It's up to Drizzt and his friends to get the people of the land united. A failed wizard finds an artifact of immense power, and he decides to try to conquer the region. Sure, he is still not trusted by most of the humans there, but he has made a friend or two. In this particular story, Drizzt has found some sense of peace in the faraway outpost of Icewind Dale. As a note of disclosure, I have not read the novels, but I have enjoyed these graphic novels so far. I think the first three so far are still the best, which I wonder if that is the case with the novels as well.
#The crystal shard comic series
A faile This series of adaptations of the popular Drizzt series continues to be entertaining. This series of adaptations of the popular Drizzt series continues to be entertaining. The climactic battle does get the space it needs, and the pacing on that final battle is great.more This novel had a lot of plot, and the graphic novel struggled a bit to give everything the space it deserved, with a scene involving a dragon getting sold a bit short in the crunch for space. The battle scenes are bloody and intense, and all of the artwork on the action scenes is great. Drizzt does all of his usual Drizzt things, but seeing him as a mentor-figure to Wulfgar is a nice turnaroud after all of his times in the student role in the first three graphic novels. Wulfgar gets a lot of the spotlight, as does the halfling rogue Regis, who ends up having one of the best scenes in the story in a mind-control battle with the villain. I had forgotten that the Icewind Dale books were more standalone than the Dark Elf Trilogy. The lack of female characters (there is one, and she only appears in two minor scenes), was a bit disappointing, particularly after this had not been an issue in other books in the series, but again, this feels like a product of this graphic novel being based on an earlier piece of Salvatore's writing.Īs for the story, there's an evil artifact, a weak-willed but power-hungry wizard who uses his newfound power to set himself up with a horde of monsters, and the heroes determined to save Icewind Dale in spite of the struggles of the locals to unite. The barbarian Wulfgar was the lead character of that novel, but here the emphasis has been shifted slightly to focus more on Drizzt, although the story is, so some extent, an ensemble cast. The lack of female characters (there is one, and she only appears in two minor scenes), was a bit disappointing, particularly after this had not been an issue in other books in th The fourth volume of the Legend of Drizzt graphic novel series goes back to the prose novel where Drizzt was originally introduced. The fourth volume of the Legend of Drizzt graphic novel series goes back to the prose novel where Drizzt was originally introduced.