Star Wars: Age of Rebellion - Villains (3/5)
Another installment in the "Age of X - Y" comics, this time focusing on antagonists in the OT era. Specifically, Tarkin, Vader, Boba Fett, Jabba the Hutt, and IG-88 (I guess Palpy was just unlucky).
Anyway, it's fine. Some of the stories are better than others. Surprisingly enough for me, I thought Fett's was the best, in part because it's more anti-hero stuff than outright villany, in part because it uses the medium to its advantage, with Fett only speaking at the very end, while others react to his presence/actions/morals. But apart from that, nothing much to write about.
The Magisterium: The Iron Trial (3/5)
The TL, DR version of this book is "Harry Potter Knockoff #66." Honestly, I could leave it like that, but for shits and giggles, here's the rundown:
-Callum "Call" Hunt is a 12 year old boy who goes to "the Magisterium" (an underground school located somewhere in the US) to learn magic.
-Gets a clique of friends.
-A secret society of mages operates, and when Callum was born, the "Second Mage War" ended against "the Enemy of Death" (a former student at the Magisterium), whose real name is revealed to be "Constantine Madden," and is believed to be out there somewhere.
-Cue revelations at the end, with the "real villain" being revealed, and certain horcrux...sorry, soul-implantation shannanigans with Call's true nature being revealed.
I could say more, but not only is this riffing off Harry Potter with the whole magic school, secret society of magic-users thing, it's riffing off the basic plot structure of the first book as well. And while I might have been able to forgive that if the book was actually good, it's just bog standard YA fare. I can barely remember the names of any of the characters, much less tell you anything about them, and while I could describe the magic system, it's nothing special (four classical elements, plus "Chaos magic," you can see where this is going).
On the other hand, is the book bad? No, not really - it's certainly not Keeper of the Lost Cities (and boy does that piece of shit deserve a roasting), and sure, if I was the intended age range, I might have had more of a kick out of it, but basically, even in a world without HP, this would still be bog-standard magic nonsense. If anything, it helps me appreciate HP even more.
Another installment in the "Age of X - Y" comics, this time focusing on antagonists in the OT era. Specifically, Tarkin, Vader, Boba Fett, Jabba the Hutt, and IG-88 (I guess Palpy was just unlucky).
Anyway, it's fine. Some of the stories are better than others. Surprisingly enough for me, I thought Fett's was the best, in part because it's more anti-hero stuff than outright villany, in part because it uses the medium to its advantage, with Fett only speaking at the very end, while others react to his presence/actions/morals. But apart from that, nothing much to write about.
The Magisterium: The Iron Trial (3/5)
The TL, DR version of this book is "Harry Potter Knockoff #66." Honestly, I could leave it like that, but for shits and giggles, here's the rundown:
-Callum "Call" Hunt is a 12 year old boy who goes to "the Magisterium" (an underground school located somewhere in the US) to learn magic.
-Gets a clique of friends.
-A secret society of mages operates, and when Callum was born, the "Second Mage War" ended against "the Enemy of Death" (a former student at the Magisterium), whose real name is revealed to be "Constantine Madden," and is believed to be out there somewhere.
-Cue revelations at the end, with the "real villain" being revealed, and certain horcrux...sorry, soul-implantation shannanigans with Call's true nature being revealed.
I could say more, but not only is this riffing off Harry Potter with the whole magic school, secret society of magic-users thing, it's riffing off the basic plot structure of the first book as well. And while I might have been able to forgive that if the book was actually good, it's just bog standard YA fare. I can barely remember the names of any of the characters, much less tell you anything about them, and while I could describe the magic system, it's nothing special (four classical elements, plus "Chaos magic," you can see where this is going).
On the other hand, is the book bad? No, not really - it's certainly not Keeper of the Lost Cities (and boy does that piece of shit deserve a roasting), and sure, if I was the intended age range, I might have had more of a kick out of it, but basically, even in a world without HP, this would still be bog-standard magic nonsense. If anything, it helps me appreciate HP even more.