

(Some of the All-New team also spun out into Waid’s Champions (2017) – see Guide to The Champions.)

The refocus on classic characters and foes in Marvel Legacy saw those two flagship titles transform into Waid’s Avengers (2017) and Ewing’s U.S.Avengers (2017), culminating in the “Avengers: No Surrender” weekly event. It later added David Walker’s Occupy Avengers (2016). The return of the Marvel Universe launched with two flagship titles – All-New All-Different Marvel included Mark Waid’s All-New All-Different Avengers (2015) and Al Ewing’s New Avengers (2016). He would later add Avengers Assemble (2012) to focus on a movie-friendly team.Īfter that point, Avengers flagships continued into Jonathan Hickman’s relaunch of Avengers (2012) and New Avengers (2013), his Infinity (2013) event, the addition of Avengers World (2014), and the lead-up to his Secret Wars in 2015. That changed in 2010, when Marvel and Bendis launched the twin Avengers flagship books of Avengers (2010) and New Avengers (2010), each focused on a different element of the team – the heavy-hitters and the street-level characters. In its place was his relaunched New Avengers, and later Mighty Avengers along with it. In 2005, Marvel stopped publishing a comic called “Avengers” for the first time since 1963 in the wake of Brian Bendis’s “Avengers: Disassembled” event. Last updated April 2023 with titles scheduled for release through August 2023.

A part of Crushing Comics – Guide to Marvel Comics. The definitive, chronological, and up-to-date guide on collecting Avengers flagships comic books from 2010 to present, including Avengers & New Avengers, Avengers by Hickman, and Avengers by Aaron via omnibuses, hardcovers, and trade paperback graphic novels.
