Last week, long-suffering X-Men fans finally got some details on the upcoming Uncanny X-Men revival. In addition to learning that Uncanny X-Men would
Comics Archives
Batman #50 did well -- but only sold 50% more than Amazing Spider-Man #1 despite the huge attention and multiple upon multiple of variant covers.
Lee Bermejo has been working on Batman: Damned, a Batman/Hellblazer project written by Brian Azzarello and now part of their Black Label imprint.
In August, Wichita Falls police released a security video showing an individual engaged in the theft of a number of comic books worth over $100,000.
Amy Chu writes, regarding Dejah Thoris currently published by Dynamite: I am knee deep writing issue #9 right now, and have come to realize as I build
Warren Ellis does love a tease, doesn't he?
All in all, it's a pretty X-citing time for X-Men fans, and we look forward to the franchise being treated like the cream of the Marvel crop once more.
Power Punch Boot Camp is an 80-page, full-colour graphic novel perfect for an all-ages audience from first-time graphic novelist Ellie Egleton.
When Bleeding Cool stomped on a load of 4chan nonsense about the immediate future of the X-Men comics, we noted that Uncanny X-Men was to be
Fantastic Four #1 topped the charts, but it was closely followed by Sandman Universe #1 -- and in some stores, Sandman Universe beat FF.
BOOM! Studios has released previews for eight new comics shipping next week from all of their assorted explosive-themed imprints.
Valiant is releasing just one comic next week: Ninja-K #10, by Christos Gage, Larry Stroman, Ryan Winn, and Andrew Dalhouse.
Dark Horse is releasing six books next week, but they've only released previews of three of them.
Michael Sweater has been tweeting at Bleeding Cool once every 12 hours until the website publishes an exposé on Good Boy! Magazine.
A open meeting was held at Nine Worlds this afternoon in Hammersmith, London about the show's future after this weekend.
Welcome to Lying in the Gutters, Bleeding Cool’s weekly runaround of the most-read stories on the site through the week. And this week, the meta-fictional
Quality over quantity; that's Oni Press's motto this week, as the publisher is releasing just one comic in stores on August 15th, the all-ages BroBots
The Girl Who Danced With Death, Chronicles of Corum, Robotech, and more in previews of Titan Comics' August 15th books (now with more EXCLUSIVE pages).
We had the July 2018 marketshare and top ten on Friday but now we get the bigger picture... TOP 100 COMIC BOOKS Based on Total Unit Sales of Products
Marvel has released previews of all of the X-Men comics they're publishing next week, on August 15th. Eight of them, if you're keeping track. Not the most
Courtesy of Simon Russell, as posted to Awesome Talk on Facebook (and used with permission). As seen in WH Smiths yesterday. The Beano Christmas Special
Ronda Pattison writes, I wasn't supposed to work in comics. I read and enjoyed comics, as most kids do, but I wasn't obsessed. When a comic store opened
Yesterday, John Harris Dunning talked to Matt Fitch and Chris Baker about Apollo. Today they swap places, Matt Fitch and Chris Baker talk to John Harris
Harriet has discovered the Dead Hand, and Carter and Renae must help the girl process this. Plus, Vil and Ellis draw near. Is it a good read?
This is good comics.
Bleeding Cool has had quite a decent hit rate when it comes to DC Comics' mature readers superhero line Black Label. Here is the latest.
Her Infernal Descent finds Lynn trapped in a white void before finding angels building a hotel in Hell itself. Is it a good read?
Project: Superpowers is called into action again when all the planes in the world begin dropping out of the sky. Is it a good read?
The variant cover to Jenny Frison's Wonder Woman #52 that retailers had ordered looked very different from the one DC is pushing now.
Finola and Cillian aim to become Clankillers, they will use the forces at their disposal to kill the four clans and the Goddess Balor. Is it a good read?





























