![]() ![]() The two man art team makes it seem like they swap pages back and forth. It also doesn't help that the art of Mass Effect: Evolution is a mixed bag. See, there's me mentioning the games again in order to enjoy something about this comic. ![]() Honestly, The Illusive Man is interesting only because I know he's voiced by Martin Sheen in the games. The same applies to his partner Eva, as well as his now deceased friend, Ben. Jack Harper, AKA The Illusive Man, is still too much of a question mark. There just isn't enough meat to Mass Effect: Evolution #2 to really come away satisfied. But when the best part of a comic is how it makes you reminisce about the games, there's a problem. Artists Omar Francia and Manuel Silva even use a nice establishing shot of Illium that makes me fondly remember the planet from my Mass Effect gaming adventures. I enjoyed not only seeing the main Turian antagonist from the first Mass Effect game, Saren, but also the planet Illium. ![]() As was the case with previous Mass Effect comics, Mass Effect: Evolution's greatest asset is in the references it makes to the Mass Effect video games. ![]()
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