Dustin Nguyen (1) (1976–)
Author of Descender Volume 1: Tin Stars
For other authors named Dustin Nguyen, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: Comics creator Dustin Nguyen at the 2011 New York Comic Con, Friday, October 14, 2011. This photo was created by Luigi Novi. By Luigi Novi, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17035874
Series
Works by Dustin Nguyen
Batman: Li'l Gotham 1 - Halloween 2 copies
Batman: Li'l Gotham 2 - Thanksgiving 2 copies
Damian: Son of Batman #4 1 copy
a lil sumth'n sumth'n 1 copy
Associated Works
Batman: Gates of Gotham (2012) — Artist - Batman: Gates of Gotham No. 4, Variant Cover Art - Batman: Gates of Gotham Nos. 1-5 — 206 copies, 8 reviews
Secret Identities: The Asian American Superhero Anthology (2008) — Illustrator — 91 copies, 4 reviews
Robin 80th Anniversary 100-Page Super Spectacular (2020) #1 (2020) — Illustrator — 10 copies, 1 review
Detective Comics # 866 — Illustrator — 6 copies
Future Quest #10 — Cover artist, some editions — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1976-06-15
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- artist
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
So fun! I love Dustin Nguyen and Derek Fridolfs "Lil Gotham" and this appeared to be just as delightful.
did not disappoint. It's a fun what if of the school AU variety that is very popular in fanfic, reimagining the Caped Crusader, Man of Steel and Amazonian Princess as elementary school kids investigating super shady shit at their new school. Like NINJAS. So. Many. Ninjas.
Anyone with passing familiarity with the universe with recognize the students and teachers alike (Pamela Isley? Victor show more Fries? Brainiac?) and guess the Principal's identity, but as a primer for the young set this will appeal to them I think. show less
did not disappoint. It's a fun what if of the school AU variety that is very popular in fanfic, reimagining the Caped Crusader, Man of Steel and Amazonian Princess as elementary school kids investigating super shady shit at their new school. Like NINJAS. So. Many. Ninjas.
Anyone with passing familiarity with the universe with recognize the students and teachers alike (Pamela Isley? Victor show more Fries? Brainiac?) and guess the Principal's identity, but as a primer for the young set this will appeal to them I think. show less
Space witch continues to hunt the last robots in the galaxy.
This is a world-building arc and boy howdy does it hoot and holler. Lemire is really good at creating unique, interesting stories when he's not gushing blood everywhere, and Ascender is proving how much fun he can craft with a post-apocalyptic galaxy full of space vampires and, my god, werewhales.
And the art is so so beautiful.
This is a world-building arc and boy howdy does it hoot and holler. Lemire is really good at creating unique, interesting stories when he's not gushing blood everywhere, and Ascender is proving how much fun he can craft with a post-apocalyptic galaxy full of space vampires and, my god, werewhales.
And the art is so so beautiful.
I've been reading a whole bunch of great comics recently and I can confidently say that this is one of the best I have ever read! As we all know, perfection is a myth, but this is literally in spitting distance.
I was calling this watercolour Mass Effect when I started because it shares a lot of DNA/ Codex with the sci-fi future with a multi-planet government with a variety of aliens, the Harvesters are big, largely artificial harbingers of apocalypse, much like the reapers, there's an show more adversarial robot faction, though they seem more like the Underground Railroad than the Geth. You get the picture. I was a disrespectful summer child, this is so much more than Mass Effect in so many ways, and I loved the trilogy (friendly reminder, ACAB includes everyone in those games, but especially your space boyfriend, Garrus. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news). There is also an Aliens/ Promethius element, which is really cool. It's kinda got elements of Brazil and Star Wars too... What I'm saying is, like pretty much every work of Sci-fi in at least theast 100 years, there's a lot of influence and inspiration. The things about good sci-fi is not it looking like or doing something you've seen before, but taking all those elements and exploring human questions and telling exciting stories with new perspectives. Descender absolutely has that in spades!
There's something for everyone:
- Hopeless Doctor
- Grumpy military femme and her rock meat friend (he's human, he just looks like rock meat)
- Adorable and genuinely heart-wrenching robot boy
- Cute and annoying, but in a lovable, not done to death Star Wars kind of way, robot... Dog?
- Big ole prejudiced working class killer robot with a heart of gold
- An empire compromising purely of Tories
- Govermental-Military-Family dynamics and nepotism
- ancient anvanced robot mystery
- genuinely full on gore and action
- Great scripting and storytelling
- possibly the most original, effective and fucking gorgeous art a comic has ever had.
As you can tell I'm absolutely obsessed and will be consuming all of this and the sequel Ascender, as soon as possible! show less
I was calling this watercolour Mass Effect when I started because it shares a lot of DNA/ Codex with the sci-fi future with a multi-planet government with a variety of aliens, the Harvesters are big, largely artificial harbingers of apocalypse, much like the reapers, there's an show more adversarial robot faction, though they seem more like the Underground Railroad than the Geth. You get the picture. I was a disrespectful summer child, this is so much more than Mass Effect in so many ways, and I loved the trilogy (friendly reminder, ACAB includes everyone in those games, but especially your space boyfriend, Garrus. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news). There is also an Aliens/ Promethius element, which is really cool. It's kinda got elements of Brazil and Star Wars too... What I'm saying is, like pretty much every work of Sci-fi in at least theast 100 years, there's a lot of influence and inspiration. The things about good sci-fi is not it looking like or doing something you've seen before, but taking all those elements and exploring human questions and telling exciting stories with new perspectives. Descender absolutely has that in spades!
There's something for everyone:
- Hopeless Doctor
- Grumpy military femme and her rock meat friend (he's human, he just looks like rock meat)
- Adorable and genuinely heart-wrenching robot boy
- Cute and annoying, but in a lovable, not done to death Star Wars kind of way, robot... Dog?
- Big ole prejudiced working class killer robot with a heart of gold
- An empire compromising purely of Tories
- Govermental-Military-Family dynamics and nepotism
- ancient anvanced robot mystery
- genuinely full on gore and action
- Great scripting and storytelling
- possibly the most original, effective and fucking gorgeous art a comic has ever had.
As you can tell I'm absolutely obsessed and will be consuming all of this and the sequel Ascender, as soon as possible! show less
It's a cute idea with decent art that doesn't do well in black and white, and is all-in-all executed terribly.
This is by far and away not the first AU iteration of familiar DC characters - with a particular emphasis on the Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman mythos - in school environments, and it does nothing to stand out from any of the others. Compared to "Gotham Academy", which barely even has appearances by the mainstay Batman characters, this is pathetic. The school isn't a school, and show more it seems stupid from page 1 that any of the main trio would go there. It's not even amusing or believable on a "well it's sort of funny that they went to a supervillain training school". Because that seems to be the premise. But it's not really a supervillain training school so much as a supervillain reference environment where apparently unsupervised children are left to run rampant most of the day without any consequences or purpose. Well, the purpose is to have one or three things every page that someone familiar with the DC Universe can say "I get that reference". That's it.
Compare this to the "Lois Lane" novels by Gwenda Bond. The series takes place in a relatively normal school, with familiar characters like Lois Lane, Clark Kent, Bruce Wayne, and Lex Luthor, all aged down. For all that weird stuff does go on in the background, forming the basis for the mysteries to solve, the school is still by and large a NORMAL school, where NORMAL things happen. Kids and adults can and frequently do face consequences for actions that break the rules of the system, and teaching is involved in the system. The school isn't just a nostalgia box. And when it makes a reference, it works fluidly in the story.
Dustin Nguyen's art is fine, although it's really difficult to appreciate without color (the gray just kind of blends together). Backgrounds are basic to nonexistent, so characters are running around in voids, even if most of what we see is mostly snapshots. Character expressions verge on the statuesque to the bizarre, with Bruce occasionally looking like a pig, and ages for non-child characters being extremely ambiguous. Due to the lack of environments, characters and plot seem to spontaneously spawn, with Brainiac's first appearance being the notable example, particularly given its "introduction". Or lack of introduction. Basically Bruce sees the Brainiac insignia on a piece of paper and is potentially weirded out by it(?) (it's not explained). He then shows Clark and Diana for no apparent reason, and they're potentially shocked by it too for some unexplained reason, and then Brainiac appears to no one's apparent surprise before going off on its merry way. And then Bruce and Clark and Diana are besties now.
Plots are picked up and dropped with no rhyme or reason. No one likes Bruce and he's frequently apparently dumped in garbage or covered in food from food fights and mistrusted by the school leadership, yet his locker is filled with love letters on Valentine's Day. Why? Because Batman is a notorious heart-throb in comics, therefore mini Bruce Wayne must also be.
Characters like Diana and Clark and Mr. Freeze have superpowers but this is only a slight oddity that Bruce occasionally comments on but is largely nonplussed by. It's fine to have a world where having superpowers isn't unusual, but there's no evidence that this is what's going on. In fact, it's implied that it's the opposite - that superpowers aren't the norm. The antagonists of the story seem to be aware, unaware, suspect, and know the extent of the superpowers of the protagonists. It's very confusing.
I just wonder if some of these writers have any clue what it's like to go to public or private school. Parents/guardians don't typically hear that their children are being bullied by literally all students and assaulted in hallways and then tell them "school isn't meant to be enjoyed". I certainly don't understand why Alfred is saying that. Certainly, school isn't supposed to be a vacation. But it's not just "let's assault the new kid" ground. There's absentminded parenting, parents not believing their kids, parents believing that hazing is good for kids to learn to toughen up, and then zombie parents who just exist because children must have guardians and guardians don't care about kid's feelings because that's how all school dramas are written apparently.
Overall the story is boring at its best, nonsensical and dumb at its worst. The art, given its presentation, is meh. There are plenty of better alternative "familiar superhero characters as kids in school" stories out there, like "Gotham Academy", Gwenda Bond's Lois Lane series, "JL8" the webcomic, and so on. Plenty of those are things that children -and adults- would enjoy reading. Skip this. show less
This is by far and away not the first AU iteration of familiar DC characters - with a particular emphasis on the Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman mythos - in school environments, and it does nothing to stand out from any of the others. Compared to "Gotham Academy", which barely even has appearances by the mainstay Batman characters, this is pathetic. The school isn't a school, and show more it seems stupid from page 1 that any of the main trio would go there. It's not even amusing or believable on a "well it's sort of funny that they went to a supervillain training school". Because that seems to be the premise. But it's not really a supervillain training school so much as a supervillain reference environment where apparently unsupervised children are left to run rampant most of the day without any consequences or purpose. Well, the purpose is to have one or three things every page that someone familiar with the DC Universe can say "I get that reference". That's it.
Compare this to the "Lois Lane" novels by Gwenda Bond. The series takes place in a relatively normal school, with familiar characters like Lois Lane, Clark Kent, Bruce Wayne, and Lex Luthor, all aged down. For all that weird stuff does go on in the background, forming the basis for the mysteries to solve, the school is still by and large a NORMAL school, where NORMAL things happen. Kids and adults can and frequently do face consequences for actions that break the rules of the system, and teaching is involved in the system. The school isn't just a nostalgia box. And when it makes a reference, it works fluidly in the story.
Dustin Nguyen's art is fine, although it's really difficult to appreciate without color (the gray just kind of blends together). Backgrounds are basic to nonexistent, so characters are running around in voids, even if most of what we see is mostly snapshots. Character expressions verge on the statuesque to the bizarre, with Bruce occasionally looking like a pig, and ages for non-child characters being extremely ambiguous. Due to the lack of environments, characters and plot seem to spontaneously spawn, with Brainiac's first appearance being the notable example, particularly given its "introduction". Or lack of introduction. Basically Bruce sees the Brainiac insignia on a piece of paper and is potentially weirded out by it(?) (it's not explained). He then shows Clark and Diana for no apparent reason, and they're potentially shocked by it too for some unexplained reason, and then Brainiac appears to no one's apparent surprise before going off on its merry way. And then Bruce and Clark and Diana are besties now.
Plots are picked up and dropped with no rhyme or reason. No one likes Bruce and he's frequently apparently dumped in garbage or covered in food from food fights and mistrusted by the school leadership, yet his locker is filled with love letters on Valentine's Day. Why? Because Batman is a notorious heart-throb in comics, therefore mini Bruce Wayne must also be.
Characters like Diana and Clark and Mr. Freeze have superpowers but this is only a slight oddity that Bruce occasionally comments on but is largely nonplussed by. It's fine to have a world where having superpowers isn't unusual, but there's no evidence that this is what's going on. In fact, it's implied that it's the opposite - that superpowers aren't the norm. The antagonists of the story seem to be aware, unaware, suspect, and know the extent of the superpowers of the protagonists. It's very confusing.
I just wonder if some of these writers have any clue what it's like to go to public or private school. Parents/guardians don't typically hear that their children are being bullied by literally all students and assaulted in hallways and then tell them "school isn't meant to be enjoyed". I certainly don't understand why Alfred is saying that. Certainly, school isn't supposed to be a vacation. But it's not just "let's assault the new kid" ground. There's absentminded parenting, parents not believing their kids, parents believing that hazing is good for kids to learn to toughen up, and then zombie parents who just exist because children must have guardians and guardians don't care about kid's feelings because that's how all school dramas are written apparently.
Overall the story is boring at its best, nonsensical and dumb at its worst. The art, given its presentation, is meh. There are plenty of better alternative "familiar superhero characters as kids in school" stories out there, like "Gotham Academy", Gwenda Bond's Lois Lane series, "JL8" the webcomic, and so on. Plenty of those are things that children -and adults- would enjoy reading. Skip this. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 79
- Also by
- 24
- Members
- 6,242
- Popularity
- #3,929
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 249
- ISBNs
- 210
- Languages
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