New Universe Checklist
Are you a hopless completist? Do you have to own every single appearance of every New Universe character ever? Don't worry, this page is here to help. No, not to overcome your addicition, but to let you know exactly what comics you need to get to make your collection complete. All comics published by Marvel unless otherwise noted. Dates given are the cover dates on the comics.
Core Titles (1986–1989)
For more information on these, see the New Universe Publishing History.
- D.P. 7 #1-32
- D.P. 7 Annual #1
- The Draft
- Justice #1-32
- Kickers, Inc. #1-12
- Mark Hazzard: Merc #1-12
- Mark Hazzard: Merc Annual #1
- Nightmask #1-12
- The Pitt
- Psi-Force #1-32
- Psi-Force Annual #1
- Spitfire and the Troubleshooters #1-9, then continued as Codename: Spitfire #10-13
- Star Brand #1-19
- Star Brand Annual #1
- The War #1-4
Collections
- Star Brand Classic Vol. 1 trade paperback (TPB); collects #1-7
- D.P. 7 Classic Vol. 1 TPB; collects #1-9
- Psi-Force Classic Vol. 1 TPB; collects #1-9
Prelude to Starblast (1992–1994)
Quasar #31, written by D.P. 7 writer Mark Gruenwald,
features Quasar traveling to and getting stuck in the New Universe.
Quasar seeks out the fighter pilot given the Star Brand in Star
Brand #19 and convinces him to let him have the Brand to get him
back home. This is the first time any of these characters have been
seen in contiunity since The War #4.
Two subplots come out of Quasar's trip to the New Universe through the next several issues. The first concerns one of Randy O'Brien's mini-antibodies that hitches a ride with Quasar back to the Marvel Universe, but ends up in Quagmire (Quasar #36, 37, 43-46). The second is that while Quasar thinks he burned the Star Brand out getting home, he actually transferred it to his girlfriend, Kayla Ballantine (Quasar #32-53). As you can see from the range, this sub-plot was drawn out for a long time. New Universe fans should be warned that it took a long time to finally reveal Kayla had the Star Brand. It also wraps up the old Questprobe series, of all things, along the way. The Kayla sub-plot culminates in Starblast (below).
- Quasar #31-53 (D.P. 7, Star Brand)
Starblast (1994)
During this four-issue limited series, Quasar is heavily featured and
his series is pretty much required reading for the event.
Starblast culminates with the Earth of the New Universe brought
into the Marvel Universe, but it is then sealed off so that no
interaction with it can take place. The final appearance of the New
Universe Earth for a decade comes in Quasar #60. (Although
it's literally an appearance of the Earth. No New Universe characters
are seen.)
- Fantastic Four #385-386
- Namor the Sub-Mariner #46-48
- Quasar #54-58, 60
- Secret Defenders #11
- Starblast #1-4
Justice in 2099 (1993–1996)
I have to admit, I don't own any of these comics at the moment. From what I've gathered on the Internet, Justice first appeared as a somewhat amnesiac character called the Net Prophet. By his final appearances, he regained his memory, but the series was canceled before it got beyond that. Note that Spider-Man 2099 was written by Peter David, who also wrote the last half of Justice. See Tensen 2099 on the Links page for more details.
- Spider-Man 2099 #12-14 (1993)
- Spider-Man 2099 #25 (1994)
- Spider-Man 2099 #41, 42, 44 (1996)
- Spider-Man 2099 Annual #1 (1994)
World Tour (2005)
The Exiles' "World Tour" brings them to a universe much like the New
Universe in Exiles #72. They drop in at what would be the very
end of D.P. 7 #1. Justice, Nightmask, and Star Brand (Ken
Connell) are also featured. The Exiles continue their adventure
in the not-quite-the-New-Universe through Exiles #74. At that
point they and their villain, Proteus, move on to 2099. Proteus does
so in Justice's body, which is last seen in Exiles #75. In
2008, a follow-up was done in an Exiles one-shot featuring Jenny
Swensen (spelled "Swenson" in the comic) and the MAX armor.
- Exiles #72-75 (D.P. 7, Justice, Star Brand, Nightmask)
- Exiles: Days of Then and Now #1 (2008; Spitfire)
Untold Tales of the New Universe (2006)
Marvel published this New Universe event in March (cover date of May 2006). There were five one-shots and three backup tales in Amazing Fantasy and New Avengers. More information on each title can be found at the Untold Tales page. This acted as a prelude to the launch of newuniversal.
- Amazing Fantasy #18 (April; Merc)
- Amazing Fantasy #19 (Spitfire)
- New Avengers #16 (April; Kickers, Inc.)
- Untold Tales of the New Universe: D.P. 7
- Untold Tales of the New Universe: Justice
- Untold Tales of the New Universe: Nightmask
- Untold Tales of the New Universe: Psi-Force
- Untold Tales of the New Universe: Star Brand
Marvel Handbook (2005–2007)
In 2004, Marvel revived The Official Handbook of the Marvel
Universe (OHOTMU), initially as a series of one-shots. The New
Universe characters hadn't appeared in the previous incarnations
because they weren't part of the Marvel Universe. However, the New
Universe got it's own entry in The Official Handbook of the Marvel
Universe: Alternate Universes 2005. Then Justice received an
entry in the monthly All-New Handbook of the Marvel Universe
A-Z while other major characters got listings in a special
handbook patterned after the Deluxe Edition of the original series.
Since then, Marvel has continued to dole out a character here and
there with their OHOTMU updates.
- All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z #6 (Justice)
- All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z: Update #1 (Merc), #2 (All-American), #3 (Chrome)
- Marvel Legacy: The 1980's Handbook (D.P. 7, Nightmask, Psi-Force)
- The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Alternate Universes 2005
newuniversal (2006–present)
This series is Warren Ellis' attempt to reinvent the New Universe from the beginning. It's an ensemble book featuring multiple characters who develop powers and are, at least initially, unaware of each other. One can't help but draw parallels to NBC's hit series Heroes.
- newuniversal #1-6
- newuniversal: shockfront #1-6 (upcoming)
- newuniversal: 1959 #1 (upcoming)
Cameos
- Quasar #4 (December 1989)
-
This issue is by the all the same creators -- down to the
colorist and letterer -- responsible for the final half of the D.P.
7 series and features a cameo by two unnamed characters that look
exactly like Charlotte "Friction" Beck and Stephanie "Glitter"
Harrington of D.P. 7. Was this writer Mark Gruenwald's idea or
penciller Paul Ryan's? - Avengers West Coast #65 (December 1990)
- Former D.P. 7 artist Paul Ryan snuck in a gag where the names of the original members of D.P. 7 appear on the tombstones in a graveyard.
- Avengers Forever #12 (October 1999)
- Someone wearing what looks like a Star Brand costume appears in the double-page spread on page 3.
- Gambit #19 (August 2000)
A mutant named Quiet Bill has the power to peer into alternate
universes. In this issue, one of those includes a view of Ken Connell
as Star Brand. According to writer Fabian Nicieza, this was going to
lead to appearances by at least some of the New Universe characters,
but he was pulled from the title before this could come to fruition.
Parodies
- Failed Universe (Blackthorne Publishing, 1986)
The New Universe launched in the middle of a big boom in the comic
book industry. Part of this was the "Black and White Explosion,"
which encompassed many a parody book like this one. In the story,
Mediocre Comics decides to create a new universe with their marketing
department's cosmic computer. It churns out the titles "Starbland";
"Misfire and the Tequilashooters"; "Sue Force", a group of
precognitive lawyers who can summon up F. Lee Belly; "Mark Lizzard:
Jerk", "P.P. 7" (Paranoid Paranormals); "Nightflask"; "S-Kickers", a
group of Canadian hockey players with super powers; and "Just
Dressed," who kills those that are out of fashion. In the end,
they're all done in by the Reader, who says none of the characters
interest him. It turns out the creative department sabotaged the
computer. They were fired and the new titles were published
anyway.- Legends #5 (DC, March 1987)
For four pages of this issue, Green Lantern Guy Gardner fights a
supervillain named Sunspot. Sunspot wears a suit that looks like the
one Ken Connell (Star Brand) wore, except Sunspot's is blue with brown
gloves instead of Connell's brown with blue gloves. His power comes
from a red spot in the palm of his hand. Sunspot claims to have "the
power to create a new universe." He ends up burning off his own foot
with his power trying to destroy one of Gardner's ring constructs
binding it.
Need even more New Universe stuff? Check out the New Universe Bibliography or Memorbilia.