This subreddit is for the enjoyment and discussion of comic book collecting only. This sub is not a profit center, if your intent or implied intent is to directly or indirectly make a profit, your submission will be removed. Multiple violations will result in a ban.

I was wondering if I could ask the good people of reddit a question. A pang of nostalgia has taken hold of me so I wanted to find a copy of an xmen comic that I read a ton of at the grocery store when I was a kid (was too poor to buy it at the time so id just reread the issue whenever my parents took me to the store). But I cant for the life of me remember. So I thought id ask to see if it jolts anyones memories.


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Users may only submit one image or image album per day and they must be appropriately flaired. The source of the excerpt, including the series name and comic issue or television episode number. Please include the name and source for the "Fan Creation" and "Cover/Pin-up" in the title of post.

The most recent issue of a comic is deemed a "spoiler" until the following issue has been released and must be properly tagged as a spoiler. Spoilers must be absent from the titles of posts until they are collected (TPB for comics, DVD for movies). Television and video games are spoilers until 30 days after release.

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Title kinda says it all but I'm just looking to thin my collection so I'm wondering what the best way to go about that is. I don't really have anything super rare or valuable, it's just a bunch of random books basically. Any help is appreciated.

I am putting together a pitch for agents and publishers. Looking for an artist to pencil and ink 5 pages of my comic (maybe more, but it'll be 5 for now. I want to see if we're a good fit). The comic is an Image style Science Fiction--a lot like Saga.

The minimum I will pay for a page is $100 (let me know if you charge more). The reason for that is that I am going to ask for rough sketches of each page, and probably will ask you to make changes. I used to be a comic book artist back in the day, so I am coming from that perspective.

Hey guys. How are you? Today, I was wondering what this subreddit's opinion on comics is? I love this subreddit full of bibliophiles, but I'm also a comicphile. I think comics are cool. Sure, everyone says that they aren't really "real reading" but I beg to differ. This article summarizes it nicely: -books-count-as-reading/. It's just that I've seen a lot of people stereotype comics as immature, childish, and unrealistic. I think that comics are just like books. They tell stories, just through pictures and stuff. I think comics are just like any other piece of literature. Let me know what your opinion is on comics? Thanks

This has been bugging me all year, especially since 'Endgame' came out and I wanted to gain some insight from others. I really feel like the comics industry as I have always known it is on extreme life support and I'm not basing that on numbers but just how I gauge interest from my surroundings. Now to be clear, when I say "as I have always known it" I don't mean to illicit conversation about diversity or any of the recent fandom/toxic fandom conversations that have been going on. I literally mean the livelihood of floppies, trades, graphic novels, digital comics, and just an overall mainstream interest in sequential story telling.

It bothers me that the highest grossing film of all time (excluding inflation) is a comic book based property yet the source material is a mistreated stepchild. It bothers me that Vertigo and MAD Magazine were just erased because of the AT&T merger. It sucks that this medium isn't seen as a medium but as a genre. You would think that with comic based properties having a stranglehold over the mainstream's attention that you would see an increase in comic sales, a healthier direct market, or, shit, even a kid on the bus reading a floppy.

To give you some context of my per view....I am a mid 30's African American male that has been going to my local shop since I was about 6 years old. I had my periods of dwindling interest in my teens, but I came back in my twenties and the interest has only grown thanks to....I dunno....the MCU maybe...oh and a growing interest in indies. I live in Los Angeles which has one of the top 20 population counts in all the world, so I come across people of all walks of life and I never see a random citizen reading an issue of 'Spider-Man' at a Starbucks or whatever. Now yes maybe they have them on a tablet or hidden but my bigger point is based on the mainstream's insatiable appetite for comic related properties and the lack of the source material out in the world. It doesn't make much sense.

I understand that industries evolve and things will never be like they were when I was a kid, but my confusion really comes at the irony that this material isn't niche anymore at least not like it was when I was a kid. This may be the only industry known that shows growth in their byproduct by whoring out it's source material without ever growing it -- HOW IS THIS POSSIBLE? The public has shown that it wants this material, yes, maybe they don't want to venture out to get it at a brick and mortar, and maybe they don't want it in print but they DO want it. How has their never been any advertising for comics on a mainstream level? How is it that after seeing Captain Marvel in the theater I'm not bombarded with copies of Kelly Sue Deconnick's trade paperback run in the lobby of the theater? How is it that comics are now just merchandise for the movies, but they continually lack growth?

A spoiler is anything not officially released for home viewing. We also give people a month after the content has been released to allow people time to catch up. Spoilers exclude trailers, comics, casting announcements, or official marketing material. Remember to use the spoiler tag for images containing spoilers. This also applies for comments.

NOTE: I am a Marvel comics reader of nearly 40 years and what has prompted this post is how noticable many first-time and casual readers have been over-complicating the process of just getting into comics. That should never happen.

Nothing you can do about it! KDP since the beginning of this year, is blocking all comic books sent to review, no question asked, it doesn't matter if it's from a series that the publisher has already confirmed copyright 6 times this year.

I sent you an email earlier before sending the books to review process to review and publish it yourself because I don't know why I always get blocked, every single time for unjust "copyright issues".

I can guarantee you 100% big publishers are dumping manga and comics all week and they just approve them right away. When they see a "peasant" like myself who self-published, they can't even bother to look at my publishing history, they just assume I'm a thief, even though I have provided the same copyright info 6 times this year for the same series.

I'm wondering what the reddit comicbook community thinks about which is better to collect. I collect nothing but TPB's and Hardcovers because I enjoy being able to read a full 6-12 (or more) issue run at once, they look good on a bookshelf, and they are less of a hassle to keep in good condition. However, I'm seeing that from a collecting standpoint, the demand for single issues seems to be much higher than TPB's. What do you think? Is it better to invest in single issues? Is the resale value better for single issues than TPB's or hardcovers? Am I wasting money investing in hardcovers over the single issues? Some Hardcovers seem to increase in value while others decrease significantly. The same seems to be for single issues as well. What has been your experience and which do you prefer? 2351a5e196

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