Totally agree with this. When the Infinity OHC came out I said that people who have been collecting these editions for a while are complaing about the covers and thin paper but what about those people who are just starting their collections of OHC's and Omni's? They have no idea of the older, better built books since almost all are OOP. They obviously like the format and will continue to purchase them. Also I think most collectors first introduction to these books are through bookstores and comic shops and are purchasing them for cover price! When they find out about online stores like IST and CGN they wont buy less, they will buy more since they can get them for aroung 50% off and get twice as much for the same price they've been paying. So lets just blame the poorer quality and increased prices on the newbies! Obviously just kidding.
Is it safe to say the flagship Marvel books will be collected in OHC? Weird that new series like Iron Man, Doctor Strange, Deadpool, are collected in HC, but not the All New, All Different Avengers, X-Men, Inhumans...
Is the ordering of the issues between the two Hawkeye OHCs and the Omni that different? I was planning on buying the Omni just because it'd be nice to have the whole run in one book but now it looks like they are going to be keeping the numbering with the new series' first OHC being Vol. 3.
Are the TV shows and movies officially linked in the same universe? I remember whedon saying something like shield was not part of it or something weird, but then the winter soldier affected the show big time. There were some issues between whedon and marvel and it got a little messy ad grey. Anyone know?
Last edited by RIPLynott; 03-20-2016 at 11:26 AM.
They are definitely in the same universe. They don't have much major interaction, mainly due to scheduling and different production teams, but they are indeed in the same universe. Winter Soldier/Agents of Shield has been the biggest connection so far but Colson also was responsible for the helicarrier in Age of Ultron.
Whedon can say what he wants if Marvel wants to link them they will. They resurrected Coulson despite Whedon's protest.
AoS is much more tied into the MCU, DD, Jessica Jones and the other upcoming street level shows are their own corner. But who knows maybe someone will pop up in Civil War from DD or JJ.
But even if they weren't linked, JJ and DD are just SO DAMN GOOD!
Couldn't care less about AoS.
That is not safe to say.
For example, Iron Man and Captain America have not (so far) hit OHC in Marvel Now, but Deadpool, Hawkeye, Young Avengers, and Superior Foes of Spider-Man have. Generally it seems that Marvel has a higher standard to reach OHC for books that are HC > TPB first (the prior two were; the latter four weren't), which is maybe why Bendis clears the bar so often. I truly think the OHCs are mostly linked to sell-through, critical reception, and creator visible more than certain characters or stories.
It looks like in ANAD a lot more books are going to TPB first, which has proven to be a better recipe for us getting OHCs down the line.
Considering that even at 50% off the TPBs are in the $15 range, it's a fair bet at this point to just skip the four likeliest OHC-getting TPBs and use that same money to subscribe to Marvel Unlimited for $70 a year and wait out the OHCs. Except, very occasionally a first-release TPB sells out and gets pricey before the HC gets here.
I'd love to know that, too. The trades broke up the Clint/Kate stuff into two books. Does the OHC/Omni maintain the original release order, or gang the character stories together?
Do you read comics in TPBs, HCs, and omnibuses - or are just not sure where to start? Check out my definitive guides to DC (including Rebirth!), Valiant Comics, and Marvel - including every X-Men and Avengers team and each Marvel Event.
You'll find definitive reading guides including every issue of every major Marvel hero and team, like Black Panther, Captain America, Captain/Ms. Marvel, Daredevil, Deadpool, Spider-Man, & and more!
Have you ever thought about differentiating between regular staple bound single issues and "prestige format" books? For example, you have "Punisher: The Ghosts of Innocents #1-2: Not collected" - and that's technically correct because those two issues haven't been collected into one trade, but the issues themselves are bound in the prestige format (cardstock covers, glued binding) which are comparable in size to many of the 90s OGNs you have listed. I think they even have their own ISBNs but I'd have to double check my copies later on to confirm that.
Yes, I'd call out anything with its own ISBN as different than a true single issue for exactly that reason. I don't usually thing to check IBSNs for things that aren't one-shots, but there are certainly some two-part bookshelf format series.
Part of the issue is that I simply have a bit of a blindspot from coming from X-Men collecting, which (Wolverine aside) only ever had the God Loves, the New Mutants debut, and Dazzler in a bookshelf format - as opposed to characters like Spider-Man, Wolverine, and Punisher, who got those early OGNs all the time.
Do you read comics in TPBs, HCs, and omnibuses - or are just not sure where to start? Check out my definitive guides to DC (including Rebirth!), Valiant Comics, and Marvel - including every X-Men and Avengers team and each Marvel Event.
You'll find definitive reading guides including every issue of every major Marvel hero and team, like Black Panther, Captain America, Captain/Ms. Marvel, Daredevil, Deadpool, Spider-Man, & and more!
I don't know how far down the rabbit hole you intend your guides to go, but for your out of continuity section there's also The Punisher Meets Archie / Archie Meets The Punisher (same issue, just different title/cover depending on who published it I believe) as well as the prestige format Batman/Punisher: Lake of Fire and Punisher/Batman: Deadly Knights.