Monday, March 24, 2025

Miles Morales: Spider-Man #31 Review

 


Writer: Cody Ziglar

Artist: Luigi Zagaria

Colorist: Bryan Valenza

Letterer: Cory Petit

Cover Artists: Federico Vicentini & Ceci De La Cruz; Sara Pichelli & Federico Blee; Frany

Production Designer: Sarah Spadaccini

Editors: Tom Groneman, Mark Basso, Kaitlyn Lindtvedt, Cy Pedro Beltran, Nick Lowe & C B Cebulski

Publisher: Marvel

Price: $3.99

Release Date: March 19, 2025

 

While Deadpool and Shift battled Midas and Output, Miles repaired Ellie’s phone so they could teleport back to Agent Gao’s hideout. After the two Deadpool & Spidey teams work together to knock out Midas and unhand Output, Miles’ storyteller god senses an interesting development. Then Agent Gao strides in, rocking a Greek outfit and a glowing sword. Is she channeling a higher power or just listening to Coldplay? Let's put on our vibranium suits, leap into Miles Morales: Spider-Man #31, and find out!

 

Story

Agent Gao no longer speaks in terms of justice. Nor does she love the city she once served. Like Rabble, Julia Gao is hurting and seeks a target for her loss. She forgets that Spider-Man teamed up with her squad to help Scorpion, Gust, and Hightail protect New York against costumed villains. And despite New Yorkers arising amid the Gang War to overturn Fisk's Law, she blames Spider-Man for shuttering her Cape Killers crew. So when a mysterious stranger in a dark alley offers her a boon, she takes it. In Cody Ziglar's story, Agent Gao turns her back on democracy. All she wants is the power to enforce her will.

 

After Deadpool mistook Shift for Miles, Spider-Man, Deadpool, and Ellie clashed in a not-so-dark alley. But they’re (mostly) putting their grievances behind them. In Miles Morales: Spider-Man #31, Miles and Wade confront the new-and-improved Agent Gao. Despite Wade's impulsiveness, Miles and Deadpool fight side-by-side to take down the hate-filled, high-powered herald. While Deadpool is over the moon to battle alongside Spidey, Miles isn't ready to make Wade his BFF. But then, Wade speaks of matters Miles doesn't understand while Miles talks to someone no one else can see.

 

As Miles and Deadpool serve up the A-Team action, Shift and Ellie focus on Agent Gao's Not Ready For Prime Time Players. It’s too early to know if Shift’s relationship with Ellie will evolve like Ms Marvel’s. Still, both understand what it's like not to belong anywhere. This crossover began with a high-flying phone call. After Ellie explains why she fought so hard to fight alongside her father, Shift yearns to have a similar talk with his brother in Miles Morales: Spider-Man #31.

 

 


 

 

Art

Agent Gao's blue, white, and gold outfit coordinates with her paid help. Miles’ purple and red suit bonds him with the equally colorful Kwaku Anansi. Shift's red-and-black links him with Ellie and his new buddy (who tried to kill him but apologized later). Bryan Valenza makes Agent Gao’s eyes burn with the same yellow and orange fire that leaps from her curved sword. After she unleashes an Alderaan-incinerating laser beam, heroes and mercs regard Agent Gao amid light green smoke. Then Miles dances amid a yellow venom show that would make Dazzler applaud.

 

Agent Gao’s curved sword hovers before her before unleashing the sun's energy. Deadpool performs acrobatics to attack Agent Gao from behind. Midas and Output demonstrate resilience as Ellie leaps, and Shift gets super-stretchy and pays homage to his trickster god. But after Luigi Zagaria shows Shift and Ellie taking a selfie, Agent Gao does a thunderclap in Miles Morales: Spider-Man #31.

 

Cory Petit thwips uppercase letters into dialogue balloons and narrative boxes. Miles' thoughts appear as white letters in red narrative boxes. Agent Gao's white balloons glow yellow, while 3D logos pop from balloons when heroes and mercs fight together. The dialogue grows bold for intonation, enlarges for volume, and rarely shrinks. Sound effects enhance snapping weapons, breaking bones, explosions, Deadpool getting jerked around, and Anansi's sweet champion thwipping for victory. Thanks to Marvel Comics for providing a copy for review. 

 

 


 

 

Final Thoughts

All great stories poise characters on the cusp of change. As Ellie tries to pull a sword out of stone and gods prepare to renew old conflicts, heroes and villains reexamine and forge new identities in Miles Morales: Spider-Man #31.

 

Rating 9.8/10

 

To look inside see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.


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