Just to put that in context, it's almost the opposite of the approach taken by Furman in the G1 comics at the time. G1 went with a slow burn storyline, and I wonder if complaints about the pacing of that series informed the approach taken to Beast Wars.Mako Crab wrote:A fair review, andersonh. You detailed most of my problems with the story and characters. Too much in too little space is what it boils down to. Beast Wars (the cartoon) worked because they gradually worked new characters into the setting one or two at a time and developed their guys. Beast Wars (the comic) avalanches wave upon wave of paper-thin characters on top of us all at once with little-or-no introduction for most of them and no reason to care who they are.
For what it's worth, I think the first mini-series worked very well, and I have no complaints about the pacing or the amount of characters used. It's The Ascending that tries to do to much too quickly. I enjoyed it anyway, but I'd have preferred a more leisurely and detailed pace.
That's probably true of me as well. To be fair, the inclusion of Unicron was probably inevitable given that Shockaract was chosen as the villain of the story, and Unicron only indirectly affects most of the story. But yeah, I think we've seen enough of him for awhile.It also doesn't help that it was yet another of Simon's famous Unicron epics, which came at a time when I felt we were being overloaded with Unicron.

