Ratings16
Average rating4.3
If you had one wish... what would you wish for?What if everyone else on the planet had one wish too? That's Eight BillionGenies. Eight seconds after magical genies grant every person on earth onewish, the world is transformed forever...and that's just the beginning! From #1 New York Times bestsellingauthor Charles Soule (Light of the Jedi, Undiscovered Country) andsuperstar artist Ryan Browne (Curse Words, God Hates Astronauts) comesthe most thought-provoking, hilarious, terrifying and emotional ride of theyear. Collects the eight issueseries. Soon to be a major motionpicture from Amazon Studios!
Featured Series
8 primary booksEight Billion Genies is a 8-book series with 8 released primary works first released in 2022 with contributions by Charles Soule.
Reviews with the most likes.
What a wild ride. This comic is leaving me thinking about so much now. I loved everything about this comic. Huge recommendation on reading it.
A fun premise the writers played out nicely. You can see the artist having so much fun with this ridiculously open ended concept.
The time jumps were interesting but inevitably came at the expense of deeper character development.
3.5 stars
The premise of this story was super compelling: once the world hits a population of 8 billion, each human gets their own individual genie to grant them a single wish. Simple, yet compelling, right? I definitely thought so, and I was totally addicted to the story that came out of this. I wanted to know what these various characters would wish for. Plus, the creators clearly wanted to give it more thought than the cliche of having people's wishes backfire because they mis-worded them, or get twisted into payback for their innate greed. Instead, we get to see a world where people immediately get to transform reality all around them, and the conflicting wishes would cause catastrophic problems. I love it when writers really try to think through fantastical concepts. In this story, they even imagined a kind of dystopian path that the world would take, where after the world was kind of messed up by the effect of too many crazy wishes, various safe havens and enclaves would form. Sadly, that's when the story kind of lost my initial fervour. The wishes themselves kind of lost their meaning. They became commodities and objects of power in another post-apocalyptic story. It was nice to read about the characters that we'd followed since the beginning, but the timescale also started to speed up (felt like they were just trying to get to the end) and reach the final wish. At that end point I found things got a bit preachy and unfortunately I didn't find the ending very satisfying. I realize that everyone prefers a story arc, rather than jumping around vignettes of various characters exploring their wishes, but I wish (no pun intended) that this particular story had gone wider that way instead. Maybe that would have been too much also, but in the end I think this story tried to take its core concept in too many different directions and didn't quite succeed in tying them all together. Nevertheless, the genies looked cute.