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In 1967, when Neal Adams began producing cover art for DC, he was assigned to titles like Adventures of Bob Hope and Adventures of Jerry Lewis. These were slapstick humor books built on broad gags and exaggerated premises—already feeling dated even by late-1960s standards.

It didn’t take long for Carmine Infantino, then DC’s Editoria...


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Updated for current market trends (January 2026).

Saturday morning cartoons were as much a part of my childhood as playing in the streets with the neighborhood kids or getting a hug from my mom. Sitting cross-legged in front of a bulky console TV, watching Scooby-Doo or Speed Racer, still fills me with nostalgia—a reminder of a time ...


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A value-ranked Top 50 list doesn’t just show what’s expensive—it shows what the Bronze Age became: outsiders, art-driven drama, and quirky scarcity books that still move the market. Here’s the Top 50 most valuable comics of the 1970s, followed by three patterns the list makes impossible to ignore.

1st Punisher


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1979 was a year defined by unease, as crisis after crisis battered American confidence. On March 28, a reactor at Three Mile Island near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania suffered a partial nuclear meltdown. To make matters even more unsettling, The China Syndrome—a film centered on a nuclear accident and corporate deception—had been released just twelve days earlier. Alt...


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When Olivia Newton-John dressed in black leather purred, “You better shape up, ’cause I need a man”, America took notice of the number 1 movie of 1978, Grease. Comic book fans were thrilled to see a large S revealed under a shirt again. When Superman hit the screen, Christopher Reeve somehow made the impossible believable: glass...


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