The top-selling comic book in January was The Avengers Annual 10. What causes this renewed interest? Why do collectors and people who like to sell comic books bring this issue to attention again?
The Avengers Annual comic series
This series is basically Marvel’s “big special” version of the regular Avengers book. These were oversized issues that usually dropped once a year, and Marvel used them to go bigger than a normal monthly issue could. More pages, more characters, bigger villains, and grander stories.
Avengers Annual #1 (1967) was the first issue, an experiment. It’s written by Roy Thomas with art by Don Heck, and it looked more like classic-era comics. The plot? It throws the team into a mess with major threats and high stakes, the kind that would’ve felt like a movie back then.
What’s fun about the Annuals is how Marvel treated them as a place for “extra.” Extra team-ups, extra crossovers, extra stuff.
More about The Avengers Annual #10
The Avengers Annual 10 became popular because of one simple reason: Thanos stopped being a background boogieman and became the main event.
Released in 1981, this issue brings together a huge cast of heroes and cosmic players, but the central characters are Thanos and his obsession with Death (the character, not the phenomenon). The story is HUGE, meaning cosmic-level.
In the Avengers Annual #10, you get massive confrontations, weird alliances, and sometimes even the most powerful heroes couldn’t keep up.
The tone is darker than many Avengers stories of the time. That’s why collectors still like it. It’s huge, the story is dark, the scale is cosmic, and the stakes are sky-high. What’s not to love about it?
How much is The Avengers Annual 10
The Avengers Annual 10 value depends heavily on condition, and the gap between grades is noticeable. This is a book that stays active in the market, so prices move with demand rather than age and rarity.
Here’s more about the Avengers annual 10 value:
- Low grades (around 3.0-4.0). These are usually in the $25-$40 range. They’re affordable entry copies, but flaws in condition keep prices down.
- Mid grades (around 6.0-8.0). This is the most common zone for collectors. Expect roughly $50-$80.
- Near Mint range (around 9.2-9.6). Prices are about $95-$190.
- High-end copies (9.8). These are rare and can jump to well over $500.
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Peter Przysiezny, owner of Comic Buying Center, has been buying and selling comics and collectibles for over 30 years. He lives in Northern Illinois and specializes in buying large comic book collections. He has a vast knowledge of all eras and types of comic books ranging from the 1930s to the 2000s. Pete spent his childhood going to comic book conventions with his father, so you could say he was raised in the industry.