Weird Science DC Comics: BATMAN #2 Review



  • Written by: Matt Fraction

  • Art by: Jorge Jimenez

  • Colors by: Tomeu Morey

  • Letters by: Clayton Cowles, Jorge Jimenez

  • Cover art by: Jorge Jimenez

  • Cover price: $4.99

  • Release date: October 1, 2025

Batman #2, by DC Comics on 10/1/25, comes in hot with baby formula heists, Batmobile shenanigans, and a shocking shootout.

First Impressions

Batman #2 is a crisp punch to the senses – kinetic, noisy, and a little bit bonkers. The art sizzles with personality, while the characters’ choices often cause whiplash. You get superhero spectacle, but at the cost of logic shredding itself by page ten.

Recap

In Batman #1, the Batman chased down a mutated Killer Croc, only to subdue the villain with kind words and a visit to the zoo. Meanwhile, Commissioner Vandal Savage upgraded the GCPD with paramilitary additions to the force.

Plot Analysis

Wayne Manor opens with a family lesson in humility and automotive basics in the past: Bruce mentors Tim and Damian on the correct way to drive a manual transmission. The sequence promises wholesome Bat-family time, but soon enough, Robin is itching for glory, eager to trade patience for screeching tires and the shadow of the Batmobile.

Now, the action shifts to the Slabs, Gotham’s industrial edge, where petty crooks bungle a botched robbery involving, of all things, baby formula. Robin crashes the scene with a flurry of gadgets and the familiar beatdown, only for one cop to shoot a fleeing suspect in the back. The line between crook and cop starts to blur faster than a Batmobile burnout.

Amid chaos and moral fog, police infighting boils over.  In the past, Tim and Damian both show off, with Tim fussing over Batmobile mechanics. In the present, Tim flips up the side of a building like gravity took the night off, getting a gunshot from a zealous cop for his trouble. Soon after, a handcuffed Robin somehow shrugs off his restraints, like he’s made of rubber and plot armor. Batman stops and disables the police transport to free Robin. In one jaw-dropping moment, two officers nearly shoot each other while Batman, bewilderingly, just watches the carnage unfold.

Commissioner Savage storms into the aftermath, jawset and vengeful, swapping the Bat-signal for a blacklist. He declares Batman and Robin enemies of the city, cranking Gotham’s beef with masked vigilantes up to eleven. The Bat-family drives off, wounded and rattled, left to lick literal and reputational wounds as Savage roars for the TV cameras.

Writing

The script fizzles with energy and quick banter. Matt Fraction clearly relishes giving Batman, Tim, and Damian a chance to riff, bicker, and bond in the opening act. However, things careen out of control whenever the plot needs to move. Logic crashes, and common sense gets left behind with burning tire marks.

Art

Jorge Jimenez’s pencils are electric, packed with kinetic lines and clever staging. Tomeu Morey’s colors don’t just enhance the panels, they detonate off the page. From motion blur to rain-soaked cityscapes, every image sings. Even a Batmobile parked in the sun looks impossibly cool here.

Characters

Robin’s feats in this issue would make even Superman side-eye. One minute he’s breaking out of handcuffs; next, he’s leaping up walls like Spider-Man’s envious brother. Batman seems weirdly passive, letting police maul each other and suspects hang onto their guns even after hitting the pavement. These aren’t just nitpicks. They’re noodles in the soup of character consistency.

Positives

The comic delivers top-shelf art that captures action, emotion, and pulpy Gotham grit. Every panel pops with life, and even quieter scenes pulse with energy. The creative team wrings athletic dynamism out of the Bat-family, cramming each page with visual treats and blockbuster bravado.

Negatives

Character logic goes out the window. Batman supervising the Batmobile wash in broad daylight undermines his myth. He stands idle as police shoot at each other, and shrugs when a shooter keeps his weapon after being knocked to the ground. Robin’s handcuff-breaking and gravity-defying leaps ignore his actual abilities, breaking verisimilitude. These lapses wrangle the tension out of otherwise gripping moments and make the world feel stitched together with string and a prayer

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

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Final Thoughts


Batman #2 is a visual feast stapled to a wild ride where logic buckles under spectacle. Fraction and Jimenez deliver fireworks, but next time, someone should keep an eye on the script’s steering wheel. Preferably not in broad daylight.

6/10

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