Top 10 Comic Books of All Time

Jun 20, 2023

The Top-10 lists of all time are always tricky to make regardless of the niche or subject. Comics are not an exception. Many admirers will have their individual preferences and that’s completely fine for this particular topic because comic books do particularly provoke discussions. Nevertheless, we are brave enough to announce our own Top-10 list of the best comic books ever. We have considered several important factors, including popularity, the sale, and the grades on the already-made popular lists. To help with making sense of the data we have got help from the experts at betting tips 4 you. Stay tuned and enjoy. 

10 – Preacher  

You will hardly find so creative and fun comic books like this one. Gareth Ennis is a well-known writer and this is certainly the biggest piece of his impressive career. The plot tells the story of the supernatural character Genesis who was born from the relationship between an angel and demon and who made God escape Heaven. It possesses the powers of the absolute good and the absolute evil inherited from its parents. 

9 – Bone  

This gentle comic book written by Jeff Smith has received multiple awards ever since 1991. It follows the story of three Bone cousins, Fone, Phoney, and Smiley. They are three weird little creatures characterized by big noses. They escape their hometown when one of Phoney’s pranks goes wrong. Their Tolkien-inspired adventure ends in a mysterious valley threatened by the Master of Grasshoppers. What is particularly interesting about this comic is that Jeff Smith began drawing Fone and his cousins at the age of five. 

8 – Transmetropolitan 

While the previous comic is ideal for kids, this one is more suited to the elders. The Warren Ellis piece of art is a blend of social and political satire and scientific fantasy with special ingredients in the shape of a healthy dose of sex and the usage of drugs. You won’t find such a specific combination in your mainstream comic which is why we rate Transmetropolitan so high in this list. Warren Ellis has created 60 episodes that antagonize all sorts of social injustices, including the corrupted politicians and the almighty corporations. Interestingly, this comic becomes even more significant and popular in the present times as we live in an era of wrong moral qualities with money controlling the whole planet. 

7 – Hellboy  

Hellboy’s story is a very interesting one. Mike Mignola first created it as a mascot for the 1991 Comic Con in Salt Lake City. Two years later he figured that the mascot could help him to run a series of stories through a comic. The stories represented a combo of mythology, horror, and Lovecraft’s sanity. Hellboy is the heart of these stories as the world’s biggest investigator of paranormal activities. Hellboy took care of the community’s well-being as he continued to investigate the things ordinary people couldn’t understand, let alone solve. 

6 – The Walking Dead  

We have seen the well-known zombie apocalypse on TV for more than a decade. However, the apocalypse that turned humans into even more cruel monsters than regular zombies has its roots in a comic book written by Robert Kirkman in 2003. Kirkman has sold as many as 193 episodes of the comic from 2003 to 2019. What makes this comic special is how Kirkman has developed his characters only to suddenly kill them out of nowhere. The zombies created a huge chaos and you never knew what was about to happen. 

5 – Batman: The Killing Joke  

Alan Moore is the most influential comic book writer of the 1980s. He gave new life to the existing serials such as the Swamp Thing or the Superman on top of creating his original pieces of work. One of Moore’s most memorable pieces is just his work on Batman. Interestingly, it is only 48 pages long but very detailed and precise to showcase both Moore and Brian Bolland as characters. The story itself is very simple as the Joker escapes Arkham and sets Batman a trap in an adrenaline park. You probably know the rest which is why we will finish this segment by saying that this comic has drastically influenced the latter movies, TV shows, and video games. 

4 – Batman: The Dark Knight Returns  

We will not move away from Batman as “Dark Knight Returns” holds the high fourth place on this list, just one above “The Killing Joke”. As you know, each superhero has two faces, one he shows in public, and the other (masked) required for saving the world. Batman began his career as a fool in the 1960s TV series before becoming the dark and revengeful hero we know today. Well, the Dark Knight was just created by Frank Miller who had the intention of making Batman a true hero without giving him the weapons or super technology. 

3 – Maus: A Survivors Tale  

Maus was the first genuine work that gave comic books a true meaning. It opened the way for comics to appear on bookshelves in genuine stores alongside other literature. It is still the only comic book with a Pulitzer award. It tells the story of how the author Vladek Spiegelman survived the holocaust. Spiegelman pictured the Jews as the mice and the Nazis as the cats. 

2 – V for Vendetta  

If you seek action and entertainment in a comic book, this one may not be your cup of tea. Nevertheless, the 1982 Allan Moore’s work carries such a massive significance in the history of comic books and we simply had to hand it a high second position in this list. The author does not reveal much at all about the main character. We have never found out the identity of the person behind the mask. We only know that years after the experiments that the British fascist government did on the prisoners in concentration camps, he destroys that government and establishes anarchy. 

1 – Watchmen  

The first place is reserved for the “Watchmen”. The main reason lies in the fact that Watchmen were not created to satisfy the desires of comic book fans exclusively. Instead, this work from Alan Moore and Cedric Gibbons dealt with so many real-life problems and themes such as politics, society, space, art, and life in general. As such, the Watchmen have cleared the path to so many other comics later on.

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