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Another first for a Marvel set are the "HoloBlasts" which show 2 characters fighting, but one character is printed normally, and the other is a hologram. There are also 12 chromium cards. An official binder was also produced for the set.
Marvel Universe Cards are collectible trading cards based on the characters and events of the Marvel Universe. The first series was published by Impel in 1990. The cards featured categories such as Super Heroes, Super Villains, Rookies, Famous Battles and Team Pictures. Two years later, Impel negotiated with DC Comics to publish DC Cosmic Cards.
Marvel Masterpieces is the name of several subsequent sets of trading cards, printed during 1992-2008, depicting characters and events from Marvel Comics. Featuring large, vividly drawn card fronts and backs detailing trivia , each card showcased a different personality from Marvel's body of work.
This 1962 comic, which features Spider-Man’s debut, is considered a cornerstone of Marvel history. In 2021, a near-mint copy with a grade of 9.6 sold for a whopping $3.6 million at auction ...
* contains the four-part comic miniseries Mystic Arcana, The Official Tarot of the Marvel Universe and The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Mystic Arcana: ISBN 0-7851-2720-8: June 2008: 264: $24.99 2008 (trade paperback) Marvel Atlas: ISBN 0-7851-2998-7: July 2008: 144: $14.99 2008 A - Z : 1: 1602 A.D. to Blackwing (Manfredi) ISBN 0 ...
An advertisement for Marvel's Epic Collection. The Epic Collection is an ongoing line of color trade paperbacks that republish Marvel comics in a uniform trade dress. . Announced in April 2013, their stated intention was to collect entire runs of characters or titles as "big fat collections with the best price we can maintain", [1] in similar manner to the discontinued black-and-white Essentia
It was also reprinted in Marvel Masterworks Uncanny X-Men Volume 1 along with Giant Size X-Men #1 and issues #95–100. [8] In 2006, Giant Size X-Men #4 reprinted issue #94 along with other Thunderbird related issues and a new Thunderbird story by Chris Claremont. [9] [10] In 2004, Marvel released a CD containing issue #94 called SNAP! X-Men. [11]
Netflix’s Stranger Things topped the chart for the week of July 4 with 4.8 billion minutes viewed across 34 total episodes. Placing second, Prime Video’s The Terminal List rose 41 percent from