Wednesday, October 22, 2025

DETECTIVE COMICS #1102 - Review




  • Written by: Tom Taylor

  • Art by: Mikel Janín

  • Colors by: Mikel Janín

  • Letters by: Wes Abbott

  • Cover art by: Mikel Janín (cover A)

  • Cover price: $4.99

  • Release date: October 22, 2025


Detective Comics #1102, by DC Comics on 10/22/25, pushes Batman into a high-stakes game against a weaponized virus and a foe who has mastered deception at every level.


First Impressions


Let’s just say this isn’t Batman’s best day at the office. If viral infections and fake identities had a contest, the comic’s plot would walk away with a trophy, then immediately lose it in a poker game. The art tries its hardest to inject drama, but even that can’t cure the case of “I’ve seen better” hanging over every page.
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Recap


Last issue, Gotham awoke to a citywide panic when a corpse-laden boat collided in the harbor, leaving Batman to unravel a biological mystery alongside Oracle. Evidence pointed to a virus that erases fear by frying the amygdala, with survivors displaying only aggression and a beastly Batman haunting the margins. Mr. Terrific confirmed the diagnosis, and the big twist: Batman himself may have caught the sickness. The cliffhanger? Gotham may be the next to lose its sense of self-preservation.
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Plot Analysis


Batman opens this issue deep in the throes of self-diagnosis. With only two days left before the virus takes full hold, he consults with Dr. Mid-Nite and Mr. Terrific, strategizing a quarantine and racing the clock to solve a mystery that’s eating Gotham alive from the inside out. A shredded lab coat, a coded message on a ship, and symptoms that strip away inhibition keep Batman moving, even as his rational edge starts to fray.​​

Clues point to Kasnia and a company called King Chemicals, run by Louis King - a man whose fortune comes from poker, not science. Bruce Wayne uses old friendships and a risky high-stakes blackjack game to get close to King. Suspicion mounts: all records in King’s past are fabricated, with digital manipulation so thorough Batman suspects AI involvement. Photos, metadata, history? All made up.​

Batman follows King out of the casino, shadowed by Oracle. He uncovers that King Chemicals has no real labs, and King himself appears to be just a ghost in the system. Infiltrating King’s base, Batman faces traps and finds himself pitted physically against the true villain: “The Lion,” who reveals that the scheme has been in play for far too long.​​

After a brutal fight and collapsing debris, Batman escapes but not unscathed. His injuries stack up: a broken rib, concussion, vision fading, but he clings to what little fear he has left. The issue closes with Batman’s resolve tested and the viral clock ticking down; Gotham’s fate remains on hold until next time.​

Writing


Tom Taylor’s script loves exposition more than it loves plot momentum. Every major reveal gets walked around, slowed by meandering dialogue and sudden poker tutorials. The story’s villain, Lion, arrives almost too late, carrying a name and motive that sound like someone grabbed a random animal out of a comic hat. Batman’s narration works overtime trying to justify the convolutions, but the results feel padded rather than suspenseful.
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Art


Mikel Janín’s art attempts to salvage atmosphere with clean lines, dramatic shadows, and meticulous detail. Scene transitions, especially the casino sequences, bring some visual snap, but the layouts slip into monotony whenever the plot grinds to a halt. Action scenes look good enough, but the stakes remain hollow beneath the gloss. The color palette maintains a somber mood, sometimes at the expense of visual energy.
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Characters


Batman is locked in a two-day spiral of self-doubt, dehydration, and bluffing his way through villains who outmatch him in subterfuge. Supporting cast - Oracle, Mr. Terrific, Princess Caroline - show up for a few lines but get shoved aside by the virus plot and digital ghost hunt. Louis King, who isn’t real except as “The Lion,” exits stage left almost as soon as he arrives, leaving readers chasing a shadow.
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Positives


The poker game sequence stands out as the best scene, giving Bruce Wayne a chance to outwit a suspect with style and subtlety, evoking shades of James Bond in Bruce's presentation. Janín’s art brings a much-needed dose of glamour and tension to the casino setting, and the mystery around King Chemicals offers faint flickers of intrigue. The best moments pop when Batman lets his guard down or someone else catches him slipping.
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Negatives


Everything else feels stuck in quarantine. Story beats take too long to hit their mark, dialogue drowns in exposition, and characters are reduced to chess pieces for a viral plot that’s all setup and little payoff. The villain twist lands flat, the existential threat sags, and Batman is left nursing bruises instead of delivering detective brilliance.


About The Reviewer: Gabriel Hernandez is the Publisher & EIC of ComicalOpinions.com, a comics review site dedicated to indie, small, and mid-sized publishers.

Follow @ComicalOpinions on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter


Final Thoughts


Detective Comics #1102 rolls out its viral threat but leaves readers feeling infected with disappointment. The pace limps, the villain disappears in a puff of digital smoke, and Batman spends more time crunching the odds than solving real mysteries. It’s the kind of issue that wins a few hands with sharp visuals but folds when the stakes get high. Better luck next draw, Gotham.

5.5/10



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