Greg Pak

Mech Cadet Yu #1

Once a year, giant robots from outer space come to Earth and bond with young cadets from the elite Sky Corps Academy to defend the world from the terrifying aliens known as the Sharg. It’s a great honor to be chosen, but this year…well, the wrong kid was picked. Greg Pak (Totally Awesome Hulk) and Takeshi Miyazawa (Ms. Marvel) team up for an action-packed adventure perfect for fans of Amadeus Cho and Pacific Rim!

4 Doctor Strange collections to make appear in your cart before the sale ends tonight!

(Unless you have the time gem in which case…please be careful!)

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Doctor Strange: Marvel Masterworks Vol 1

Stephen Strange is Doctor Strange. But he is no doctor, at least not that kind that would initially come to mind. He is the Master of the Mystic Arts, a sorcerer supreme, a white knight who wields black magic against blacker villains still. Strange is mankind’s only hope against the dark other-worldly forces that conspire to destroy the conscious world. Catch the beginning of Stan Lee and Steve Ditko’s amazing run. Collects stories from Strange Tales #110-111, 114-141 & Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964) #2.

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Doctor Strange: Strange Origin

How did Stephen Strange become Earth’s Sorcerer Supreme? Find out in a high-flying, globe-trotting, window-crashing, ghost-battling adventure from the earliest days of Strange’s magical training! Part Indiana Jones, part Lord of the Rings, this uncanny origin story reveals how a selfish, arrogant surgeon collided with a hot-headed martial artist to become the greatest team the mystic arts have ever seen! But can Strange and Wong stop hitting each other and figure out how all this magic stuff works, anyway? Plus: Years later, an older and wiser Doctor Strange is all that stands between Earth and the forces of darkness. Every act of magic has its cost, but has Stephen been paying his tab? Get spellbound by the past and present of a Marvel hero with a big future! Collects Dr. Strange: Season One, Doctor Strange (2015) #1.

Note: Fans of the movie who aren’t sure where to start reading Doctor Strange will have no problem jumping right into this graphic novel!

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Doctor Strange: The Oath

Collects Doctor Strange: The Oath #1-5. Doctor Stephen Strange embarks on the most important paranormal investigation of his career, as he sets out to solve an attempted murder - his own! And with his most trusted friend also at death’s door, Strange turns to an unexpected corner of the Marvel Universe to recruit a new ally.

Note: Fans of Brian K. Vaughan’s work (like Saga!) won’t want to miss this excellent run on Doctor Strange!

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Doctor Strange Vol. 1: The Way of the Weird

Only Doctor Strange can protect our world from the darkness beyond — now, witness the full toll that constant struggle takes on Earth’s Sorcerer Supreme! Every spell cast comes at a cost, but what happens when Strange falls behind on his tab? Find out as the good doctor wakes up somewhere very odd, nearly naked — with no spell books, no weapons and no memory of how he got there…or why all the monsters are chasing him! And as a new visitor to Strange’s Sanctum Sanctorum learns one wrong door can lead to oblivion, a magic circle of Strange’s friends and allies are about to face their greatest threat. Dark forces are destroying everything mystical in the multiverse, and their sights are set on this dimension. Magic’s days are numbered, and Doctor Strange is not ready! Collects Doctor Strange (2015) #1-5.

SAVE STORM

professorthorgi:

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Do you see that? Do you see those numbers up there? Those are the sales figures for Storm in the month of October. Let me tell you why this is bad.

Now for years I heard people saying how much they love Storm, how she deserves her own book, asking why Marvel won’t give her one and why they don’t make a movie about her and saying they would totally buy a book of hers if they gave her one.

Well Marvel finally listened and gave her her own ongoing series, and it was indeed a great and happy day. They put superstar writer Greg Pak on the book, a guy who had been campaigning for her to have a series for years and was a big fan of the character and her history, it was all lined up to be a big smash hit. 

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Now, jump to October. Marvel cancels any book that drops below 20,000 units in sales (and it’s actually started canceling books even higher than that, sorry All-New X-Factor fans), and sure the book had some low sales compared to other new series when it started, but I didn’t worry. those sales figures only show how much retailers are buying and retailers get it wrong all the time, so I told people “Guys it takes retailers three months to adjust their sales figures to match the way that customers are buying the title. And I know that customers are going to buy this book up, heck they have been at my store, so just wait till issue 4, the sales will jump up on that one because the retailers will see how much the customers want it.”

Yeah, turns out I was wrong, because issue four not only dropped another ten percent (still kind of high for the typical issue 3 to 4 drop), but it is now below the 20,000 dollar cancellation line.

Let me repeat that for you. This book, the book we were all asking for for years, is now at issue 4, the issue that retailers start ordering based on how much they’ve seen it sell, and it’s already below the cancellation line. This means that this book staring a strong, well written, powerful Woman of Color, perhaps the most prominent one in comic book history, the first series she’s ever had, making it a very important book for the history of Marvel… is not selling. And not only is it not selling, it’s REALLY not selling, do you know how many books at Marvel drop below 20,000 units by issue 4? Hardly any.

And to everyone out there whose first instinct is to shout out “Well Marvel isn’t advertising it enough.” Stop, just stop. It’s Storm, STORM! One of the most famous characters in their universe. And it’s being written by Greg Pak, the guy who wrote the most popular Hulk series since probably the 80s and is currently writing some of the most popular series over at DC, he’s kind of a big deal.

So Marvel did their job, we asked for a Storm book and they gave it to us. Now it’s up to us, now the responsibility is on our shoulders, and we have to go out there and buy the book, we can make as many post as we want about how happy we are that this book exist (and those post are great, don’t get me wrong, keep making them) but end of the day, the only thing that can save this book is our four dollars. 

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SO HERE’S THE DEAL

You see that cover, that one up there, yeah that’s Storm #5, it comes out this week, this Wednesday the 19th of November, 2014. 

Go to your local comic book store and buy it.

It’s as simple as that.

Well okay there’s more to it than that, but that’s the least we can do. Want to do more? Great, then here we go.

But what if my store sells out or doesn’t carry it?

This is what you do about that. One of the main reasons that the people running comic book stores don’t order enough of the books that people want. It’s because customers don’t make their voices heard. And I don’t mean saying you want a book online. No, I mean if you want this book, go to the person working at your store, and say you want to reserve a copy of Storm this Wednesday. Almost every comic book store in America has some sort of a subscription or reservation or pull list service.

And just pulling a copy of this off the shelf yourself and buying it doesn’t have nearly as much of an impact as you going up to the counter and asking them face to face for it, or them on Tuesday night pulling the books and putting them away for their customers and going “Huh, look, someone is reserving Storm.” There is a new wave of readers finally speaking up and saying that they want books with more diverse characters and different tones and stories than what we’ve always gotten, and I see that each week in my store. But when it comes time for me to pull the books for the people who reserve with us, do you know what I always pull? The same old stuff that has always sold in a comic shop since the dawn of time. And when it comes time for us to order the new books, those pull list and request hold a big sway on what we order. So make your voice heard.

But that’s not all! If your store doesn’t carry this book or they run out, if you just walk in and go “oh well” then that does nothing. Going up to the counter and asking them if they could order another one, will typically result in them actually ordering you another copy. Which then sends a message to Marvel that “Oh hey, look at that, some new people are buying this book who just got into it, great!” And also if you ask them to start a weekly subscription list for you and you ask them to add Storm to that list, if your store doesn’t typically order that book, then that means that they just increased the number of copies they permanently order for that book for all future months. 

But I have to spend my four dollars this week on a big crossover book or another title I really don’t enjoy but I read just so I can find out what happens inside.

No, you don’t, you really don’t. Look at the books you’re buying and ask yourself, “Am I enjoying this?” if the answer is no and you’re just buying it to know what happens in it, then stop, you can learn all that info online in the amount of time it takes me to type this sentence. Spend your money on the books you will enjoy, or on the books you want to support because it sends a message that you are behind, and as I said, Storm really does that. 

But I’m already buying Storm

Awesome, up top!

*SMACK*

Down low!

*SMACK*

Now go buy a second copy and give it to your friends, or give the digital code away online. I tried so hard to save other books in the past (some successes, a lot of failures, I miss you already New Warriors) and the number one way I got people into a series was by getting them hooked with a free copy. (The number two way to get people hooked is by making tons of post talking about how good and important the book is, so if you can’t afford another copy, then by all means do that).

Okay, I’m going to do it, I’m going to buy a copy of Storm this week. What do I do then?

First off, thank you, and secondly, post about it this Wednesday through Friday (19th - 21st) with the tag “Save Storm.” Take a selfie with the cover, make a post about what you love about it, encourage other people to make post about it. Whatever you do, use the tag “Save Storm” and get this going around the internet like a typhoon. 

Come on Storm Chasers, I know we can do this, it’s still early, Marvel will give this book up until at least issue 10 or 12 to turn itself around, but that still means we only have a few issues to save it in, so let’s get it done this week and show everyone that Ororo deserves a book and has the fanbase to back it up!

Help #SaveStorm by telling everyone you know to download Storm #1 for FREE by using the code STORMCHASERS

(via rcbot)