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Ultimate Hawkeye begins with its strongest foot forward through a prologue that sets up the overarching connection to The Ultimates and acts as the springboard for the issue’s main story. Writer Deniz Camp immediately brings you into the action with a sequence that feels unquestionably cool, and that’s heavily due to the killer artwork of Juan Frigeri and Federico Blee as well.
Rating: 3/5
| PROS | CONS |
| Excellent Prologue | Clunkiness Pulls from the Story |
| Showcase of Style and Grit | Major Reveal Doesn’t Deliver on Potential |
While the prologue is just a few pages, it sets the tone so well and allows Charli to shine without having to say all that much. He also takes a huge player off the board almost effortlessly, and Camp’s narration paints a beyond vivid picture of a brutal takedown, and the contrast works immensely well.


Ultimate Hawkeye’s Main Story is A Mixed Bag
Then we move into the main story, and things are a bit more mixed. Writers B. Earl and Taboo depict Charli’s internal monologue throughout the course of the story, painting a clearer picture of Charli’s current mindset and his backstory through stories of his grandmother and love of poetry. At times, that really lands and brings you closer to the person wielding the bow, but other times it’s a bit too literal and on the nose, taking you out of the action at hand.








