Marvel Celebrates 50 Years of Jack Kirby's the Eternals On Sale: April 1, 2026 [press release] In 1976, Jack Kirby introduced an all-new mythology to the Marvel Universe—one as imaginative and grand as the “King of Comics” himself—the Eternals! This April, join Marvel Comics in celebrating 50 years of Kirby’s legendary work with ETERNALS 50TH ANNIVERSARY #1, an oversized special and a must-have for Kirby fans and Marvel collectors alike! Discover untold stories of Earth’s immortal protectors, explore their hidden history, and witness the debut of a brand-new Eternal—whose secrets could shake the foundations of the Marvel Universe! ETERNALS 50TH ANNIVERSARY #1 will feature three incredible tales from veteran comic creators, rising talent, and Grammy Award-nominated musician Patrick Stump, Marvel’s Spidey and His Amazing Friends songwriter/composer and lead singer of the multiplatinum-selling rock band Fall Out Boy. First, Ikaris and Captain America team up for a sweeping adventure that examines the Eternals’ place in superhero history in a tale by Ethan S. Parker, Griffin Sheridan, Dale Eaglesham, and Phil Noto. Then, discover the dark roots of the Eternals' fiercest fighter, the deviant Ransak the Reject, in a story by Ralph Macchio and Michael Cho. And don’t miss the startling introduction of THE LOST ETERNAL! Why has his existence been hidden for centuries? And what has caused him to come online now? Learn these answers and more in a revelatory story written by Patrick Stump.
My son informed me that allegedly, online weirdos are upset because the name "He-Man" is a pronoun....
So is Jason Momoa now officially going to be referred to as Aqua "the Main" Man since he has been/is both characters?
This was one of the better Marvel rip off titles during the 90s comic bubble. I knew it was a matter of time before the bubble burst so I didn’t even bother with comics like this, but I will admit the artwork was pretty good.
Publisher's Description. Image Comics is celebrating the Season Four premiere of the hit TV adaptation of Invincible, which will stream on Prime Video on Wednesday, March 18. A slew of team-up variant covers spanning some of Image's most popular ongoing series, featuring Robert Kirkman, Cory Walker, and Ryan Ottley's iconic characters from the series—including Mark Grayson, Atom Eve, and Omni-Man—will crash other Image universes with cameo appearances on covers and title logos redesigned to echo the instantly recognizable Invincible look. Created by Kirkman and Walker, Invincible #1 debuted on January 22, 2003. Ottley joined soon after on issue #7 in late 2003 as the new series artist and contributing creator. Throughout its 15-year run at Image Comics, Invincible not only continued for 144 issues but also spawned multiple spin-off series and even a historic inter-company crossover with a certain friendly neighborhood wallcrawler.
The artwork was the only reason to even pick up any of the original Image incarnation of the comics or other non big two comics back then. Dark Horse Comics may have been the only non big two publisher at the time that attempted to give legitimately good story & characters even with their own failed foray into super hero comics. Cross-Gen was a close second & their behind the scenes publishing/financing issues led to their downfall more than market bubble like many others.