DC Comics and Peacemaker Tries Hard #4 Spoilers and Review follows.
Snowflame Returns!
What To Expect.
PEACEMAKER TRIES HARD! #4
Written by KYLE STARKS
Art by STEVE PUGH
Cover by KRIS ANKA
Variant cover by STEVE LIEBER
1:25 variant cover by MIGUEL MERCADO
Movie poster variant cover by KRIS ANKA
$4.99 US | 32 pages | 4 of 6 | (all covers are card stock)
Things go from bad to worse when Peacemaker, with the help of some Golden Age superheroes, infiltrates General Immortus’s secret island base—but ends up captured by a drug smuggler with a penchant for his own goods. Bullets, powder, and punches fly, and Peacemaker’s geriatric squad have victory in sight. But first…they’ll have to get through Deathstroke! Well…kinda…
Peacemaker Tries Hard #4 Spoilers and Review.
Peacemaker and the Red Bee head to the Amazon in the Blackhawk’s plane looking for the Brain.
They are greeted by poisonous tree frogs that can kill 10-20 grown men at once.
It’s not the frogs that get them, but henchmen with guns.
Snowflame’s henchmen!
In his monologue, they learn that Snowflame works for the Brain.
As he’s talking to his captives, he continues to use blow, and is expectedly unhinged.
The Red Bee has his very strong pet Bee named Michael free Peacemaker and him from their handcuffs.
Snowflame uses a new manifestation of his cocaine-fueled powers to attack the.
Michael even brings Peacemaker’s gun to him, but Snowflame demonstrates a new invulnerability that he didn’t manifest in past appearances.
Enter a poisonous frogs who attacks Snowflame from is cocaine pile and leaves him laying.
The book ends with a kid showing Peacemaker and Red Bee pointing them in the direction of the Brain who, unknown to them, has Deathstroke as protection.
The Pulse.
This is Snowflame third appearance in DC Comics since his debut in 1988 (full spoilers here) and return in 2020 (full spoilers here). This story is the best of the bunch as it doesn’t take the character too seriously nor play him for a laughs as window into 1980s culture. It shows the character as being hobbled by his addiction and embraces his absurdity. Story tone may not generally be my cup of tea, but it had its moments. Art was amazing. 6.5 out of 10.