In his interesting investigation on The Invisible Language of Visual Storytelling, Part 11, Joe Quesada talks about "Reveal" and... Watchmen!
You can read the whole thing HERE.
I highly recommend reading Quesada's Substack!
[...] Nothing Changed. Everything Did.
Before the reveal, the audience is assembling pieces.
After the reveal, everything organizes.
Cause and effect become clear.
And the audience feels the shift immediately.
Watchmen might be the clearest example of this in comics.
Throughout the story, every piece is already in place.
Ozymandias’ intelligence.
His resources.
His obsession with saving the world.
The missing scientists.
It’s all there.
You just haven’t connected it yet.
Then Ozymandias begins to fill in the gaps.
You’re still processing what he’s saying.
Trying to understand the scope.
Still catching up.
Then comes the line that changes everything.
“I did it thirty-five minutes ago.”
No buildup.
No countdown.
No chance to stop it.
The event is already over.And suddenly it’s undeniable.
The plan. The scale.
Then the inevitability.
You weren’t waiting for it to happen.
You were already too late. [...]
Read the complete piece HERE.















