This Friday, IDW will be soliciting the first issue of a Transformers/Back to the Future crossover comic book. Four issues long, the first issue is out in
Comics Archives
I grew up tracing Steve Bell cartoons. His cartoon strip in The Guardian newspaper 'If...' was what I turned to first in the paper my parents bought twice
The Polari Prize is the UK's only book prize for LGBTQ writing. Established in 2007, in the upstairs room of a bar in Soho, London, before growing and
The world can seem like a terrible and strange place sometimes, but at Bleeding Cool you can still read all about comics, merch, TV shows, games, movies
Heathen Volume 1 (by Natasha Alterici and Rachel Deering) is one of Vault Comics’ breakout successes. The team, now with artist Ashley A. Woods, currently
Terry Moore has announced Ever, a graphic novel about a girl who discovers she is the key to opening the hellish Pit of Darkness.
Bezimena by Nina Bunjevac appeared on my radar when Phil Hester described Bezimena as a “haunting, difficult, beautifully crystalline comic.”, so I
An hour ago, Bleeding Cool published an article regarding a number of their creators deciding to stop working for Dynamite Entertainment. Shortly before
Is the long-running indie comic book series a thing of the past, or will publishers besides Image take a chance on finding the next big hit?
Last May, Bleeding Cool reported on Dynamite Entertainment's decision to publish an Ethan Van Sciver variant cover of Vampirella to be sold, exclusively
REVIEW: Giant-Size X-Men: Magneto #1 is an elegantly told team-up story as Magneto makes a deal with Namor that leads to deep sea danger.
DC Comics' Dark Nights: Death Metal #2 beats out Marvel's Empyre #1 but it was a close-run thing. Strange Adventures is also doing rather well,
REVIEW: Mann and Eisma's Engineward #1 from Vault Comics builds a future where Earth, and all of us, are forgotten.
Vault Comics is launching a Vampire: The Masquerade comic book in August 2020, from Tim Seeley, Tini Howard, Blake Howard, Dev Pramanik and Nathan Gooden.
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice is a punishingly, unforgivingly challenging video game by fromsoftware, the makers of the Dark Souls games. Set in a medieval
REVIEW: While Hulkling shines, Empyre #1 puts Reed Richards and Tony Stark in a situation they should've been smart enough to avoid.
This weekend, Chris Claremont went to Huntsville Comic Con, in Huntsville, Alabama, amidst plent of concern from fellow comic creators.
In this week's entry in our Comics & Complication series we look at Western comics extremely problematic depictions of women.
REVIEW: Grimm Fairy Tales 2020 Annual from Zenescope Entertainment is a superhero story that feels tailor-made for fans of vintage comics.
No Heroine may have been hit b the pandemic when being released, but it has been the little self-published comic book that could. No Heroine #3 will be
If Rick and Morty was a horror comic, it might be something like Necromancer Bill. Both are irreverent buddy comedies with grouchy mentors and meek
The world can seem like a terrible and strange place sometimes, but at Bleeding Cool you can still read all about comics, merch, TV shows, games, movies
REVIEW: Yasmeen #1 from Scout Comics sees its lead character flee both dreams and nightmares in Iraq, but will she find peace in America?
REVIEW: X-Men FCBD #1 gives comics fans a Tarot card reading (literally) as Tini Howard and Jonathan Hickman peer into X-Men's future.
REVIEW: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine #1 reminds readers just how great licensed comics, and writers David and Scott Tipton, can be.
REVIEW: Metalshark Bro Volume 2 #1 from Scout Comics is the funniest comic on stands. It's what Adult Swim wishes it had been.
Ludocrats #3 has literal building busting visuals, the clever quips, the mad metaplot, there's really only one word for a book like this.
Restaurant to Another World by Junpei Inuzuka and artist Takaaki Kugatsu is an interesting subgenre in fantasy manga. An unnamed chef with a restaurant in
All of this looks good, but Justice League #49 mostly focuses on the shortcomings of the biggest names in the DC Universe.
Steve Uy is a comic book creator we haven't seen for a while. But over the years, he has worked on X-Men, Legion, Eden's Trail, The Hollows, Grumpy Cat,