Template:Short description Template:Incomplete list Template:Use mdy dates Template:Comics navbar This page provides lists of best-selling comic book series to date. It includes Japanese manga, American comic books, and European comics. This list includes comic books that have sold at least 100Template:Nbspmillion copies.
There are three separate lists, for three different comic book publication formats: collected comic book volumes, periodical single-issue floppy comics, and comic magazines. They are separated because the sales figures of these publication formats are not directly comparable.
Collected comic book volumes
This list is for comics printed in a traditional book format (paperback or hardcover), typically with a similar number of pages as novels. The list includes graphic novels printed exclusively in this format, and trade paperback/hardcover books which compile periodical comic chapters/issues into larger collected volumes. Japanese manga tankōbon volumes and European comic albums account for the vast majority of collected comic book volume sales.[1] American trade paperbacks and graphic novels are also included in the list.
These comic series were originally serialized either as chapters (typically 15-30 pages each) in comic publications (such as comic magazines) or as single-page comic strips in non-comic publications (such as newspapers), before being collected into a larger comic book volume (which compiles either multiple comic chapters or numerous comic strips).[1] For comic series originally serialized as chapters in comic magazines or manga magazines, their estimated circulation figures in those magazines are given in footnotes.
Denotes comic series currently running |
Periodical single-issue floppy comics
This list is for single-issue floppy comics, also known as the American comic book format. Unlike the paperback book format, floppy comics are thinner periodicals and stapled together. Each floppy comic issue is typically 20–40 pages, and usually consists of a single chapter (as opposed to a larger comic book volume that typically includes multiple chapters). A floppy comic is comparable to a comic magazine, but is thinner in size and is dedicated to a single character or group of characters (whereas a comic magazine is thicker and serializes multiple different unrelated series).[1]
Single-issue floppy comics are the most common publication format for American comics, and account for the vast majority of American superhero comic sales.[34] This list also contains periodical publications from other countries that are similarly dedicated to a single character or group of characters. Some of the numbers reported here may also include sales of trade paperback volumes, which account for a small portion of American comic sales.
According to the most recently available data, the best-selling American single-issue comic of all time was X-Men #1, which was published in 1991 and has since sold almost 8.2 million copies.
Comic series | Creator(s) | Publisher | No. of issues | Serialized | Approximate sales |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Superman | Jerry Siegel Joe Shuster |
DC Comics | 18,732[35] | 1938 – 2016 | 600 million[36]Template:Efn |
Batman | Bob Kane Bill Finger |
DC Comics | 23,193[37] | 1939 – 2016 | 484Template:NbspmillionTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn |
Spider-Man | Stan Lee Steve Ditko |
Marvel | 13,500[38] | 1963 – 2016 | 387 millionTemplate:EfnTemplate:Efn |
X-Men | Stan Lee Jack Kirby |
Marvel | 12,000[39] | 1963 – 2016 | 260 million[40]Template:Efn |
Captain America | Joe Simon Jack Kirby |
Marvel | 9,000[41] | 1941 – 2016 | 210Template:Nbspmillion[40] |
Diabolik | Angela Giussani Luciana Giussani |
Astorina | 862 | 1962 – 2016 | 150Template:Nbspmillion[16] |
Spawn | Todd McFarlane | Image Comics | 600[42] | 1992 – 2016 | 150Template:Nbspmillion[43] |
The Phantom | Lee Falk | Frew Publications | 3,000[44] | 1936 – 2016 | 150Template:Nbspmillion[40] |
Comic magazines
This list is for comic magazines, which are anthology magazines that serialize multiple different unrelated comic series. This list includes Japanese manga magazines, European comic magazines, and English-language comic magazines.
In Japan, manga magazines account for the vast majority of manga sales. Most manga series first appear in manga magazines, before later being sold separately as collected tankobon volumes.[1]
See also
Notes
References
External links
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