Monday, November 24, 2025

Binary #2 Review


 


Writer: Stephanie Phillips

Artist: Giada Belviso

Colorist: Rachelle Rosenberg

Letterer: Travis Lanham

Cover Artists: Rickie Yagawa; Corin Howell & Rachelle Rosenberg; Jacopo Camagni; Junggeun Yoon

Designer: Jay Bowen

Editors: Lindsey Cohick, Annalise Bissa, Tom Brevoort & CB Cebulski

Publisher: Marvel Comics

Price: $3.99

Release Date: November 5, 2025

 

Carol Danvers is hurting. She accepted the Phoenix Force ten years ago. Yet in the past year, she has suffered from increasing headaches. Along with the people she protects, frustration has begun to overtake her. Like the characters in Stephen King's novel, the inhabitants of Beverly, Massachusetts, live under the dome. And after a decade of lockdown, Carol's protection feels like imprisonment. How will the townspeople express their frustrations this time? And how will their actions change Carol Danvers' life? Let's slip on some shades, leap into Binary #2, and see!

 

Story

When Doug Ramsey unleashed the X-virus, Jean Grey knew how dangerous it was. She feared not only what it would do to our planet but that the virus might spread to other worlds. Carol Danvers tried to talk her out of it, but Jean had to try. As in Robert Charles Wilson's novel Spin, Jean Grey attempted to enclose Earth in a protective barrier. When the effort proved too much for Jean, Carol was with her. She accepted the Phoenix Force and vowed to live with it.

 

In Binary #2, Carol suffers from an inferiority complex. Distraught over Jean's death and burdened with unwanted power, she retreated to her hometown. Erecting a barrier to protect the people in her community from the X-virus came naturally. But once Carol erected the barrier, she couldn't leave. Trapped in a prison of her own making and expending energy to keep the virus out, Carol couldn't learn to wield the Phoenix Force like Jean. So, she feels like a failure. Worse, she broke her promise to Jean to protect the rest of the Universe from the X-virus.

 

After beginning her story shortly after Doug Ramsey unleashed the X-virus, Stephanie Phillips fast forwards to the days following the troubled town hall meeting. Just as Hank stirred up the audience, he called people to his home. He shows them the explosives that they will use to blow up the Beverly town hall at the beginning of Binary #1. But neither he, his followers, nor Carol expect what happens next.

 


 

 

Art

Jean kneels and supports her weary body with her hands inside her barrier. While her hair flutters with the Phoenix Fire, Captain Marvel keeps her long blonde hair bound in a braid. Fracture lines race across Jean's face as Carol pounds on the barrier. When hands reach toward each other to touch the barrier, Jean and Carol form two dark beings at the heart of a white hole star in Binary #2.

 

Carol Danvers burns orange, yellow, and white as she hovers over the street. A Babel pushes herself up and kneels while supporting herself with her hands. But when she looks up, her features evoke Carol’s anger. And instead of submitting like Jean, she lashes out with her fists like Captain Marvel pounding on the barrier. So, Carol encloses her in a pink ball of energy, evoking the shield Jean placed around the Earth.

 

 


 

 

Like the clothes of the Babel she captures, Carol takes refuge in a green room. Giada Belviso shows how the community space has fallen into disrepair. Broken window blinds in a private residence are another reminder that the lockdown is unsustainable. As Rachelle Rosenberg shows the yellow sunlight streaming into the room, the light mimics a cosmos. The glowing stars illuminate Hank as he preaches. One of his followers, clad in a red jacket, best expresses their resolve in Binary #2.

 

Carol Danver's white uppercase thoughts also appear in red boxes. Travis Lanham places bold black time/space markers in white boxes bordered with yellow. Black uppercase dialogue inhabits white balloons and narrative boxes. The letters grow bold for intonation. Anger swells words and deforms balloons. Sound effects help us hear Carol's efforts to rescue her friend and a Phoenix scream. Thanks to Marvel Comics for providing a review copy. 

 

 


 

 

Final Thoughts

Carol Danvers has done her best. But it doesn't feel like it's enough. Her efforts are a drop in a bucket compared with what she promised Jean Grey she would do. But while Carol acts out of compassion for the townspeople and the Babels, another woman exploits Carol’s self-doubt and guilt to expand her power base in Binary #2.

 

Rating 9.6/10

 

To look inside see my review at Comic Book Dispatch

 

To see how this series started, see my review of Binary #1

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