is the MVP. In a world of flying gods and government conspiracies, Jimmy is the audience surrogate. He gets a subplot involving "Flamebird" that is simultaneously hilarious and shockingly heartfelt. The show finally uses Jimmy as more than the comic relief; he is the moral compass.
Spoiler alert: My Adventures with Superman Season 2 does not fumble. In fact, the recently released (available now on Digital and Blu-ray) does something remarkable—it fixes the first season’s pacing issues while doubling down on everything that made the show a sleeper hit.
And Clark? Jack Quaid continues to be the definitive "Nice Guy" Superman. But in Season 2, that niceness is tested. When confronted with the ghosts of Krypton, Clark has to ask a hard question: If your biological family was evil, are you destined to follow their path? Let’s address the elephant in the fortress. Season 2 introduces Brainiac and Supergirl (Kara Zor-El) into the mix. If you were worried about "grimdark" Superman, don't be.
gets her best arc yet. She isn't just the "investigative journalist chasing the story" this time. She is chasing the truth about herself . Without giving too much away, the episode "Lane and Order" flips the script: Lois discovers a secret military file about her own mother. It turns her relentless drive from a character trait into a tragic motivation.
Have you picked up the Season 2 pack yet? Who is your favorite new character—Kara or Brainiac? Let me know in the comments below!
The fights in Season 2 are cinematic . The finale—titled "My Adventures with Doomsday"—is a 22-minute sakuga fest that rivals the climax of Superman: The Animated Series . There is a specific shot of Superman punching a hole through a satellite while saving a falling plane with his cape that I have already replayed fifty times.
The is the definitive way to watch it. No commercials, no week-long waits, just pure, uncut Kryptonian goodness.
There is a specific anxiety that comes with loving a reboot. You watch the first season, you fall head-over-heels for the fresh animation style and the "aw shucks" charm of a Clark Kent who texts like a millennial, and then you hold your breath. Would Season 2 fumble the lore? Would it drown in the "angst" that plagues modern superhero dramas?
This version of Brainiac is terrifying. He isn't just a green-skinned guy in a spaceship; he is a glitching, reality-bending digital ghost of Krypton’s hubris. The animation team goes hard on his design—think Spider-Verse levels of visual distortion.