Thursday, July 2, 2026

Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4 Review

 


Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4 Review

Writer: Gabriel Hardman

Artist & Cover Artist: Gabriel Hardman

Colorist: Romulo Fajardo Jr

Letterer: Simon Bowland

Variant Cover Artist: Tonci Zonjic

Publisher: DC Comics

Price: $5.99 US (All Covers Card Stock)

Release Date: July 1, 2026

 

Bruce Wayne never confused Emil Rotha with the good guys. Still, he wanted to believe that the new owner of Queen Industries could help Humanity survive global warming. But when Captain Billings and his soldiers start killing his exploited workforce, Bruce fights alongside Green Arrow and the Question to help the captured migrants escape.

 

The Question came to the Arctic to find redemption. Green Arrow wanted to discover what Emil Rotha was doing at Queen Industries. Batman agreed to help Emil Rotha because he didn’t want Gotham to become a submerged city. But now, all their lives are on the line. Can the trio help the indentured servants escape from this remote part of the world? Or will Batman, Green Arrow, and the Question lose sight of what's important amid the whiteout conditions? Let’s leap into Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4 and see!

 

Story

After the explosion at the construction site, Emil Rotha thinks his workers are out to get him. So, until his people uncover who was culpable, he tells Captain Billings to judge everyone guilty until proven innocent. The Question and Green Arrow tried to get a third of the workers off Alk. But after the Rotha’s private army shot them down, they set fire to the wrecked C-130.

 

In Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4, the heroes manage to herd the survivors into a Cold War silo. But now they're trapped inside, and Rotha's people know the exits. Ashti, whose people endangered Emil Rotha's life, helps them determine what to do next. And Pinter, who didn’t alert Rotha when Batman searched his Records room, also wants to help. But as the Question remains mission-focused, Oliver Queen envies Bruce Wayne. Oliver fought the good fight and lost everything. But Bruce, who hides behind his mask, has the world by its toes.

 

Oliver Queen may have a chip on his shoulder. But like Emil Rotha, he and Bruce belong to the social elite. While their social and financial status sets them apart from others, Vic Sage had to borrow money for airline tickets to investigate why Queen Industries is exploiting the worsening conditions in Hub City. The reporter, who has gone by several names and covers his face with a featureless mask, dismisses Emil Rotha's intelligence. But the names Rotha gave his project, the subsidiary tasked with building it, and the terrorist group frustrating his operation illuminate Rotha’s views on the future he is trying to build, and his place in it, in Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4.

 

Art

As Rotha's soldiers fire on the fleeing workers and set fire to the downed plane, they also unload their rifles on the canopy of Batman's Batwing. While Green Arrow lays down cover fire, the Question urges workers into the surface hatch, and Batman shields two people with his armored cape. After Gabriel Hardman devotes the biggest panel to this act of sacrifice, Batman owns a full-page spread. Batman also suffers perhaps his greatest trial amid the issue’s sole two-page horizontal layout. But while thin, wide panels provide a cinematic feel, and insets offer close-ups of the action, fraught scenes featuring Oliver Queen feature diagonal layouts.

 

As Romulo Fajardo Jr adorns Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4 with a nuanced palette, soldiers attempt to break into the orange and yellow Batwing cockpit while setting fire to the C-130. While the fires rage on this small island off the coast of Greenland, the surface hatch glows sapphire as Batman helps Ashti inside. As the two study a yellow map, Batman and Ashti glow yellow, while the green workers clutch weapons and make Molotov cocktails. Oliver Queen gets his view on Bruce off his chest before a red spot of light in the darkness. Yet despite how he treats his workers as he has struggled to complete his project, Emil Rotha still tries to build a better future amid the blue ice and snow.

 

Bold black uppercase letters reveal the Question's thoughts, while red letters in beige boxes convey responses from the Batwing's control system. The uppercase dialogue in white balloons occasionally shrinks, grows bold with intonation, and swells for raised voices. Simon Bowland's sound effects enhance the brutal fighting, as autocannon rounds burn into Batman's armor, helicopters thunder over the snowfields, soldiers employ heavy equipment to reach harried workers, and explosions rock the former military facility. Thanks to DC Comics for sharing this story with us.

 

Final Thoughts

As Bruce Wayne told Oliver Queen, sometimes villains can accomplish good. Bruce was considering how best to safeguard Gotham and the world when he supported Emil Rotha. Yet as people fight and die while trying to build a better future, and heroes argue the merits of full disclosure, a masked reporter strives to give his readers the unscripted truth in Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #4.

 

Rating 10/10

 

 

To look inside see my preview of Batman/GreenArrow/The Question: Arcadia #4

 

For what happened last time see my preview of Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #3.

For what happened before that, see my preview of Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #2

For how this series started, see my preview of Batman/Green Arrow/The Question: Arcadia #1

 


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