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Fantastic Four
Comics for SaleSame day shipping when you order weekdays by 5 p.m. EST Every comic protected by a bag and board. Money-back guarantee.
1961 series
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Show Covers only
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Sales Rank #1 See Top 2,500
Publisher
Marvel
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Ages_7-12
Ages_13-16
Super-hero
Fantastic_Four
First Issue #1 - November 1961
Last #416 - September 1996
Continued in Fantastic Four (1996 series)
These Fantastic Four comic books for sale were the first super-hero series published by Marvel comic books in the "Silver Age" of comics.
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Top Sellers
by buyers of Fantastic Four 1961 series
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1
Avengers 1963 series
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2
Uncanny X-Men 1981 series
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3
Daredevil 1964 series
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4
Thor 1966 series
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5
Amazing Spider-Man 1963 series
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6
Incredible Hulk 1968 series
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7
Captain America 1968 series
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8
Iron Man 1968 series
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9
Marvel Comics Presents 1988 series
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10
X-Factor 1986 series
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11
Action Comics 1938 series
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12
Punisher 1987 series
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13
Fantastic Four 2003 series
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14
Wolverine 1988 series
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15
Marvel Team-Up 1972 series
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16
Batman 1940 series
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17
Adventures of Superman 1987 series
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18
Silver Surfer 1987 series
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19
Spectacular Spider-Man 1976 series
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20
Web of Spider-Man 1985 series
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21
Detective Comics 1937 series
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22
Alpha Flight 1983 series
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23
Defenders 1972 series
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24
X-Men 1991 series
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| Fantastic Four comic books for sale
The Fantastic Four is the series that launched the Marvel age of heores. The first series of Fantastic Four (starting in 1961) is the most popular among collectors. But other Fantastic Four comic books for sale are nearly as popular. Some Fantastic Four series contain only a few issues, and others are longer, such as Fantastic Four (1998 series). All of Fantastic Four comics for sale come with our full money-back guarantee. So, if you're a Fantastic 4 fan or you're looking for Fantastic Four comics for sale, this is the place! | Why You Should Collect and Buy Fantastic Four Comic Books
This is the comic book that saved the comic book industry.
The year was 1961 and DC had a virtual monopoly on superhero comics, which have always been the bumper crop for publishers. Superman, Batman, and re-launches of The Flash and Green Lantern, along with Wonder Woman and several second-tier heros. But, all their characters were good guys, and none of their characters had any, well, character. They were good. Through and through.
And then, along came Stan Lee and Jack Kirby's brilliant collaboration, the Fantastic Four. The four squabbled like real people, had villains with good sides and heroes with dark sides. Their characters did things that real people did -- went to the barber shop, went on vacation, nearly went bankrupt. It was a family story in a superhero context.
Yes, the Fantastic Four totally re-energized comics, and was the first title in the "Marvel Age of Comics". This series' success led to everything else in the Marvel family. Without a successful Fantastic Four, there would never have been a Spider-Man, or Iron Man or Captain America or Thor.
The series was the definition of innovative. The characters had no secret identities, they actually lived in New York City, (no "Metropolis" for them), and they fought like siblings...in fact, Sue Storm (the Invisible Girl) and Johnny Storm (the Human Torch), WERE siblings. And they squabbled, just like you did with your siblings.
And bad guys had a good side. In one sequence, which has stayed with me for 40 years, the evil Dr. Doom and Reed Richards are about to blow each other's brains out and the collateral damage would be the destruction of a valuable painting by an old master. Neither Richards or the detestable Doom could bare to see that happen. The result? An agreement to end the fight to save the painting. Great Caesar's Ghost.... there were no characters like that in DC comics!!!
And, Johnny Storm, a leading star, was a teenager. In DC-land, the teenagers were the sidekicks, Robin to Batman, Speedy to Green Arrow, and Kid Flash to... well, you know.
But here, a teenager was a star. His success bred the other great Marvel teenage star....Spider-Man. If the readers of comics in the 1960s were kids and teenagers, well, why not discuss their problems... like being bullied in school, or an upcoming Chemistry test. Meanwhile, Superman was concerned with how best to camouflage this giant key to his Fortress of Solitude.
And, the Fantastic Four lived in a real city, New York, and Reed Richards was wondering how he could kiss Sue Storm.
The 'reality' of the series was how it intermingled real people reacting to ordinary situations with the bad guys trying to take over the world. Bad guy coming after me? Well, hold on, while I pay the rent. Today, most every superhero comic has taken this enduring quality from Fantastic Four's original series.
The continuity was staggering. In a day when an artist will sign to draw 12 issues of a series, Kirby and Lee teamed for 102 straight issues. The characters they created, from the Silver Surfer and Galactus to the Inhumans and zillions more populate the Marvel universe to this day.
So, if you're looking for a title with great stories, great art (Kirby and Lee at their pinnacle), the Fantastic Four is the place to do.
To buy Fantastic Four comic books, click to Fantastic 4 comics for sale
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