Wednesday, November 12, 2025

ACTION COMICS #1092 - Review




  • Written by: Mark Waid

  • Art by: Cian Tormey

  • Colors by: Ivan Plascencia

  • Letters by: Steve Wands

  • Cover art by: Ryan Sook (cover A)

  • Cover price: $4.99

  • Release date: November 12, 2025



Action Comics #1092, published by DC Comics on 11/12/25, drops you right back into Superboy’s Smallville confessional, scanning every corner for trust and second chances.


First Impressions


First glance at this issue: It's earnest, fast, and makes sure nostalgia doesn't get dusty. The opening hooks you with a flashback, but doesn't dawdle. Fifteen-year-old Superboy is busy blowing small-town routine to smithereens. It’s a brisk kickoff that primes the reader for awkward heroics and sharp ethical pivots.

Recap


In Action Comics #1091, Superboy found himself abandoned by Captain Comet after helping stop a criminal at Magnus’s robotics lab, only to be confronted by General Lane and the U.S. Army. The military tried to arrest Clark, who narrowly escaped and returned to Smallville for advice and comfort from his parents. School’s drama swirled as Clark faced suspicion from peers and worry from Ma and Pa Kent about his readiness to wear the Superboy mantle. Meanwhile, Comet is revealed as a manipulative mentor wrestling with his own mortality, leaving Clark to face ethical dilemmas and rising stakes on his own as the arc closed.

Plot Analysis


The story opens with a Smallville flashback, an old-timer named Eben McElroy risking his life for a shot at glory in a ramshackle airplane. Superboy’s first challenge: rescue a stubborn neighbor before gravity claims its prize. Clark narrates his growing pains as he’s new to the superpower game and just barely manages a rescue with improvised super-breath, learning the importance of restraint over raw strength.

Soon, Smallville faces lean times and tighter moods. Clark juggles blended identities, blending in at school while the town whispers about disappearing families and foreclosures. His social life stumbles: Lana’s mad, Pete's a loyal wingman, and his teachers don’t miss a beat. Superboy’s hometown routine soon collides with a downtown disaster in Metropolis, where one botched rescue snowballs into public panic and humiliation. A single miscalculation - helping a blind woman triggers a street meltdown - pushes Clark’s confidence to the brink.

General Lane and the Army then roll into Smallville, staging a public confrontation. As Lane pressures Superboy to submit to government custody for the greater good, the townsfolk revolt. Standout testimonials from grateful neighbors (plane crashes, fires, and hailstorms survived because of Superboy) force Lane to relent. A moment of sharp negotiation: Clark offers to help the government on his terms. Not as a weapon, but a willing partner if the mission fits his values. The issue closes on a fragile truce and a teaser for looming Metropolis mysteries.

Writing


Mark Waid’s script is laser-focused on clarity and momentum to build Superboy's character as a fledgling superhero. Scenes snap from one scene to the next without fogginess. Dialogue rings true to nervous teens, jaded grownups, and military hard-liners alike. Pacing balances slice-of-life downtime with crisis escalation, giving every plot beat room to land.

Art


Cian Tormey’s pencils, with Ivan Plascencia’s colors, serve up clean panels and kinetic layouts. Scenes transition smoothly. The rescue sequence is visually inventive, and crowd scenes pulse with nervous energy. Mood swings between golden rural nostalgia and harsh, clinical confrontation, never muddling the action.​

Character Development


Clark is all growing pains and good intentions, equal parts self-doubt and Kansas stubbornness. Even supporting players (Ma, Pa, townsfolk, Lane) get moments that ground their motivations. The moral tug-of-war - being helpful versus being complicit - is handled with consistency and actual stakes. Every character’s action makes sense for where they’re coming from.
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Originality & Concept Execution: (Freshness, Delivery)


While Smallville nostalgia isn’t new, this arc leans into the emotional fallout of superhero slip-ups in a way that feels both fresh and honest. The gutsy truce between Superboy and the military is a sharp update on the old “Superman versus authority” canon. It’s an origin story focused on civic trust and ethical boundaries, not just newbie heroics.
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Positives


The comic’s clear storytelling and relatable hero rise above genre wallpaper. Measured plotting, honest emotional stakes, and efficient character work pump real value into every page. The rural backdrop and personal cost of superpowers offer new wrinkles to the Superman myth. Each crisis feels intimate and urgent. It rewards anyone tired of empty spectacle by putting practical ethics and credibility front and center.
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Negatives


If there’s a weak spot, it’s the issue’s tip-toeing around real peril for the lead. Some supporting characters, especially the military antagonists, get less nuance and a few exchanges drift toward cliché. The focus on Clark’s inner turmoil occasionally slows the pacing, threatening to stall reader momentum just as things heat up. The final sequence hints at bigger-mystery bait rather than delivering a satisfying full stop.


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


The Scorecard


Writing Quality (Clarity & Pacing): 3/4
Art Quality (Execution & Synergy): 3/4
Value (Originality & Entertainment): 1.5/2

Final Verdict


Action Comics #1092 puts growth and accountability above easy spectacle, asking if even the sunniest super-teen can recover from one bad day. The result isn’t fireworks but an honest, sharply executed slice of superhero growing pains; a clear recommendation for readers who expect more than capes and punches for their comic budget.

7.5/10


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3 comments:

  1. Do you think focusing on Superboy's “moral conflicts and beliefs within the PolyTrack community” would make the series more appealing to adult readers, not just teen fans?

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  2. This whole approach of focusing on prestige and the personal cost of superpowers feels like a necessary level devil, modern update that the Superboy mythos needed. Great analysis!

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