Man, 'The Last Ronin' hit me like a ton of bricks—especially the way it handled the fates of the Turtles. The comic’s whole premise revolves around a lone surviving Turtle, and the emotional weight comes from knowing who didn’t make it. Leonardo, Donatello, and Raphael all fall in battle before the story even begins, leaving Michelangelo as the last one standing. It’s brutal, but the way their deaths are framed through flashbacks and Mikey’s memories adds layers to their legacies. Donnie dies defending their home, Raph goes down in a rage-fueled last stand, and Leo sacrifices himself to buy time. The storytelling doesn’t just kill them off for shock value; it makes their losses feel like a gut punch because you see how it shapes Mikey’s journey.
The comic’s brilliance is in how it uses their absence. You get glimpses of their final moments through Mikey’s grief-stricken recollections, and it’s heartbreaking every time. The way Donnie’s tech fails him, Raph’s defiance even in death, and Leo’s calm acceptance—it all feeds into the theme of legacy. Even Splinter’s earlier death (which happens pre-story) casts a shadow. It’s not just about who dies, but how their deaths redefine what’s left of the TMNT world. I still get chills thinking about that final shot of Mikey holding their weapons, carrying their spirits into the fight.
Reading 'The Last Ronin' felt like attending a funeral for characters I grew up with. The comic doesn’t shy away from its dark premise: Michelangelo is the sole survivor, and the others—Leo, Donnie, Raph—are already gone. Their deaths aren’t shown in real time, but the flashbacks are devastating. Donatello’s demise is particularly tragic; he’s overwhelmed while trying to protect their home, a genius outsmarted by sheer numbers. Raphael’s end is pure rage, fighting to the last breath, which is so him. Leonardo’s death is the most poetic, though—he falls in a way that mirrors Splinter’s teachings, choosing strategy over survival.
The comic’s emotional core is Mikey grappling with their loss. It’s not just action; it’s a eulogy. Even minor characters like April and Casey play into the grief, their lives altered by the Turtles’ absence. What sticks with me is how the story makes their deaths matter. It’s not gratuitous; it’s about what’s left behind. The weapons, the memories, Mikey’s survivor’s guilt—it all adds up to a story that’s more about mourning than revenge.
The deaths in 'The Last Ronin' are handled with this quiet, crushing weight. Michelangelo’s the last one alive, and the comic reveals through fragments that his brothers died fighting. Donnie falls defending their base, Raph in a berserker last stand, and Leo in a sacrifice play. Even Splinter’s gone before the story starts. What gets me is how their deaths aren’t just plot points—they’re the foundation of Mikey’s character arc. Every fight he picks, every choice he makes, is haunted by them. The comic’s genius is in making you feel the absence as much as the action.
2026-05-06 23:01:24
2
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Assassin
Cooper
9.8
61.6K
Zephyr is the last air dragon in existence. For a century and a half, she has searched for her mate. Finally, she decides to have a true dragon with Avani, the last earth dragon and only remaining male dragon. Her son, Ancalagon, is the last of the pure dragons.
Ishir is a Bengal tiger shifter. He became friends with Avani before he was captured and placed into an Arena. There he met Tana, the fire dragon. He befriended her, her hybrid daughter and eventually her Lycan mate. He has been working to rescue shifters and sometimes even missing humans as his job for years. It was during a meeting to discuss taking down a new Arena that Ishir met Zephyr and realized that he was mated to a dragon.
When Zephyr recognizes Ishir as her mate, she refuses to acknowledge him. After all this time, she finally finds her mate when she’s just had her son. But a dragon can’t stay away from their mate, and in a moment of weakness, she goes to Ishir, spending a night of passion more intense than anything she could have imagined.
However, when she returns home, she finds that her son has been kidnapped, taken by hunters. She begins searching for him, half crazed to protect him from the people who so willingly kill shifters.
When she finally finds her son, Oliver, the lead hunter makes an agreement with Zephyr. She will work for him in exchange for her son’s life. Now Zephyr will have to go against her very nature, becoming an assassin to kill those she is sworn to protect in order to save her son.
Can Ishir find Ancalagon, protect the shifters and save Zephyr from herself, or will she lose herself to save her son?
"If you can't satisfy me with your mouth, then you'll have to satisfy me some other way."
In one swift motion, he tore off her flimsy top and skirt, tossing the shredded fabric aside. The implications of his actions became quite clear to Visenya. "Please, let me try again... with my mouth. I believe I can..."
"Quiet!" Lucian's voice reverberated off the walls of his bedchamber, instantly silencing her.
This was not the way she had envisioned her first time. She had imagined passionate kisses and tender caresses from a man who loved and cherished her. But Lucian was not capable of love, and he certainly didn't cherish her. Instead, she was cursed with a mate consumed by vengeance, and wanted nothing more than to watch her suffer.
———
Ten years had passed since dragons ruled over the world, and Visenya had taken her rightful place as the Lycan Queen. Vampires were forced into the shadows, as hunting and enslaving humans became punishable by death. Finally, the world found peace. However, everything changed when Dragon Lord Lucian emerged from his induced slumber, only to discover the annihilation of his entire race at the hands of Visenya's father. Stripped of her kingdom, Visenya was condemned to a life of servitude as Lucian's slave. The cruelest twist of fate awaited her when she learned that her long-awaited mate was none other than the vengeful Dragon Lord himself.
Consumed by their mutual hatred, will they be able to resist the powerful bond between mates? Or will Lucian push Visenya to her limits, only to regret it in the end?
WARNING: This story may contain content that some may find disturbing.
HUNJI: A Broken Wolf & the last witch of Andora - Book 4
Jwgstout
9.9
55.9K
***Completed*** can be read as a standalone book. please note posted chapters are currently unedited.Knight of the queen or not, I am the expendable one, the one that shouldn’t be here, and the one that shouldn’t be alive. By all accounts, I should have died 13 years ago. A question I always ask myself, every time my eyes open: why am I still alive? Why did the gods let that old priestess find me so many moons ago and bring me back from the dead? Why did they allow me to live?I still wonder what my role is in this story and believe me there is more to this story than any of us know. I can feel it, see it unfolding, almost taste it. The last three years have just been a prelude to something bigger, something yet unseen and unknown. Lamia and Mathias may be the main characters, but we all had a role, an important part to play. Unfortunately, the script of our lives had been hidden away or maybe it just hasn’t been written yet.****Sent on a quest by his beloved Queen Lamia; Hunji finds himself back at the beginning. The place where his old life ended, and where the goddess granted him a second chance. On the hunt for a witch, Hunji must face his past - A past that left him broken. When the goddess breathed new life into him, he took an oath to serve her. Now that promise is being tested.He has survived his past but it's the future that threatens to turn his world upside down. That and the little witch who he was sent to find, protect and bring home; is hellbent on throwing a curve ball at every plan he had.
There is other life beyond earth. Jai was pushed into the river by his ex-girlfriend's boyfriend and thought that it was the time of his death. Miraculously, Jai survived, but he woke up in strange world with twin moons. At night, a spirit popped up in Jai’s dream and told him to kill White Dragon who was murdering people in the past. Not only that, Jai suddenly received the ability to control thunder. When Miria, the beauty girl from Letush who let him stayed in her house, suddenly became ill, Jai joined a tournament in Aeronvein Kingdom to win her cure. Can he win the tournament and get the medicine for her? How can Jai survive in his new world afterwards?
The Ivanovas and the Vitales are well-known aristocratic families who have maintained everlasting friendship through generations.
My name is Anastasia Ivanova.
I have been the daughter of the Ivanovas for twenty years, only to discover just now that I was switched at birth.
When I was swept out of the Ivanova’s mansion like rubbish, Lorenzo, the youngest son of the Vitale family, firmly picked me up in spite of all objections.
Lorenzo always acted cold and distant toward me. I didn’t know why he came to take me into his car at that time.
He whispered in my ear again and again, "I’ve wanted you for a long time." He pinned me against the leather seat, making me cry until my voice was hoarse. At that moment, I finally understood his coldness over the years was not indifference but restraint.
Soon after, Lorenzo overrode all objections to marry me.
His parents were vehemently against me, but Lorenzo directly stripped them of power and became the youngest godfather. Scarlett Montgomery tried to stop us from getting married, but Lorenzo canceled all her credit cards and threatened to send her away.
I thought we would have a happy life.
Three days before our wedding ceremony, he planned to send me abroad, claiming enemies might retaliate. But, I accidentally overheard him talking to Scarlett in the hallway at night.
"Thank goodness. You tricked her into leaving until after I give birth. You’re so good to me!"
He kissed her cheek, "I don’t want Anastasia know our affair. You must keep it secret."
Their dialogue made me devastated.
But I didn’t confront him immediately. Instead, I quietly completed my immigration paperwork as a way to make a clean break with him.
The Last Wolfe is a dark mafia romance about two enemies who fall in love without knowing they are enemies.
Raven Wolfe is the last survivor of her family. Eight years ago, the Vlad family murdered her parents, her brothers, her uncles, her cousins. She survived because she was not home that night. Now she hunts the men who destroyed her life. She has no names. No faces. She has been chasing shadows for eight years.
Fenris Vlad is the son of Dante Vlad, the man who ordered the massacre. He has spent years searching for the last heir of the Wolfe family. He does not know what she looks like. He only knows she exists.
They meet by chance at a charity gala. She is there because her boss told her to network. He is there because his father ordered him to attend. Their eyes meet across the room. Something sparks between them. He pursues her. She lets him. Partly for the mission. Partly because she cannot help herself.
She learns about his past slowly. His mother's death. His father's cruelty. The guilt he carries. He learns about her even slower. She has been lying for eight years. She is careful. But the truth has a way of slipping out.
When Raven discovers that Fenris was present during her family's massacre, her world shatters. She walks away. He hunts for her. He finds her. The truth comes out. Dante Vlad orders her death. Fenris chooses her over his father. He kills Dante to save her.
The story ends with Fenris walking away from the empire. They leave the city together. They start a new life. No contracts. No threats. Just love.
The Last Wolfe is approximately 105,000 words. Dark romance. Mafia. Enemies to lovers. Adult content.
The Ronin' is a gritty, atmospheric tale that follows several key figures, but the heart of the story revolves around a nameless warrior—often just called 'the Ronin'—who’s wandering through a feudal Japan-inspired world, haunted by his past. He’s got this quiet intensity, like a storm brewing under the surface, and his sword skills are legendary, but what really hooks me is how his moral ambiguity plays out. He’s not your typical hero; he’s more of a tragic figure, caught between honor and survival.
Then there’s the geisha with a dagger hidden in her sleeve, whose name I won’t spoil because her reveal is half the fun. She’s not just a damsel—she’s cunning, with her own agenda, and her interactions with the Ronin crackle with tension. The third standout is the corrupt magistrate, a villain who oozes slimy charm. He’s the kind of guy you love to hate, with a network of spies and thugs that make the Ronin’s life hell. The dynamic between these three is what gives the story its pulse, mixing action with deep, personal stakes.
The Last Ronin is one of those rare comics that feels like a love letter to long-time fans while still being accessible to newcomers. From what I've gathered, it's a five-issue limited series, which is perfect for its tight, revenge-driven narrative. Each issue packs a punch, blending brutal action with surprisingly deep emotional beats. I remember tearing through the first issue in one sitting—it's that gripping!
What's fascinating is how it reimagines the TMNT universe in this dystopian future. The art style shifts to match the darker tone, and the pacing feels cinematic. By the time I reached the final issue, it left me with that bittersweet feeling of a story that knew exactly when to end. Definitely worth picking up if you dig gritty, character-driven tales.