With "Kevin's Big Score," written by Matt Wayne and directed by Butch Lukic, we get our first episode not written by Dwayne McDuffie. And it's still a pretty good one. Some nice character tension and conflict -- although to be honest, I think maybe the ending redeemed Kevin a little too much. I never got the sense from the pilot that he'd really reformed, just that he was tagging along because he liked Gwen.
I guess that "living crystal" Volcanis forced Kevin to touch was the same kind of crystal that Pyrosapiens (like Diamondhead) are made of. If so, I wonder why it's as rare in this galactic sector as Volcanis claimed. I mean, Ben in Diamondhead form must've left a ton of the stuff lying around after shooting it at things in his various battles.
The lines about Grandpa Max buying a new Rust Bucket to replace the old one explains a continuity issue I hadn't even thought of; the original Rust Bucket was destroyed in the live-action Race Against Time movie. The mention of that is a subtle acknowledgment that the movie is canonical. I wonder, did the developers of this show not know that would happen in the movie and have to fix the error later, or did they know and just decide that the Rust Bucket was too iconic to do without?
Anyway, now I'm wondering if there will be any followup on the Plumber tech that Kevin's rodentlike "friend" stripped from the Rust Bucket and sold. Although clearly the main arc is going to be finding the other superpowered "Plumbers' kids" and assembling the team. Honestly, I felt the ending was weak -- all this trouble to get this holomessage from Max, and that's all it is? Heck, they could've figured out on their own that that was a good idea.
And what is it with all these Plumbers' kids being part-alien? Just how much interspecies boinking were the Plumbers engaging in all these years? What, is there a universal custom of rishathra that Max never told Ben and Gwen about because they were too young? (See Niven's The Ringworld Engineers: rishathra is ritual sex as a way of closing a deal, like a handshake only a whooollle lot more so.)
Omnitrix aliens this week: the return of Echo Echo, who's a little less creepy-robot-monotone and has a bit more personality, and the introduction of Big Chill, an eerie giant-moth sort of beast with ice breath and intangibility (sort of like if Iceman and Shadowcat had a kid, which is within the realm of possibility based on the movies). I'm kind of wondering why Ben went to Big Chill a second time for the climactic confrontation. I can see why it was necessary for story reasons; the big reveal wouldn't have worked as well if we'd seen Gwen show up with some unfamiliar alien standing next to her. The audience had to know it was Ben. But in-story, I don't see why he would've chosen that form for that particular confrontation.
Meanwhile, I have the distinct impression that the 10-minute limit on the Omnitrix is gone. Last week gave the impression that Ben can change back to himself at will, and this week it seemed that Echo Echo's various parts were unconscious for considerably more than 10 minutes before they reassembled and reverted to Ben. I guess that means we won't have any more of the running gag where the Omnitrix gave him the wrong alien, either. Presumably he has more control over this model, either because of the still-unexplained upgrade or because of untold experiences he had years ago before finally removing it. (Indeed, if he gained fuller control over it back then, it could explain how he was able to remove it.)