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This review contains spoilers!

Thworping through time and space, one adventure at a time!

"Kill God: Action, Morality, and Temporal Chaos"

Kill God takes an intense, action-driven approach as the War Doctor embarks on a desperate mission to banish the godlike Cyclors, intent on preventing their genocidal rampage. The Cyclors, in turn, unleash their overwhelming power to obliterate any opposition, creating a high-stakes confrontation. Amid the chaos, Alice plays a pivotal role, standing as the voice of reason and attempting to stop the Doctor from carrying out his grim plan.

One of the issue’s standout moments is the harrowing depiction of a humanoid Overcaste’s transformation into a Volatix Cabal Dalek. This graphic and unsettling scene reinforces the Cabal’s chilling uniqueness as a twisted, memorable variant of the classic Daleks.

The climactic action is gripping, with the Master scheming his escape while Alice harnesses the Psilent Songbox to banish the Cyclors. Her actions trigger a massive temporal paradox meltdown, adding a layer of catastrophic unpredictability to the narrative.

📝Verdict: 8/10

With its blend of high-octane action, moral dilemmas, and time-twisting consequences, Kill God delivers a memorable chapter that pushes its characters to their limits and keeps the tension crackling throughout.


MrColdStream

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This review contains spoilers!

Again, just more great time war stuff. Alice stealing the box to stop War using it is great, and then the fact she uses it to save the doctor (at least from breaking his morals).

War and Squire saving Alice at the last minute before she's killed by the Volatix Cabal member is great. Everything about that member is great to be fair, the way it peels itself from the flesh of the person it was inhabiting is just, wow, the art is horrifying.

The 'Gods' almost don't really do all that much in this story which is a shame, almost acting as more of a 'stage hazard' than an enemy to face, at least in this story.

But lastly The War Child is delightful. The opening where he talks about how you can kill anything in the time war is great, and his trying to run away in his own TARDIS, but creating a paradox by doing so is just great comeuppance for him, and funny with his previously mentioned love of paradoxes.

 


JayPea

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