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This is a list of active and upcoming Marvel Comics printed comic books (as opposed to digital comics, trade paperbacks, hardcover books, etc.). The list is updated as of January 8, 2025. The list is updated as of January 8, 2025.
Marvel Comics is an American comic book company dating to 1961. This is a list of the publications it has released in its history under the "Marvel Comics" imprint. The list does not include collected editions; trade paperbacks; digital comics; free, promotional giveaways; sketchbooks; poster books or magazines, nor does it include series published by other Marvel imprints such as Epic, Icon ...
Lists of Marvel Comics publications cover publications by Marvel Comics, a publisher of American comic books and related media. The Walt Disney Company acquired the parent company, Marvel Entertainment , in 2009.
Marvel Unlimited (formerly known as Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited) is an American online service owned by Marvel Comics that distributes their comic books via the internet. [1] The service launched on November 13, 2007, and now has more than 30,000 comic book issues in its archive. [ 2 ]
Marvel Comics is an American comic book company dating to 1961. This is a list of the publications it has released in its history under the "Marvel Comics" imprint. The list does not include collected editions; trade paperbacks; digital comics; free, promotional giveaways; sketchbooks; poster books or magazines, nor does it include series published by other Marvel imprints such as Epic, Icon ...
The Amazing Spider-Man newspaper comic strip has had many attempts of being collected prior to The Library of American Comics started to publish this series. In the 1980s, two trade paperbacks collecting episodes from the strip's first year; another collection was an anthology collection titled The Best of Spider-Man.
Marvel Treasury Edition is an American comic book series published by Marvel Comics from 1974 to 1981. [1] It usually featured reprints of previously published stories but a few issues contained new material. The series was published in an oversized 10″ x 14″ tabloid (or "treasury") format and was launched with a collection of Spider-Man ...
X-Force #116 X-Force #119 (October 2001) was the first Marvel Comics title since The Amazing Spider-Man #96–98 in 1971 to not have the Comics Code Authority (CCA) approval seal, due to the violence depicted in the issue. The CCA, which governed the content of American comic books, rejected the issue, requiring that changes be made.