However, while Lord wasn’t the featured villain in volume two, he was a significant part of the story, and his role as main villain of this volume was pretty heavily foreshadowed at the end of the book. Lord’s presence feels like slick timing, with the character featuring as the main villain in Wonder Woman 1984, hopefully already released by then. She’s determined to fight back against what she perceives as the god of war and try and bring Themiscyran values to the world of man. Diana is preparing her sisters for an attack from man’s world specifically, government weapons dealer Max Lord and his A.R.E.S. After successfully beating back Uberfraulein, the leader of an invading Nazi force who the Amazons attempted to rehabilitate after her capture, Wonder Woman has become queen of the Amazons. Volume three picks up right where the last story left off. 3, the finale of Morrison and Yanick Paquette’s multi-year graphic reimagining will be arriving in stores this march. As Grant Morrison wraps up his sprawling multiversal epic in The Green Lantern (presumably with issue #12 in February, if the schedules line up), the architect of the modern DC Metaverse will also be finishing his foray into Earth One.
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