The war between Darkseid and the remains of Earth, vampires and humans is raging in DC vs. vampires. Standing in his way is Mr. Miracle, who only wants to hang on to his child and leave him alone. That being said, only Darkseid’s family can kill him, and he is the only hope of a good man. DC vs. Vampires: World War V #10 is a tense issue that achieves its own mini story arc and builds stakes.
DC vs. Vampire: World War V #10 opens in a coastal city. Mr. Miracle steals a cyborg ship and seeks evacuation, but soon meets Ghostmaker and Raven. He avoided capture for a while, and finally found out that vampires and humans were working together.
The subplots that provide satisfying results by the end include Batman (his costume is Ras Algur) and Green Lantern (aka Alfred), who are advised by a baby with Deadman in it. If that sounds weird, that’s true, but it works thanks to the long-term accumulation of this extremely vast series. They need to organize some magical users, and the results require Batman breaks, Damians and fun writing.
Alfred and Batman steal the show in this issue.
Credit: DC Comics
Generally speaking, writer Matthew Rosenberg gets a lot of kicks from the dialogue. Mr. Miracle doesn’t particularly care about the war rage that suits the darkness and fate of humans and vampires that tell him. Levitty is based on the scope of what is happening.
Rosenberg and Otto Schmidt continue their fantastic job of meaning a huge cast and multiple subplots. Certainly, stories like this have subplots that just add a little bit of action or delay to the inevitable, but the number of characters they pack into every problem is impressive. Fans who love the character may feel a little at times (poor Beast Boy), but it’s impressive how many characters are featured.
The action and gore remain high and leaned towards the horror aspect of the series. More importantly, he will keep you interested in heavy dialogue scenes and bouncing back at different angles to make things interesting. There is a big death that will take you off guard, and Schmidt makes you feel it.
DC vs. Vampires: World War V #10 continues to do an impressive balancing act of horror, humor and superhero drama series. The vast cast leads to some pacing stumbling, but this issue offers a chapter of tense rewards in the brutal and strange parts.
‘DC vs. Vampire: World War V’ #10 leaning against humor and big shock
DC vs. Vampire: World War I V #10
DC vs. Vampires: World War V #10 continues to do an impressive balancing act of horror, humor and superhero drama series. The vast cast leads to some pacing stumbling, but this issue offers a chapter of tense rewards in the brutal and strange parts.
Mr. Miracle’s Arc adds emotional depth and tension
Use humor skillfully to balance fear and behavior
Otto Schmidt’s art is consistent and visually persuasive for the big ensemble scene
A huge cast means that some fan favorite characters will be shortened
Some subplots feel like fillers and distractions from the main action
