G.I. Joe (comics): Difference between revisions
m Date maintenance tags and general fixes: build 404: |
|||
Line 293: | Line 293: | ||
*[http://www.joereloaded.com/ Joe Reloaded.com - Home of the GI Joe Comic Forum] |
*[http://www.joereloaded.com/ Joe Reloaded.com - Home of the GI Joe Comic Forum] |
||
* [http://www.joebattlelines.com JoeBattlelines.com] - G.I. Joe news, forums, interviews, multi-media, and reviews. |
* [http://www.joebattlelines.com JoeBattlelines.com] - G.I. Joe news, forums, interviews, multi-media, and reviews. |
||
*[http://furycomics.com/viewer/5/GI_Joe/ G.I. Joe] online comic books from FuryComics.com |
|||
*[http://www.comics.org/search.lasso?query=g.i.+joe&type=title&sort=alpha&Submit=Search All comic covers for G.I. Joe] |
*[http://www.comics.org/search.lasso?query=g.i.+joe&type=title&sort=alpha&Submit=Search All comic covers for G.I. Joe] |
||
Revision as of 08:34, 4 April 2010
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
No issues specified. Please specify issues, or remove this template. |
G.I. Joe has been the title of comic strips and comic books in every decade since 1942. As a licensed property by Hasbro, comics were released from 1967 up to this day, with only two interruptions longer than a year (1977-1981, 1997-2000). As a team fighting Cobra since 1982, the comic book history of G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero has seen three separate publishers and four main-title series, all of which have been based on the Hasbro toy line of the same name. The first series was produced by Marvel Comics between 1982 and 1994, running for 155 issues and spawning several spin-off titles throughout the course of its run; the second and third series, published by Devil's Due Productions from 2001 to 2008, totaled 80 issues and included several spin-off titles as well. The fourth series is being published by IDW Publishing since October 2008, and various spin-off titles were launched as well. Another series, based on the G.I. Joe Extreme line of toys, was a short-lived run published by Dark Horse Comics in 1995-1996.
King Features Syndicate
Private Breger
From 1941 to 1945, Sgt Dave Breger wrote a comic strip featuring the comical adventures of recruit Private Breger, which were reprinted as the strip G.I. Joe of Yank magazine.
Mister Breger
After World War II, Dave Berger continued his comic strip now titled Mister Breger up into the 1960s, chronicling the civil life of his humorous character.
Yank, the Army Weekly
G.I. Joe
From 1942 to 1945, the G.I. Joe comic strip reprinted the adventures of Private Breger from King Features Syndicate.
Ziff-Davis
Ziff-Davis was in the habit of numbering their first issues "10". When the series became popular, they reset the numbering system, so there are two issues for each number from 10 to 14 and there are no issues numbered 1 through 5. Ziff-Davis's G.I. Joe was set during the Korean War.
G.I. Joe (vol 1)
A first volume started in 1950 and lasted 5 issues, numbered 10 through 14.
G.I. Joe (vol 2)
A second volume continuing from the previous was published from 1951 and lasted 46 issues, numbered 6 through 51.
DC Comics
In 1964-1965, DC Comics released two issues of Showcase (53 and 54) titled G.I. Joe, which took place during WWII.
Custom Comics
America's Moveable Fighting Man
In 1967 Hasbro released a single small comic book titled America's Moveable Fighting Man with its action figures produced by Custom Comics, Inc.
The Adventures of G.I. Joe
In 1969, issues of a larger format comic with more elaborate stories were released with toys as The Adventures of G.I. Joe. From 1970 to 1976, Hasbro continued to reprint and publish new comics in-house as the The G.I. Joe Adventure Team (see the Hasbro section).
Marvel Comics
A Real American Hero (Main series)
Hasbro relaunched their G.I. Joe franchise with G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero. It was supported by a Marvel Comics series. It was unique at the time in that it was a comic book series that was promoted on television commercials which also supported the toy line. This 155-issue series is considered to be one of the longest-running comic book tie-ins to a toy line. Much of its success is to be credited to Larry Hama, who wrote the entire series save for a few issues with guest writers. Rather than treating the stories as a mere promotion for the toys, Hama wrote the series with seriousness and infused it with doses of realism, humor, and drama. Other than Transformers, no other series was able to duplicate its success. Notable artists include Herb Trimpe, Ron Wagner, Rod Whigham, and Marshall Rogers.
Issue #21 became a fan-favorite[citation needed], not only because the Cobra ninja Storm Shadow was introduced, but that issue also became a prime example of comics' visual storytelling power, having no dialogue or sound effects.
A number of differences existed between the comic book and the animated TV series. Certain characters who were very prominent in the comic book, such as Stalker, were featured very little in the cartoon, while characters who were less prominent in the comic book, such as Shipwreck, were very prominent in the cartoon series. Another difference was that in the comic book featured a romance between Scarlett and Snake-Eyes, whereas in the cartoon, a romance between Scarlett and Duke was hinted at instead (most likely due to the differences between writing for a comic book audience and writing for an animated series). The most notable difference between the comic and the cartoon, however, is in its handling of combat. While the cartoon had the characters use semi-futuristic laser rifles and pistols (due to an edict for "no bullets" from the studio), the comic book did not shy away from using real-world pistols, rifles, SMGs and ammunition; The cartoon characters would almost comically wade through waves of enemy fire untouched, while the comic book would routinely have characters suffer injuries from bullets or shrapnel; the cartoon showed that nearly every soldier in every battle survived (for example, many shots of aircraft being shot down were shown to have its pilot escape in a parachute), while the comic did not shy away from character deaths; for example, issues #109 included the deaths of a large number of Joes, including fan-favorites like Doc, Breaker, and Quick-Kick, while other storylines included the deaths of Serpentor and Dr. Mindbender.
In 2001, with the success of Devil's Due Comics run of G.I. Joe, Marvel Comics collected the first 50 issues in five trade paperbacks, with ten issues in each book. All covers for the trade paperbacks were drawn by J. Scott Campbell. Marvel will not publish the rest of the series, because Hasbro has purchased the rights to the comics. Hasbro has since released reprints of some issues with some of their action figures.
In 2009, IDW Publishing began to publish the series again. It is called Classic G.I. Joe and, like Marvel did before, collects ten issues in each volume. To date, six volumes have been published.
G.I. Joe Yearbooks
The four Yearbooks (1985-1988) collected some previous stories, summarized events, etc. and, aside from the first Yearbook (which re-printed the seminal first issue), published new stories that tied into current events in the main title.
G.I. Joe: Special Missions
The success of the main title lead Marvel Comics to produce a secondary title, G.I. Joe: Special Missions which lasted 28 issues, with Herb Trimpe as the artist for nearly the entire run, with Dave Cockrum providing pencils on several issues. Spinning out of issue #50 of a story in the main title, the series featured more intense violence and a more ambiguous morality than the main title, while the enemies were conventional terrorists as well as Cobra itself. The first four issues, as well as the backup story from issue #50 of the main title, were later republished as a trade paperback.
G.I. Joe: Order of Battle
Order of Battle was a four-issue comic series that reprinted the data found on the action figures' file cards with some edits and all-new artwork of G.I. Joe characters by Herb Trimpe. Published in 1987, the first two issues featured G.I. Joe members while the third issue focused on the Cobra Organization, and the fourth featured various vehicles and equipment used by both organizations. The second issue erroneously listed Sylvester Stallone's Rocky Balboa character as a member of G.I. Joe. While negotiations had taken place to license the character, the deal had fallen through.[1] The third and fourth issues contained a retraction stating that Rocky Balboa was not and had never been a member of G.I. Joe. The trade paperback edition of the series removed mention of the Rocky character entirely.
G.I. Joe Special
Shortly after the final issue (which was released in December 1994), a G.I. Joe Special #1 was released, with alternate art for issue #61 by Todd McFarlane.
Reprints
G.I. Joe Comic Magazine
The first 37 issues of the main series were released in thirteen digests.
Tales of G.I. Joe
Tales of G.I. Joe reprinted the first fifteen issues of G.I. Joe on a higher quality paper stock than that used for the main comic.
Foreign language versions
G.I. Joe was published in a number of languages, sometimes by local publishers. Issues were translated into German, Spanish, Portuguese, Polish, French (Canada), Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Danish, Japanese, Arabic, Indonesian, and other languages.
Alternate universes
G.I. Joe and the Transformers
A four issue limited series that teamed-up the Joes with the other popular property of the 1980s, Transformers. The Joes and the Autobots must join forces to stop the Decepticons and Cobra from destroying the world. The story suffered from the need to have the events of the limited series reflect the events of the main G.I. Joe and Transformers titles published by Marvel Comics at the time. However, while there were references in the Transformers ongoing series to the events of the limited series, the G.I. Joe ignored it completely, as writer Larry Hama didn't consider it to be canon, though towards the end of the ongoing G.I. Joe series several Transformers characters appeared in the G.I. Joe title as a prequel for the upcoming Transformers: Generation Two comic. The issues made reference to the limited series. A trade paperback later collected all four issues.
Action Force and G.I. Joe: European Missions
Action Force was the British counterpart to the 3 3/4-inch G.I. Joe toy line. The Action Force comic was launched by Marvel UK in 1987, tying into the previous Battle Action Force, and publishing original strips as well as modified reprints of the U.S. comic, with the team renamed "Action Force". The title lasted fifty issues before merging with Marvel UK's The Transformers in early 1988.
Later in 1988, a second series, Action Force Monthly, was launched due to Marvel UK's decision to produce comics in the American monthly format, and ran for fifteen issues before it was cancelled. The Action Force Monthly title was published in the U.S. as G.I. Joe: European Missions, which kept all of the dialogue from the UK version without attempting to incorporate the reprinted stories into the continuity of the U.S. G.I. Joe comic. The comic also included a tie-in story for the UK release of G.I. Joe: The Movie.
After the cancellation of Action Force Monthly, the U.S. G.I. Joe comic continued to be reprinted in Marvel UK's The Transformers comic as a back-up feature, with the dialogue kept intact, until it was dropped in 1991.
Blackthorne Publishing
Blackthorne Publishing released six bi-monthly issues of G.I. Joe in 3-D and one annual. These issues were meant to be read with 3-D glasses. The stories didn't contradict the previous Marvel ongoing series, but wasn't considered canon. Blackthorne also published three "How to draw G.I. Joe" issues.
Dark Horse Comics
In 1996, the G.I. Joe toy line was relaunched with the G.I. Joe Extreme series. Dark Horse Comics acquired the rights to publish comics based on the G.I. Joe Extreme property. The first series was a four-issue limited series that was written by Mike W. Barr and drawn by Tatsuya Ishida and introduced the main characters. The ongoing G.I. Joe Extreme series that was launched afterward dropped the word "Extreme" from the title. The ongoing series lasted four issue before being canceled, although Dark Horse referred to the title as being on hiatus.
Benchpress Comics
In the spring of 1999, Benchpress Comics announced the acquisition of the rights to produce new G.I. Joe and Transformers comics. The G.I. Joe project was to have included Larry Hama as writer. Benchpress's initial plan was to release two G.I. Joe titles; one would feature a core cast of characters (similar to the Marvel Comics series), while the other would have featured a rotating cast (similar in style to the Special Missions title). For unknown reasons, negotiations over hiring Larry Hama stalled and Benchpress went bankrupt, losing the license in the process. Larry Hama's series proposal and the three sample pages of the comic that were produced are available online.[2]
Devil's Due Publishing
Most G.I. Joe titles published by Devil's Due Publishing are available in both comic and trade paperback formats.
On January 15, 2010 Hasbro stated the Devil's Due continuity was no longer canonical: "Fans can read it according to their personal preference, but we are currently taking the brand in a direction that does not take the Devil’s Due story into account."[3]
G.I. Joe A Real American Hero (Reinstated)
In July 2001, Devil's Due acquired the rights to G.I. Joe and released a four-issue limited series through Image Comics entitled G.I. Joe (vol. 1), written by Josh Blaylock with John Larter and Steve Kurth as the artists. The title quickly became known to the fans as A Real American Hero (vol. 2) (following from Marvel's original series) or G.I. Joe Reinstated (the title of the first four-issue arc). A comics convention special was released before the first issue. Strong sales on the limited series led to it being upgraded to an ongoing series with the publication of a fifth issue and a monthly schedule. The new series picked up seven years after the end of the Marvel Comics series and also used elements from the animated TV series. Several older characters were featured in the title alongside several new recruits. The new series also spun off several other series and was responsible for bringing back attention to other 1980s properties such as Transformers, Masters of the Universe and Voltron. Devil's Due later broke with Image Comics and took over the publishing of the book.
The series ended with issue #43 with the introduction of a new enemy.
G. I. Joe: Battle Files
G.I. Joe: Battle Files gave profiles of the G.I. Joe and Cobra teams, as well as information on their vehicles. Battle Files was published between April and September 2002. A Sourcebook trade paperback was published in February 2003, which collected issues one through three with additional profiles added.
G.I. Joe: Frontline
This series lasted eighteen issues and featured a rotating creative team for every story. The stories explored what happened to GI Joe and Cobra during the seven-year interlude between the Marvel and Devil's Due comic series. Larry Hama wrote Frontline's initial offering, "The Mission That Never Was," a four-part series set one month after the events of the Marvel series' issue #155.
Arashikage Showdown
A single digest featuring Snake-Eyes, Storm Shadow, Jinx, Scarlett, Kamakura, T'Jbang, Nunchuk and Budo. The martial arts experts try to recover the secret scrolls of the Arashikage Ninja Clan, to which several of them belong. This book has been considered to be non-canon by fans as it incorporates magical and fantasy elements not present in the main series.
G.I. Joe: Master and Apprentice I & II
These were two four-issue limited series written by Brandon Jerwa. The first series was about how Snake Eyes met and trained his apprentice Kamakura, while the second series focused on Storm Shadow and his apprentice/lover Junko Akita.
G.I. Joe: America's Elite
G.I. Joe: America's Elite, officially entitled G.I. Joe Comic Book Volume 2 on the inside cover, started with a "zero" issue and picked up the story one year after the events of the last issue of G.I. Joe: Reinstated. The series featured a darker tone and a smaller group of Joes than in Reinstated. The series started off with the president asking General Joseph Colton, the original G.I. Joe, to be the team's C.O., replacing General Hawk, who was paralyzed in the previous series. Character profiles were provided in the Data Desk Handbook, as well as in individual issues. Joe Casey wrote the first eighteen issues before editor Mike O'Sullivan wrote issues #19 and 20. Mark Powers and Mike Bear became the current writer and penciller on the book with #21. The twelve issue "World War III" story arc ran from issue #25 to #36. The series concluded with issue #36 after Devil's Due lost the G.I. Joe license.
Storm Shadow
This series, written by Larry Hama, lasted seven issues and focused on former Cobra and G.I. Joe team member Storm Shadow. The series began in May 2007, and, while not bearing the "America's Elite" subtitle, the events occurred in the same time frame as the main series.
Data Desk Handbook
An original one-shot published files for G.I. Joe America's Elite main characters at the launch of the series. The files are presented as computer entries written by General Joseph Colton. Several other files were later published in individual issues of America's Elite, Special Missions and several trade paperback volumes. An updated version in two issues (A-M and N-Z) was released in October and November 2007.
The Hunt for Cobra Commander
This one-shot issue was set in the year between the Devil's Due A Real American Hero series and America's Elite series and featured G.I Joe team member Spirit.
Special Missions
A series of one-shots featuring reservist Joes, and set in different parts of the world. The series beared the America's Elite subtitle.
- Manhattan - This one-shot featured G.I. Joe reservists Beach Head, Cover Girl, Mercer, Low-Light and Tunnel Rat, on a special mission involving a bio-weapon threat in New York City.
- Tokyo - This one-shot features the ninja Jinx, samurai Budo, and "yahoo" reservists Wild Bill (Texan chopper pilot), the Cajun Marine codenamed Gung Ho, ladies man Clutch and Malibu surfer and gunman Rock N' Roll who try to prevent a coup in Japan.
- Antarctica - This one-shot, released in December 2006, features Snake Eyes, Stalker, Duke and Scarlett, as well as reservists Snow Job, Frostbite and Iceberg.
- Brazil - This one-shot features characters that came with the 1986 G.I. Joe Special Missions Brazil Toys R Us exclusive boxed set.
- The Enemy - This one-shot contrasts the motivations of original G.I. Joe infantryman Grunt with those of an unnamed Cobra "Blueshirt" trooper, with a backup tale about the mission where Cobra forces abduct the Baroness' child.
Declassified
The various Declassified series and one-shots explore the origins of the characters, and are set before #1 of Marvel's G.I. Joe series.
- Snake Eyes: Declassified - A six-issue limited series written by Brandon Jerwa and set before Marvel Comics' G.I. Joe #1, retelling and expanding the story of Snake Eyes.
- Scarlett: Declassified - A double-sized one-shot issue telling the history of the character code-named Scarlett (Shana O'Hara), set between Snake-Eyes Declassified and G.I. Joe Declassified.
- G.I. Joe: Declassified - This series of three double-sized issues, written by Larry Hama, was released bi-monthly beginning in the Summer of 2006. The story is set between Scarlett Declassified and issue #1 of the original Marvel Comics series, telling the first missions of the original thirteen members of the team.
- Dreadnoks: Declassified - A limited series of three double-sized issues written by Josh Blaylock telling the complete origin story of Zartan, including how he gained his abilities and
Alternate universes
DDP also published comics in three alternate continuities.
G.I. Joe vs. the Transformers
G.I. Joe vs. the Transformers was a series of cross-productions with Dreamwave Productions, who, at the time of publication, held the license to create Transformers comics. Each studio released their own six-issue mini-series which featured their own take on a crossover between the two franchises. Unlike previous efforts to bring the two properties together, the Devil's Due story takes place in an alternate present day where Cobra, just rising to prominence, has uncovered the Ark. Cobra steal the Transformers found inside, such as Optimus Prime, Ironhide and Ratchet, and adapt them into Cobra assault vehicles such as Cobra HISS tanks. G.I. Joe is formed to stop Cobra and receive unexpected help from Wheeljack and Bumblebee, who managed to avoid being taken by Cobra.
The second mini-series was a follow-up to the first story. Cybertronian technology has augmented both G.I. Joe and Cobra's forces, who are still fighting each other. During a battle, an accident causes several Joes and members of Cobra to be accidentally transported to Cybertron. The backlash of the accident also pulls several Transformers to Earth as well as scattering them through time. The Joes and Cobra must travel into the past and future to retrieve the missing Autobots and Decepticons before the Earth is destroyed. This is complicated by the fact that most of Cybertron is under the control of the Decepticon Shockwave.
The third mini-series, entitled The Art of War, followed on from the second mini-series, using elements of the first. The new story focused on a re-imagined version of Serpentor, in this continuity a cyborg created from the DNA of great warleaders and the mechanical components of Megatron. Inadvertently freed by a Cobra raid, Serpentor journeyed to Cybertron. Now Hawk, Grimlock and the other Autobots and Joes must stop him before he takes the Autobot Matrix of Leadership for himself.
A fourth mini-series consisting of two double-sized issues, entitled Black Horizon, was released in early 2007. After Hawk resigned from G.I. Joe in the wake of the events of "The Art of War", he formed a loose alliance with the Autobots to stop the spread of Cybertronian technology. However, a much bigger threat looms: the serpent cult Cobra-La and the dark god of the Transformers Unicron. Hawk, Flint, and Optimus Prime go the Himalayas to confront Cobra-La, and find a long lost hero: Joe Colton, the original G.I. Joe.
G.I. Joe Reloaded
G.I. Joe Reloaded was a fourteen-issue ongoing series published by Devil's Due which was set in an alternate universe and featured a more realistic take on the G.I. Joe franchise. The ongoing series was preceded by the Cobra Reborn and G.I. Joe Reborn one-shots which introduced the main characters and showed the formation of G.I. Joe and the Cobra Organization.
In this universe, Snake-Eyes is Storm Shadow's half-brother and a former Cobra agent, the African-American woman Carla "Doc" Greer, (an alternate version of the character Carl "Doc" Greer from the main continuity), is G.I. Joe's field medic, and Duke is an undercover Cobra agent who betrays the group. The series had no connection to the main comic series and was canceled after fourteen issues due to low sales.
G.I. Joe: Sigma 6
G.I. Joe: Sigma 6 was a six-issue mini-series written for a younger audience based on the toyline and animated TV series of the same name. While the series was out of continuity with the main comic universe, the characters largely have the same personas: Hawk is the commanding officer, Duke is the field leader, and there is a connection between the ninjas Snake-Eyes and Storm Shadow.
Dreamwave Productions
Transformers/G.I. Joe
In this alternate universe, the story, written by John Ney Reiber and drawn by Jae Lee, Cobra had discovered and awakened the Decepticons, reformatting their vehicle modes into 1940s era war vehicles and weapons. The two evil forces conquer much of Europe in an alternate version of World War II. G.I. Joe, here a group of American infantry men, find the Autobots who aid them in stopping both Cobra and the Decepticons.
Transformers/G.I. Joe: Divided Front
A second volume, Divided Front, was scheduled to also run for six issues. It was written by James McDonough and Adam Patyk and drawn by Pat Lee. Dreamwave released only one issue before their financial troubles put a halt to their operations. The story followedon from Transformers/G.I. Joe, but took place in 1985, and was intended to have explained the connection to the first volume's story.
For more detailed information, see Dreamwave's Transformers/G.I. Joe section in Transformers (comic).
IDW Publishing
Devil's Due lost the G.I. Joe comics license in January 2008, and published their last G.I. Joe comic in July 2008 with G.I. Joe America's Elite #36.[4][5] The license was then given to IDW Publishing, which was officially announced on May 29, 2008.[citation needed] IDW's G.I. Joe series is a complete reboot of the property, ignoring the continuity from the Marvel and Devil's Due incarnations of the comic.
G.I. Joe
Issue #0 was released in October 2008, containing three stand-alone stories which acted as previews for the main G.I. Joe series, the G.I. Joe: Origins and G.I. Joe: Cobra spin-off mini-series. The #0 issue is followed by an ongoing monthly G.I. Joe series, written by Chuck Dixon[6] and drawn by Robert Atkins, which started in January 2009.[7][8][9]
G.I. Joe: Origins
G.I. Joe: Origins is an ongoing series. The first five issues were written by Larry Hama with art by Tom Feister and Mike Hawthorne, but other creative teams are scheduled to rotate on the title. The series started in February 2009 and focuses on the formation of the G.I. Joe team several years before the events of the main series.
G.I. Joe: Cobra I & II
G.I. Joe: Cobra, co-written by Christos Gage and Mike Costa and drawn by Antonio Fuso, was a four-issue mini-series that started in March 2009 and focused on the inner working of the Cobra Organization as viewed through the eyes of undercover G.I. Joe agent Chuckles. By the end of the series Chuckles is forced to kill his handler, Jinx and loses contact with his Joe superiors. A G.I. Cobra II mini-series began in January 2010, picking up with General Hawk recruiting a new–also female and Japanese–soldier to recover Chuckles.
In June 2010, the series becomes ongoing as of issue 5, though it is now simply titled Cobra (without the II).
G.I. Joe: Special
G.I. Joe: Special is a series of one-shot issues focusing on different characters.
- Helix Special (August 2009)
- Cobra Special (September 2009)
Alternate universes
Reprints
IDW began printing trade paperback collections of the original Marvel comics series starting in January 2009.[10] The reprints contain ten issues each, retaining the originals full color.
G.I. Joe: Rise of Cobra
- G.I. Joe Movie Prequel A four-part limited series acting as a prequel to the 2009 Summer live-action movie, G.I. Joe: Rise of Cobra, published from March 2009 to June 2009, written by Chuck Dixon.
- G.I. Joe Movie Adaptation A four-part limited series published in July 2009 and written by Chuck Dixon, adapting the 2009 movie.
- EA/Game Stop Comic A comic distributed through Game Stop retail stores that bridges the gap between the movie and the EA video game that followed.
- G.I. Joe Movie: Snake Eyes A Snake-Eyes solo series co-written by Ray Park (October 2009).[11]
- G.I. Joe: Operation HISS Began in January 2010. The first issue is a reprint of the EA/Game Stop Comic.
Hasbro Comics
The G.I. Joe Adventure Team
Released from 1970 to 1976 with action figures and toy sets.
Marvel/Devil's Due Universe
Action Stars' Starduster mini-comics
Three out-of-continuity mini-comics packed in Action Stars cereals (1985) featuring original character Starduster.
Super Trooper
A two-page comic strip relating an adventure with character Super Trooper was available with action figures sold in 1988. This character was never used in the Marvel incarnation, but the story didn't contradict the Marvel continuity.
Battle Corps mini-comics
Four Larry Hama-written mini-comics sold with Battle Corps figures in 1992. While the stories don't contradict the Marvel continuity, they were never referenced in the Marvel incarnation.
Full size comic 2-packs
Twelve Larry Hama-written comics have been released in 2008. They loosely fit into the original Marvel-published continuity. These comics are sold packed with two figures each.
Reprints of Marvel and DDP stories
Hasbro has reprinted 24 Marvel-published comics, and one of Devil's Due's, (vol 1.) #16, packaged with either three-packs of figures (featuring the original comic covers) or, later, two-packs (featuring homage cover artwork). Marvel issues #1, #14, #21, #24, #25, #30, #64, #86, and #115 were reprinted with homage cover, while issues #1-9, #21, #24, #26, #44, #49, #74-76, & #101, and Devil's Due #16, were reprinted with their original covers. Issue one was also reprinted with a convention-special cover in a repackaging of the issue #1 three-pack.
Resolute universe
Two issues have been released in 2009, based on the upcoming cartoon, with G.I. Joe Resolute action figures. In the Comic 2-packs containing Shockblast & Destro, and Tunnel Rat & Storm Shadow. A third issue with a Crimson Guard and Iron Klaw was available as a download on Amazon.com upon order of the Resolute DVD. A fourth issue entitled Cold Comfort, featuring Scarlett and Cobra Commander, has yet to be released.
Store exclusives
- Splash-Bang Amazon.com upon order.
- Who Owns the Night Walmart.com upon order.
Alternate universe
The Spy Troops, Valor vs. Venom, Ninja Battles and Sigma 6 storylines are considered part of the same universe, though some contradictions exist between the first three and Sigma 6.[citation needed]
Spy-Troops and Valor vs Venom
Ten mini-comics written by Larry Hama, one mini-comic written by Devil's Due. Hama's issues #7 and 8 were reprinted as a full size comic entitle "Dawn of the V-troops".
Ninja Battles
One full-size issue written by Devil's Due.
Sigma 6 mini-comic
An abbreviated version of Devils' Due Sigma 6 issue #1 was sold along with the Ninja paratrooper Snake-Eyes toy.
Kung Fu Grip
Two issues written by Andrew Dabb ("Heavy Metal" and "A Ghost Story"), are available online on Hasbro's G.I. Joe website. The stories fall under the Sigma 6 line.
Tokyopop
G.I. Joe: Spy Troops Cine-Manga
In 2003, Tokyopop adapted the Spy Troops direct-to-DVD movie by using screen captures from the animation and added word balloons.
FP Comics
The G.I. Joe Collector's Club Comics released under the FP label are not set in any specific Joe universe.
Convention exclusives (main series)
In 2008, a G.I. Joe convention exclusive comic book was released, written by Larry Hama, based on a story by David S. Lane, it featured the Joes' SWAT team against Gristle and the Headhunters. A second issue by Lane was released in 2009.
Direct-to-Cobra
A series consisting of two issues.
Panini Comics
Panini Comics is scheduled to release a movie adaptation for the European market in 2009.[citation needed]
See also
- G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero
- G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1985 TV series)
- G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1989 TV series)
- G.I. Joe: The Movie
- G.I. Joe
- File card
- Cobra Organization
- Action figure
- G.I. Joe Extreme
- G.I. Joe: Sigma 6
- G.I. Joe: America's Elite
- G.I. Joe (film)
References
- ^ YOJOE.COM | Sculpt: Rocky Balboa
- ^ YoJoe!.com: Bench Press Studios' G.I. Joe
- ^ Phil Kost (2010-01-15). "HASBRO answers your questions *2009/2010* *UPDATED 1/15*". The G.I. Joe Comic Forum. Retrieved 2010-02-16.
- ^ Hasbro Recruits New GI Joe License Suitors, Newsarama, November 16, 2007
- ^ IESB.net: Devil's Due Loses G.I. Joe Comic Book License
- ^ Chuck Dixon Writes G.I. Joe for IDW, Comic Book Resources, September 8, 2008
- ^ IDW Announces GI Joe Plans, Newsarama, September 9, 2008
- ^ G.I. Joe Roundtable, Part 1: Hama, Dixon, Gage & More, Newsarama, September 12, 2008
- ^ G.I. Joe Roundtable, Part 2: Feister, Schmidt and More, Newsarama, September 15, 2008
- ^ "Classic GI Joe, Vol 1". store. IDW Publishing. 06 January 2009. Retrieved 10 January 2009.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ IDW Launches G.I. Joe Invasion, Publishers Weekly, September 22, 2008
External links
- Yo Joe.com Comics Page
- JMM's G.I. Joe Comics Home Page
- Joe Reloaded.com - Home of the GI Joe Comic Forum
- JoeBattlelines.com - G.I. Joe news, forums, interviews, multi-media, and reviews.
- G.I. Joe online comic books from FuryComics.com
- All comic covers for G.I. Joe