Meh. I've been on the fence about this series since it was announced, and I can't say anything here sold me on it.
Batman and Plastic Man apparently built the computer that evolves into Brother Eye, which has assimilated most of the Earth's humans (and its heroes) by the time of Batman Beyond's future. Bruce sends Terry into the past to prevent Brother Eye's rise, but they misjudge the time and he winds up arriving five years into our future, when Brother Eye has already begun consolidating his power. Essentially, it's "Age of Ultron," except the "past" is still our future.
The problem is that the author of this issue (whoever it is) falls into the same traps as Bendis did with the Ultron story, relying too much on the shock value of seeing how the heroes have been victimized (e.g., Black Canary's head becoming part of Frankenstein's torso) and focusing too little on the emotional impact that these changes had on the heroes themselves or on the philosophical implications of the choices that they're forced to make (e.g., Bruce condoning the murder of a mysterious person in the past, seemingly the point of Terry's mission). Given that we all know the conclusion of this story before it happens, as we did with "Age of Ultron," it's only the emotional and speculative parts of these stories that matter. The authors would be wise to take a page from Remender's current run on "Uncanny Avengers," rather than trying to shock and awe with violence. Either way, I won't be here much longer.
** (two of five stars)
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