The end of Space Ghost season two has arrived, and Dynamite Entertainment is not closing this chapter quietly.
Space Ghost #12 is a massive, time-bending finale from writer David Pepose and artist Jonathan Lau, bringing Tempus, the Time-Shredder, Jan, Jace, and a multiverse-sized rescue mission together for one explosive final issue. This is the kind of finale that swings big, throws every cosmic toy on the board, and reminds readers why this run has been one of Dynamite’s strongest adventure titles.
You can find more details on the official Dynamite Entertainment product page, and fans can also read our full Space Ghost #12 review for additional coverage.
Time Is Running Out for Space Ghost
Space Ghost #12 drops the hero directly into Tempus’s doomsday weapon, the Time-Shredder, and the stakes could not be bigger. Space Ghost is trapped at the edge of time itself, and survival may come down to Jan and Jace doing the impossible: assembling a team from across the multiverse.
That team is one of the issue’s biggest hooks.
Space Spectre. Eclipse Woman. Werewolf Jan. Thundercleese. 1960s animated-style Zorak.
Together, they form the wildest backup squad Space Ghost could ask for: the Space Force.
It is weird, energetic, colorful, and exactly the kind of multiverse chaos that makes this finale feel like an event issue rather than a standard closing chapter.
David Pepose Goes Full Cosmic Finale Mode
David Pepose has been building this run with a strong sense of scope, character, and old-school adventure energy, and Space Ghost #12 feels like the payoff. The issue brings together time travel, alternate versions, cosmic warfare, and emotional urgency without losing the pulpy superhero momentum that makes Space Ghost work so well.
The best part is that the finale does not feel small.
Tempus is not just another villain throwing out a last-minute threat. His plan attacks time and space at the structural level. That gives Space Ghost a challenge that feels appropriately huge for a season finale.
Pepose understands that Space Ghost works best when the story balances mythic heroism with sharp character drama. Jan and Jace are not just side characters waiting for rescue. They are central to the pushback. Their leadership in assembling the Space Force gives the finale extra weight because it shows how much this universe has expanded beyond one masked cosmic hero.
Jonathan Lau Brings the Multiverse to Life
Jonathan Lau’s artwork gives Space Ghost #12 the scale it needs.
The pages move from cosmic machinery to collapsing timelines to strange planets and alternate heroes without losing clarity. Lau’s action staging keeps the book readable even when the story is throwing multiversal chaos, creatures, villains, and time-shredding danger at the reader.
The preview pages alone show how big this issue wants to feel. Space Ghost is surrounded by cosmic forces, Tempus looms like a villain with history-altering power, and the multiverse sequences open the door for some truly fun visual surprises.
There is also a strong contrast between the different cover styles. Francesco Mattina’s Cover A gives the book an intense cinematic energy, while Jae Lee’s Cover B has a clean, iconic team composition. Michael Cho’s Cover C goes bold and graphic, and Bjorn Barends’ Cover D gives Space Ghost a powerful modern sci-fi edge.
Collectors have plenty to chase here.
The Space Force Steals the Show
The idea of Jan and Jace forming a multiverse rescue team is the kind of concept that immediately makes this issue feel special.
The Space Force lineup is pure comic book fun. Space Spectre brings legacy energy. Eclipse Woman adds mystery and power. Werewolf Jan is exactly the kind of alternate-universe madness that makes a multiverse story worth reading. Thundercleese brings unexpected brute-force weirdness. And 1960s animated-style Zorak is the kind of deep-cut character inclusion that longtime animation and Space Ghost fans should appreciate.
This is not just a gimmick. It gives the issue a sense of celebration.
Space Ghost #12 feels like a finale that honors the character’s history while still pushing the Dynamite version forward. It is nostalgic without being stuck in the past, and modern without losing the retro-adventure DNA that makes Space Ghost so recognizable.
Why New Readers Should Care
Even if you have not followed every issue, Space Ghost #12 has a clean, exciting hook:
Space Ghost is trapped inside a time-destroying weapon, and Jan and Jace have to recruit heroes from across the multiverse to save him.
That is simple, big, and easy to get excited about.
This issue is a strong pickup for readers who enjoy:
Cosmic superhero action.
Multiverse stories.
Old-school adventure heroes.
Big season finales.
Time-travel chaos.
Retro animation callbacks.
Dynamite Entertainment comics.
David Pepose’s sharp superhero writing.
Jonathan Lau’s kinetic sci-fi artwork.
Space Ghost has always worked best as a larger-than-life hero, and this issue fully embraces that energy.
Extra-Sized Finale
One of the biggest selling points for Space Ghost #12 is that it is an extra-sized finale featuring 40 pages with 28 pages of story and art. That matters because this issue has a lot to deliver: Tempus, the Time-Shredder, Jan and Jace, the Space Force, Gargolyoids, the Time Tyrants, and the fate of time and space itself.
The larger page count gives the finale room to breathe. It feels like a true closing chapter rather than a rushed wrap-up.
And with more Space Ghost adventure coming next month, this finale works as both an ending and a launchpad.
Comic Book Details
Title: Space Ghost #12
Publisher: Dynamite Entertainment
Writer: David Pepose
Artist: Jonathan Lau
Cover A: Francesco Mattina
Cover B: Jae Lee
Cover C: Michael Cho
Cover D: Bjorn Barends
Format: Comic Book
Pages: 40 pages
Story Pages: 28 pages of story and art
Price: $5.99
Color: Full Color
Covers: All Cardstock Covers
Genre: Adventure
Rating: Teen
Final Verdict
Space Ghost #12 is a blockbuster finale packed with cosmic stakes, multiverse mayhem, and high-energy superhero adventure.
David Pepose and Jonathan Lau deliver a final issue that feels big enough for the end of season two while still leaving readers ready for what comes next. Tempus and the Time-Shredder give the issue danger, Jan and Jace give it heart, and the Space Force gives it the kind of wild comic book imagination that makes a finale memorable.
This is Space Ghost at full power: heroic, strange, explosive, and larger than time itself.
If you have been following this run, Space Ghost #12 looks like a must-read finale. If you are a new reader looking for a cosmic adventure with old-school energy and modern storytelling, this is a great issue to put on your radar.
Space Ghost #12 from Dynamite Entertainment is the end of the season, but it does not feel like the end of the mission.
Space Ghost may be trapped in time, but this series is still moving forward at lightspeed.
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Join the Conversation
Are you picking up Space Ghost #12 from Dynamite Entertainment?
Which member of the Space Force are you most excited to see: Space Spectre, Eclipse Woman, Werewolf Jan, Thundercleese, or classic animated-style Zorak?
Drop your thoughts in the comments and let us know where you want Space Ghost to go next.
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