![]() ![]() ![]() In the end, we’re left with a fairly shallow story that left me fairly cold. One problem with this issue is that there wasn’t much effort put into making the reader care about the main character.Īnother problem is that there is a fairly obvious plot twist that happens at the end, and anyone who has ever seen a movie or TV show dealing with people who can see the future will know what is going to happen 15 pages before the end. One of the things that made the first series stand out was that while the stories may have super-powered elements in them, they were really about the characters in those stories. Volume 2 Issue #1 deals with a young woman who thinks she may be able to see into the future through her dreams, and decides she has to try to save someone she saw in one of her visions. If you’ve never heard of Demo before, the basic pitch is that the stories are about normal young people who discover they have super-powers. Unfortunately, I was not blown away by this particular issue. I generally like Brian Wood‘s writing, I generally like Beck Cloonan‘s art, and I generally enjoyed the first series of Demo stories that the two creators released a few years ago, so I was looking forward to the new volume of stories. Price: $2.99 Release date: February 3, 2010 ![]()
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