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Punisher #1 is brought to readers by the team of Benjamin Percy and Jose Luis Soares, and they lock in right from the start. The Punisher has been around for a while, and it can be hard to find an in for the character in situations like this. However, Percy and Soares are able to hit a sweet spot in this first issue, hitting readers with a story that feels classic without actually copying the past.
Rating: 4 out of 5
| Pros | Cons |
| Feels like a classic Punisher story | It hits all the right notes, but can feel a bit too cliche and hard-boiled |
| Sets up a cool story to pull readers in | Diehard Punisher fans may want something more substantial from their fave |
| Great art that feels like the best Punisher art of the past |
Percy Builds a Cool Story to Bring the Punisher Back to Prominence
Benjamin Percy has been the guy Marvel goes to when they need a writer for their more violent characters. Percy wrote Wolverine in the Krakoa Era of the X-Men from 2020 to 2025, as well as writing a Ghost Rider book during this period, and X-Force. He does a fantastic job with heroes that kill and he’s currently on Hellverine and Wade Wilson: Deadpool. He’s honestly exactly the right writer for this title. He gets how to dig into heroes like Frank Castle and the first issue does a fantastic job of capturing the right tone of the book, even if there are a few mistakes.
Percy wrote the Red Band mini, and this book is related to that one, but if you didn’t read it, don’t worry about it. All you need to know is that some wild stuff went down, and Frank is back in the saddle, but he isn’t feeling so hot. He’s killing his way through the city on autopilot, all as an enemy develops a plan to destroy him. Percy gives readers a mechanical, empty Punisher, and it’s an interesting direction to take the character. If you’re hoping for mouthy Frank to come back and say cold ’80s action movie lines as he kills people, that’s not here. This is a story about rebuilding, and it works. There’s a lot of Punisher cliches to the story, and it feels like a story that you could use a variety of street-level heroes in. It’s a bit generic, but that’s okay because it’s a winning formula. It brings back a character everyone loves, and sets things going in an interesting direction.









