While I understand people saying this reminds them of underground comics, for me fanzine is the operative word. It reminds me so much of the zines of the late 60s when I first learned about fandom. Except that in that context Streamline would have been printed with a ditto machine. We have breathless, sketchily-written scripts and hyperactive, crudely-drawn art. Plus giant bylines for the creators (an essential part of vintage stripzines). But that isn't all bad. Like old fanzines the magazine overflows with the creators' exuberance and enthusiasm for comics.
"Streamline" is your basic superhero punch-up. The editor seems to have insisted the writer put at least one dialogue balloon into each panel. He needn't have bothered. What's important here is Streamline smashing things, not sparkling wit. All the same I enjoyed "Specially prepared for you, Shorty!" When Dr DuMar is about to destroy the House of Commons on page 7 I immediately thought of that Moore & Cook Thunderbirds parody. Finally, I congratulate Streamline for his public service announcement cautioning kids not to try to take over the world.
"Kid Carter" is more of the same without a fancy suit. The final panel payoff makes this strip my favorite in the book. "Who cares about Ramon Housely now, eh, kids?"
"Inky" has the look of a five-minute job. "Hey, Denis, we've got a page to fill!" Zero stars.
As for "The Search for the Lost City," you know it's a lower-rung production when Denis Gifford is the best artist in the book. It's another ridiculously fast-paced story, but how can you go wrong when halfway through the story there's a "Suddenly" panel with an exploding volcano? Want to bet Gifford drew Treadgold's hand on the last page from life? Best drawing in the book.
After reading the ads I'm eager to see the amazing, horribly-named AMPHIBASTRA!!
Bottom line: if you remember stripzines fondly, you can't not like this comic!