Yes. In a comic store, among other places.
As far as comic retailing goes, it was part of my job to not make jumping into comics seem daunting to new readers.
And to my mind, it isn't. Multiple volumes are simply not the obstacle that some want to make them out to be.
Google "Doctor Strange Publication History" and you immediate get links like this that lay everything out for you, with up to date information.
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Docto...ge_Comic_Books
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor...Strange_vol._5
The fact that some people are so boggled by comics that they have to be educated as to how to read them in the first place shouldn't dictate how Marvel publishes.
Should every comic also come with instructions about how to read them, just in case there might be a reader who's confused?
I would expect this isn't a challenge at all for kids, who spend most their time on their smart phones and are quite good at navigating their way through information.
And if someone is so lazy that unless you personally hand them a book they'll walk out of your store, again that's not Marvel's problem as a publisher. Nothing they do on their end is going to make that person less of an idiot.
As someone who has worked retail, it does suck to deal with morons who insist on being catered to and who are unwilling to make even the most minimal effort on their own behalf but that's how it goes. No matter how much you bend over backwards for some customers, it's not going to be enough.
It's an imperfect world. I'm well aware.
Marvel surely cares at least much, if not more, about how their books sell than you do. It is how they make money, after all.
The idea that well, if they just keep putting a book out, with no breaks, no restarts, no reboots, no new #1's ever, that it will just sustain itself, magically defying the atrophying patterns of publishing, is a naive point of view.
Reboots and new volumes help extend the life of titles. That's just a fact. Luckily there's ways to keep it all straight.