I can see how people feel that, personally I liked all the Hyperman/ other cosmic non-sense in the second half quite a bit, I know quite a lot of people hate the bird issue, but outside of that I thought it was pretty solid, some of it definitely feels a little disjointed going from issue to issue but that's no surprise considering editorial played with the final issue count like a fucking accordion.
I was thinking more the Earth Gender Swap. The character designs were atrocious and the concept was cringe as executed.
And the bird issue too.
I recently had the pleasure of picking up Weapon X and Machine Man 2020 BWS nails it out of the park every time, it's the subtle visual story telling in his art that really pushes it forward.
He really did. He did the pivotal Iron Man 232
He came along way from the Jack Kirby clone he started as in 70s
He hacked away drawing Avengers, Uncanny X-men, and Nick Fury before his work on some horror titles caught Roy Thomas' eye. Thomas picked him up to work on the newly acquired Conan License. Over the course of two years his artwork progressed quite a bit.
However, BWS real strength isn't in excelling at one thing. He's not great at faces, his linework isn't on that next. What he really gets is how the art comes together.
He left Marvel in the 70s to return a decade later. He'd do about twenty projects for marvel, mostly with Chris Claremont.
Then he left, helping establish Valiant. He drew Jim Shooter's Solar Man of the Atom origin, helped design the character line, drew X-O Manowars first issue, drew the book ends of Unity, drew threw issues of Eternal Warrior, and ended his tenure as chief art guru with a section of the Deathmate crossover where Jim Lee inked him.
His line is that he was disenchanted with how Valiant was treating creators, I think it was that and they were planning to replace him with Joe Quesada. He can be prickly.
He wound up doing all the covers for Jim Lee's Wildstorm rising and pencilling the first bookend written by James Robinson. He'd later go on to express his utter contempt for Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld in an interview.
He took another stab at a company collab, this time with Malibu. He created, drew, and wrote Rune. Six issues, a prologue, an annual, and a doublesized crossover with Conan. The Marvel buyout left him jaded and he jumped ship. He went to Dark Horse and did a series called freebooters, which enabled him to recycle some of his old stories Marvel had stopped, such as LifeDeath III.
he briefly returned to Marvel in the early 00s for some very spartan covers and a brief sequence as well as attempting to secure a project at the Big two for a time, despite all of his trash talk. After that fell through, he's spent the last twenty years on
Monsters.