But seemingly as fast as we’ve gotten to know Morris - and his overwhelming sense of superiority - he’s enveloped in a stray cloud of Terrigen Mist, and that development winds up tying Thorne’s hands behind his back. Not only is he unable to redeem Morris’s off-putting, self-absorbed characterization, but the way Mosaic tests his powers feels loose and unfocused. Since Mosaic has the sort of Deadman-style abilities of jumping from body to body (and in this case, picking up all their skills), you need a framework to not only make this vague power set make sense, but also to maintain any sense of limitations or tension - otherwise, what’s stopping Morris from just jumping into another body or finding a convenient set of skills to help him out of a jam? As Morris bounces from host to host without a solid villain to match wits against, new readers unfamiliar with body-jumping comics tropes might have some trouble catching up with the chaos, and given that Morris is kind of a tough sell to root for to begin with, that puts this debut issue at a disadvantage.