Arpad Okay, Doom Rocket:

Chromatic Fantasy’s freaky and loose art style puts the action in action. There’s a lot of getting it on and a general disregard for realism. Rather than capturing the perfect moment, HA’s panels communicate the whole act. The bodies bloom from the point of their connection, a single image that implies the time surrounding it.

Same goes for a sword fight. The connections tell a story before and after the hit. And the words between Jules and Casper while blades cross at the surrealist vanishing point? They’re as much foreplay and intercourse as the subsequent getting flipped over naked and whipped with a switch.”

Read the full review on Doom Rockets website here!