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Can’t wait for the show!
Very cute, but the plot gets a little redundant. The characters are hilarious and some of my favorites pop up here. It’s a little misleading because everyone on the cover art is not in the story, though.
Not going to lie, I wasn't a fan of this. I read it solely because Ms. Marvel was on the cover, but I was sorely disappointed in the story. It was just kind of boring. Also, I was kind of bothered about what happened to Ember, and how she was taken advantage of. Definitely not a fan of that. Also, I found Squirrel Girl and America really annoying. Granted, I haven't read any of their solo comics, so maybe that's just how they are? 2 stars because one it's Ms. Marvel, and I love her, and two lear...
- Fun superheroes- Epic storyline- Love the characters :)
Love SG, love Ms. M and America has kind of grown on me. Also liked the artwork a lot and while the story (and the writing) aren't anything special, they are fun.
It was a really enjoyable read. As it is with crossovers, not all characters were written perfectly in character all the time but the main heroes, Doreen and Kamala, were a great team-up to read about! I had lots of fun especially since the main plot was concerned with video games and I'm a gamer myself. Overall, it was pretty good for a crossover.
I'm a fan of Squirrel Girl and Ms. Marvel, so I was excited when this title was announced. Unfortunately, this wasn't very good. The creators change from issue to issue, so the writing and the art vary in quality depending on who is involved. It's just a bit jarring to have so many changes in one volume. Also, the villain that they are fighting isn't that interesting, and in the end it turns out that she is being manipulated by one of my least favorite Marvel villains, so that was a letdown for
Doreen Green is a college computer science student volunteering to teach an after school computer class for high schoolers. (She's also secretly superhero Squirrel Girl.) Kamala's grades have been struggling (thanks to her secret life as Ms Marvel) so she's taking the class to boost her GPA. There's another girl in the class with Kamala named Ember. Ember was turned into an inhuman in an accident and she doesn't feel like anyone understands her except someone she met online. She has powers that
THIS WAS SO MUCH FUN AND I WANT TO BE A PART OF THIS SUPER GANG PLEASE AND THANK YOU.
This crossover is for people like me who enjoy both Ms. Marvel (Kamala Khan) and Squirrel Girl. I liked it, but I thought it could have been better. Really appreciated the G. Willow Wilson and Ryan North chapters, which are not at the beginning, so you might want to keep on reading even if you think the beginning is meh. The plot is the really overdone "people get stuck in a video game," but this time written (partially) by people who understand about video games and software development, so tha...
Squirrel Girl and Ms. Marvel team up (with special guests America Chavez and Inferno) to save an Inhuman struggling with her new powers. This is definitely geared toward younger readers but it's still an entertaining story overall; probably more-so for me because I read it out loud with my five-year-old, who is obsessed with these particular super heroes!
Who would have thought the first meeting of Squirrel Girl and Ms. Marvel would be so very, very bland? I guess that's what you get from one of these corporate comic books by committee with three writers and four artists. It's easy to pick out Ryan North's contributions, but his heavy lifting cannot bring this Frankenstein to life.
Actual rating: 3.5This was fun. There were a couple art styles I wasn't huge on (most people drew Squirrel Girl way too slender, and one person made the conscious decision to give Ms. Marvel these huge boobs and I was like //excuse me can we not sexualize the high-schooler please and thank you//), but most of the writing was decent (though I feel like it probably didn't need to be as long as it did). I definitely enjoyed the parts written by Ryan North the most.
So thrilled to see this team up, but it doesn't take the place the independent stories have in my heart. That being said, it was so fun this was game-ified and I have had the alternate cover of Ms. Marvel and Squirrel Girl playing video games together as my desktop wallpaper for about 9 months. No regrets.
Squirrel Girl and Ms. Marvel team-up against a supervillain who can make items from video games appear. This was written for a younger audience than I. I've loved Squirrel Girl and was so-so about the new rendition of Ms. Marvel, and together they should have worked magic. Instead it felt a bit too pandering - let's throw in some way cool stuff from video games and have our female superheroes support each other in femaleness yay! I probably would have liked it when I was twelve.
It bothers me that 3/7 characters on the cover aren't even in the book - feels like false advertising!I liked the first half of the book, but then it sorta shifts gears into different territory and I wasn't really on board with that. Also not a huge fan of the climactic boss fight.I liked the superheroes, and I liked Ember even though her whole deal was pretty cliché. I don't know America (yet), but is her personality just "fiery South-American wants to punch people"?
Strong themes somewhat diluted by a VR conceit which robs the climax of vitality and believability, and the story only really comes alive when North and Wilson write their signature characters. (Read as single issues.)
CUTE CUTE CUTE. The girls in STEM team-up you've been waiting for! (Not enough Nancy tho.) Ms. Marvel and Squirrel Girl must work together, using their knowledge of computer science as well as their superpowers, to fight a villain who makes videogames come to life, while attempting to conceal their secret identities from each other (despite the fact that Kamala is taking a class on computer programming that Doreen is teaching). Koi Boi, Chipmunk Hunk, Brain Drain, America Chavez, and Inferno mak...
Would really like to see more from this crew!
Totally see what they are doing here. Super approachable story which should help kids get into the tv shows...or let kids who like the show approach comics.Fairly well done story...3.5.