Warning: Spoilers for Imperial Guardians #1
Imperial Guardians follows Gamora as she leads her new cosmic team consisting of Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers), Cosmic Ghost Rider (Frank Castle), Darkhawk (Christopher Powell), and Brawn (Amadeus Cho). Assembled by the Inhumans to protect the new Galactic Union after the Imperial War, this new team of Guardians must run discrete black ops missions to make sure the new cosmic order does not crumble as quickly as it was put into place. Their first mission pits the team against the Kree Grand Admiral Sul-Hek, who has gone rogue in protest to the Inhuman Royal Family’s Rule over the Kree hegemony.

Title: Imperial Guardians (2026) #1
Writer: Dan Abnett
Artist: Marcelo Ferreira
Colourist: Rachelle Rosenberg
Letterer: Cory Petit
Cover Artist: Sean Izaakse
This is the first cosmic level comic book that I’ve read in a long time, the last one being Sam Alexander’s Nova from 2016, so I’m a little behind on recent events in this corner of Marvel. I may go back and read some of the series that lead up to this one, like Imperial, and Imperial War: Imperial Guardians. I considered picking up Imperial when it came out last summer because of Amadeus Cho, but I wasn’t sure I would be interested. I decided to pick up Imperial Guardians because I missed reading Amadeus, one of my favourite characters.
The Imperial Guardians is Like an Intergalactic Sitcom
Imperial Guardians has the characters keeping private logs that remind me of the interviews on shows like The Office or Modern Family. As the leader, Gamora has her team make these logs as insurance due to the nature of their mission. So if they ever do run into trouble, the members of the team have some coverage and proof of why they were doing what they were doing, and who sent them to do it. This interview style storytelling is actually a reference to the Guardians of the Galaxy series from 2008 where they did the same thing.

I think this is an interesting story telling strategy that works well to give more insight into the character’s personal thoughts and opinions. Though since this is a limited series with only five issues, there’s only so much space to fit the story they want to tell. Having the characters explain what they’re doing feels like a shortcut that allows the writers to jump straight into the action of the story without having to show what happened before. Limited series give a spotlight to teams and characters, but they don’t give as much space to develop them as an ongoing series would.
The Imperial Guardians Are an Interesting Team, but a Limited Series Doesn’t Allow Them to Develop
I like the dynamic between the characters in this team, but with only five issues in this series, by the time I’m really invested in the characters I’m introduced to here, it’ll be over, and the characters will go their separate ways. Especially for someone like me who hasn’t followed the stories for most of these characters, I don’t have time to become connected to them. One story arc doesn’t even give the characters enough time to develop, before they have to reset in the next storyline they join for new readers to jump in on, and the cycle repeats.

Internally, the Imperial Guardians are standing in as the current Guardians of the Galaxy run. Before the MCU, the Guardians probably weren’t Marvel’s most recognizable title, but now giving the Guardians a series, but not making it ongoing is baffling to me. Sure, this is not the iconic lineup from the movie, but I personally really enjoy this combination of cosmic characters. And with an ongoing, it gives the opportunity to bring back original Guardians further down the line. Star-Lord has even been mentioned already, but I guess we’ll see how the story plays out in the months to come.
Imperial Guardians (2026) #1 is available now – Imperial Guardians #1
Next Week’s Comic Reviews:
- Star Wars: Hyperspace Stories – Grievous
- Cyclops #2
- Deathstroke: The Terminator #1
- New Titans #33
- Nightwing #136







