But I did a bit of research and decided that Wildcats Version 3.0 could be read as a stand alone, without complete knowledge of the whole story from the origin. I began with the first TPB,Wildcats Version 3.0 - Brand Building, and then read Full Disclosure, the two collections published covering the first twelve issues. The series only had 24 issues total, so I was left to collect the individual issues 13-24 as there were no TPB releases for them. Okay, so beyond the fact that with any comic series it seems that navigating the whole series can be complicated, the question remains as to the quality of the thing itself.
I found this series to be compelling. We have the original Wildacts characters set in this corporate world, where Spartan is the CEO of Halo, a company bound to change the world from within the broken structure of current paradigms. The comic exposes our culture in all its frailty, and devises a rather hopeful future, based on the infinite resources available to the Halo CEO as an alien superbot. The premise is strong, it seemed to me, until the publisher it seems decided to cancel the series early, which resulted in a weird inertia in the last few issues. This was really a disappointment to me, because the potential was there to keep going. The last issues dealt with an entirely different conflict with a group of assassins in Europe, and it was so obvious that the planned arc was destroyed by poor sales figures. This will be, I suppose, one of those comics that readers will express regret, which may actually add to the mystique of the series, and perhaps we will see a revival at some point in the future.
Published by Alex Mathews
Born in Greenwich, CT, raised in New York City, transplanted by strange fate in Southern California, I am searching for purpose in life and finding that the most difiicult and rewarding journey there is. The... View profile
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