3/22/2023 0 Comments Divinity 2 malody questionsAbram is now considered a possible threat due to his tampering with the environment and individuals around him. It is definitely going to be a very interesting ride for the last two issues of Divinity. The facial expressions are very strongly composited with each slight penciling change reinforced with a melancholic touching of inks and colours. Abram is witnessing and reliving a moment that for him now must be a very tough thing to digest. The present time space-suited Abram is hiding in the background, faded in colour compared to the extreme close up of Eva and Abram’s faces. There are some very emotional moments that are handled with great care beginning with the first scene in which Eva tells Abram that she is pregnant. The art team of David Hairsine, Ryan Winn and David Baron has yet to disappoint. The first issue relied on the narration as well but feels more poignant within these pages. Matt Kindt’s script, as usual, feels very natural with the dialogue, but his strength lies in this case with the floating, drifting feel of the narration. With issue #2, the bouncing between the past and present is still being shown, interlaced between an unknown narrator whose identity is revealed towards the latter quarter of the issue. The creative team has done an excellent job thus far establishing a very cinematic feel to the pacing of the first two issues. Abram floats, cross-legged within his pod, overseeing his Garden of Eden without his Eve or in this case, without his girlfriend Eva. What exactly happened to Abram Adams after spending all this time in space? The question has gained a bit of momentum in Divinity #2 as Abram is now considered a God-like figure after creating a self-sustaining biome in the middle of the Australian outback. Divinity has yet to answer the ultimate question posed from issue #1.
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