Miracleman: The Silver Age has just released its final issue, 31 years after the first issue came out. That's two months per page. When Neil Gaiman first started writing The Golden Age, he was just a friend of Alan Moore that was about to be hired by DC Comics to write a remake of an obscure World War 2 superhero, the Sandman.

What I'm saying is that it's very weird to have an AI image generation joke in a comic that, six issues ago, predated the Super Nintendo.

but what about the plot zara the plot is okay. It's not, like, 31 years great (again with this), but it serves to position the middle Miraclechild as someone that neither wants to join the Miracleman polycule nor embrace the all-encompassing nihilism of Kid Miracleman.

The only issue i can see is that having the rebel as a conservative reactionary that wants Miracleman's mass-produced utopia to go because it's "boring" is not going to get much sympathy in an age of mega-austerity. Yeah, having everything you ever wish is boring, but not having anything is boring and also painful.


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