast through a bunch of the setup, and then stall out on some of the boring dialogue or something else over the course of 4 or 5 issues.  This first issue is definitely the former.  Outside of my love of the two universes, there is not too much here to want me to buy the remaining issues.

My problems with the story aside, the art in this book really is quite wonderful.  Both sets of characters look very much like their on-screen counterparts.  Not many of the TNG crew is shown in this issue, so I can’t wait to see how they are depicted in future issues.

IN CONCLUSION: Wait on picking this up.  It’s definitely not worth the price at $2.99, and there’s no telling how the rest of the story is going to go.  I’d wait until the price drops or the rest of the story plays out before downloading this.

Do you agree?  Are their other Doctor Who or Star Trek comics that I should be reading instead?  Send me an email at chris@ocdcast.com.

Digital Ink: Review of “Transformers: Autocracy”

Every Wednesday, Chris Renshaw from the “Obsessive Comics Disorder” website (http://ocdcast.com) reviews some digital comics that you can read on your iOS devices via the comixology app.  Do you have any suggestions?  Feel free to email him at chris@ocdcast.com.

Okay, this week I am definitely breaking away from the norm and reviewing a comic from IDW.  That would be the digital-only comic “Transformers: Autocracy” by Chris Metzen (yes, THAT Chris Metzen), Flint Dille, and Livio Ramondelli (IDW, $0.99 per issue).  It’s a 12 issue series that comes out every other Wednesday.  I fell behind a couple of issues due to work and sat down yesterday to get caught up on issues 9 and 10.

Here’s the story: before he became Optimus Prime, the leader of the Autobots; he was just Orion Pax, a solider of Iacon sworn to hold up the law of the Autobots.  Yet, under the rule of Zeta Prime, the various robots have become oppressed and Orion is put into a position where he has to question everything that he has stood for up to this point.  Along the way, his path crosses with the rebel fighters known as “Decepticons” and their leader Megatron.

I LOVE this book.  It is everything that I want to read in a comic and so much more.  Of course it doesn’t help that I do like the Transformers and what IDW has done with them.  I anxiously await each issue as it comes out and even though it is a 12 issue series it has not skipped a beat yet.  I can’t wait to see where this comic ends up and see if it leads to anything else down the line.  In addition, the $0.99 price point for each issue is my must buy price for digital comics; honestly I feel like all digital comics need to be at that price.

The artwork in this book is stunning as well.  Going along with the theme of the book, we see a very dark Cybertron.  In the grand settings of the Autobot leaders, it is very shinny and new, yet in the grungy towns of the oppressed robots the setting changes to represent this drastic difference in class.  Don’t expect the Transformers to be exactly the way you remember them, as these are their Cybertronian forms (before they ever went to Earth).

IN CONCLUSION: Buy this comic.  Now!  Even if the Transformers are not your thing, at 99 cents you don’t have anything to lose by trying out an issue or two.  Didn’t enjoy it?  Have any other good Transformers comics I should read?  (I’ve already read All Hail Megatron by the way.)  Let me know in the comments below, or feel free to see me an email at chris@ocdcast.com.

Digital Ink: Review of “Fables #1″

 

It’s Wednesday everyone, Happy New Comics Day!  Chris here again from Obsessive Comics Disorder (http://ocdcast.com).  While I, like many of you, wait patiently to get into Diablo III, I thought I’d post this week’s comics review – “Fables #1″ by Bill Willingham/Lan Medina/Steve Leialoha (Vertigo, $0.99).  Okay, now I know that *technically* Vertigo is a part of DC Comics and I said I’d review something other than that, but given the popularity of Fables and the fact that A) I hadn’t read it yet, and B) they had a big sale on the comics this week, and C) it isn’t your standard Batman/Superman or other super hero comic book that you guys would let it slide.  Am I right?

Fables is all about what happens with “Happily Ever After” meets reality.  All of the characters from various children’s fairy tales seem to be involved in the story, where these characters have been evicted from their fantasy homes and forces to live in New York City.  Those that can’t pass as “normal” get magical disguises so that they can move through the city without raising any suspicion.  In fact, this is the number one rule of the “Fables” — as they call themselves — that they must not reveal the existence of themselves to the normal world.  Therefore, a small underground government has propped up to take care of matters between the various characters.  We get glances into what these characters would be like if they had to face the harsh realities that we deal with everyday.

When I finished this book, I was very conflicted.  I have heard from years from many different people how good this book is.  Yet, from just reading the first issue, there really isn’t much here to pull me in.  A story is set up involving the disappearance/possible murder of Snow White’s sister Rose Red, but I am not pulled into the storyline as much as I feel I should be.  Honestly, if it were not for the reputation of this book, I wouldn’t bother picking up any more issues of this book.  I find myself wondering more about how these characters got to this point than what is going on now.  If the comic had started with some of that storyline, I would have been more drawn to this.

As far as the art goes, it seems to blend nicely with the storyline.  By that I mean while this is a story set in modern times, you get this fairy tale-like experience while reading the book.  Even though I was reading this on my iPad, I could see this comic getting made into a giant leather-bound book.  I’m not the biggest fan of this art style, but it seems to work in this book.  It would just take me awhile to get used to it.

My Rating: 2 out of 5.  As of right now, this comic seems to suffer from the problem of being over hyped.  Coming in fresh, I just do not see what people see in this comic.  However, I am willing to give this a couple more issues to see if it grabs me.  Yet, as the first issue is still only 99 cents, anyone out there should give this a try.  As always, if you have any opinions, feel free to comment below or send me an email at chris@ocdcast.com

Digital Ink: Review of “Earth 2″

Hello everyone! Chris Renshaw here again from Obsessive Comics Disorder (http://ocdcast.com) with a new digital comic to share with you guys.

A bit of a disclaimer up front: I am a HUGE DC Comics fan. I’ve been in love with all the great stuff that has come out of the new 52 push that they have been doing since September. I do love other comics as well, so I will make sure that next week’s pick will not be from DC. However, this weekend I happened to be at my local comic book store for Free Comic Book Day and one of the titles that caught my eye was “Earth 2″ (DC Comics, $3.99) by James Robinson, Nicola Scott, and Trevor Scott. I decided to wait on it for the time being, as I mentally added it to my “I’ll wait a month and get it for a $1 cheaper on comixology” list. Yet, for the rest of the day it kept nagging at me, so I decided to take the plunge and buy it early on comixology for the regular $3.99 price.

With the “Second Wave” of the new 52, DC cancelled a few books that were not doing so well and replaced them with different titles. Two of these titles, Earth 2 and World’s Finest bring back the idea of the multiverse to this newly rebooted DC Universe. “Earth 2″ is the designation for another Earth in another universe that is much like our own (if you remember the TV show “Sliders”….it’s kinda like that). The book titled Earth 2 gives a look into this world and its superheroes. The book starts out with a storyline much like the first arc of the new “Justice League” book by Geoff Johns and Jim Lee; with demons from Apokolips coming to take over our world. In the main DCU, this is what brought the Justice League together in the first place. For Earth 2, Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman have been around for quite awhile before meeting these forces. By the end of the book, circumstances arise where a new breed of superheroes may be on the horizon, yet these characters may be familiar to those that have read DC books before.

From the beginning, I loved this book. It has everything that you would want from an alternate universe tale: characters that we are used to acting from a slightly altered point of view. For instance, we get to see a very touching moment between Batman and his Robin (who in this universe is his daughter). Yes, it is very cliche, but at the same time it isn’t because it’s Batman we are talking about, and we aren’t given the chance to see his fatherly side come out that much.
In addition, the story doesn’t spend an eternity dragging out the Apokolips War – if you want that you can read “Justice League”. No, the story quickly wraps up and proceeds to introduce us to these “new” characters – which is the most interesting part to me. A bit of back story: in the past, the entire premise of Earth 2 has been that it is where the “Justice Society” lives – heroes like the FIRST Flash and Green Lantern (Jay Garrick and Alan Scott). Earth 2 originally was DC’s way of retconning what happened to those heroes and why we have a Barry Allen Flash and a Jay Garrick Flash. When DC smashed all of their universes together, these older heroes were now the Golden Age heroes who would later inspire the Modern Age heroes such as Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman.

Now, we are given a story where these heroes do not even emerge until after the War is over and the planet is hoping for a new wave of heroes to emerge. It’s a twist on the characters and idea behind Earth 2 and in my opinion it’s executed very well. It serves as a mirror counterpiece to Johns/Lee’s Justice League, with the art and style looking very similar, especially when dealing with the extra-terrestrial look of the Parademons from Apokolips.
My Rating: 4.5 out of 5. Just about anyone can pick up this book and have a good understanding of this book. Those that have read Justice League will see the connections to that book and those who have been fans of the Justice Society will want to see the new take on these characters. As always though, it might be worth waiting a few weeks until this book drops to $2.99 — depends on if saving a dollar is more important than reading the book now.

Am I wrong? Let me know; either in the comments below, via email (chris@ocdcast.com), or send me a message via Twitter (@ChrisTheProf).

Digital Ink: Review of “Zero Hour: Crisis in Time”

Hello everyone!  I’m Chris Renshaw, and I run a blog called “Obsessive Comics Disorder” (ocdcast.com) where I have various podcast/videos about all the geeky things that I am into.  Being a big comics fan, one of my favorite apps on iOS is the Comixology app.  So each week, I’m going to bring you guys a new review of a comic (or series) that you guys can find on that app.  This week, I’m talking about the 1994 DC Comics event “Zero Hour: Crisis in Time”, written by Dan Jurgens and inked by Jerry Ordway (5 issues, $1.99 each).

Now understand, I’ve only been into comics for the past couple of years, so I did not originally read this event when it was originally published.  About a month or so ago, Comixology ran a sale where each issue was only $0.99.  I am an avid DC Comics fan, and  I’ve been working on reading DC’s major event books (Crisis on Infinite Earths, etc.), so I picked them all up.  There are five issues, labeled Zero Hour #0 – 4.

Around the DC Universe, strange occurrences start to happen.  People from alternate timelines begin to show up, confusing the heroes of the DCU.  Gradually, they begin to learn that something (or someone….) has disrupted the timestream, causing temporal disruptions that are eating way the past and the future, working its way to destroy all of time and reality!  Our heroes must work together to figure out what is going on and find a way to stop it before all of time and space is undone!

This was my biggest problem with this comic, as the way Comixology presented them, the issues started with #0 and ran through issue #4.  So I opened up #0 and began reading.  I was immediately confused by what I was reading, as I seemed to be jumping into the middle of a story.  I couldn’t understand anything that was going on.  By the time that I got to #2, I realized that events were happening in reverse order.  At first, I thought maybe that as a time travel event, this was on purpose.  However, after looking up the event online, I found out that the books were supposed to be read in reverse; starting at Issue #4 and “counting down” to Issue #0.  When I went back and read the books in the correct order, suddenly the story made more sense.

Just like any story dealing with time travel, there are a bunch of minor details that get overlooked.  As the “disruptions” destroy parts of the timeline, characters from the past and future that have been moved to the present blink out of existence.  Yet, if the past was vanishing, ALL our heroes would be gone.  Other than that, the story is fairly straight forward (if you read it the correct way….).  Just like any DC event, obviously the more you know about DC characters, the more you get out of their events, as you will recognize and understand more characters and their decisions that someone who hasn’t read many DC books.

As someone who has gotten started reading modern day books, it’s always weird going back and reading books from the past.  With the advent of computers, modern artists have completely new tools that older artists did not have.  Not only that, but every era has new “styles” of art that are popular, and reading outside of the style you are accustomed to can be interesting.  The art is this book is fairly similar to others I’ve read from the 90′s.  There are a few times when the artist gets a little crazy with some of the coloring, but otherwise the artwork is pretty standard and gets the story across, which is crucial in a complex story such as this.

My Rating: 3 out of 5.  It’s a standard DC event, used to correct various “continuity errors” that came up during the 90′s.  If you are a DC comics fan, you’ll enjoy seeing all your favorite characters.  If not, you might be a little thrown off by the story.  Just make sure that you read it in the right order….

Have you read this event?  Do you agree/disagree?  Do you have suggestions of other comics for me to review?  Leave a comment below, or email me at chris@ocdcast.com.  Also, you can follow me on twitter at twitter.com/ChrisTheProf.