Masters of the Universe (comics)

Masters of the Universe
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Marvel Comics
London Edition Magazines
Image Comics
Schedule Monthly, biweekly (DC Comics's 2012 digital series)
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date DC Comics:
December 1982 - February 1983
July 2012 - ongoing
Marvel Comics:
May 1986 - May 1988
London Edition Magazines:
1986 - 1990
Image Comics (MV Creations):
November 2002 - December 2004
No. of issues DC Comics:
3 (1982-1983)
34 (2012-ongoing)
Marvel Comics:
14
London Edition Magazines:
103
Image Comics (MV Creations):
26
Main character(s) Masters of the Universe characters
Collected editions
The Shard of Darkness ISBN 1-59314-017-7
Dark Reflections ISBN 0974800813

The Masters of the Universe media franchise has appeared in several comic book series. Most were small publications (known as "minicomics"), which were included as bonuses with action figures. Standalone comic-book series were also published by DC, Marvel Comics, London Edition Magazines and Image Comics.[1][2]

Publication history

Original minicomics (1981–1983)

The original action figures were packaged with minicomics, with stories about the characters.[3] In the early comics He-Man is a wandering barbarian on Eternia, a world dealing with the aftermath of a war which devastated its civilizations and left behind fantastic machinery and weapons. The war opened a rift between dimensions, allowing the evil warlord Skeletor to travel to Eternia. Skeletor has set his sights on the ancient Castle Grayskull, a fortress of mystery and power; whoever controls Grayskull will become Master of the Universe. To prevent Skeletor from achieving his goal, He-Man has received special powers and weapons from the Sorceress and defends the castle from Skeletor. He-Man is supported by allies such as Man-At-Arms (the Eternian master of weapons) and Teela, the adopted daughter of Man-At-Arms. Skeletor finds one half of the Power Sword, the key to Castle Grayskull. He-Man received the other half from the Sorceress, and must prevent Skeletor from linking the two halves and gaining access to the castle. To distinguish these stories from the minicomics which were released as tie-ins with the TV series, fans called this first version of Eternia "mini-Eternia" and the words were combined into Mineternia in 2003 by the minicomics fansite Eternia Minor (now He-Man Tales).[4]

DC Comics limited series (1982)

DC Comics published an insert preview which appeared in several comic books dated November 1982.[5] The following month, a Masters Of The Universe limited series[6] was sold separately on newsstands.

Later minicomics (1985–1987)

With the introduction of Hordak, the minicomics began to diverge from the He-Man and She-Ra animated series and Etheria became Hordak's base of operations.

Years earlier, Hordak had been overthrown by his minion Skeletor and banished from Eternia. He returns, accompanied by the Evil Horde, to conquer the planet. Occasionally allying with Skeletor (but usually attempting to destroy him), Hordak is opposed by He-Man.

In the mini-comic King of the Snakemen, Skeletor discovers a pool of energy buried in Snake Mountain which contains ancient emperor King Hiss. Hiss discloses that he had conquered a number of planets before invading Eternia. Large portions of the planet had fallen to the Snake Men before they were defeated by the Council of the Elders and banished to another dimension. Hiss now seeks to recover his fellow Snake Men and bring vengeance to Eternia.

Details about Eternia's past are revealed in subsequent minicomics surrounding the Three Towers: Grayskull Tower, Viper Tower and Central Tower. The giant structure is raised from underground by Hiss and Skeletor and is the focus of adventures as He-Man tries to prevent all three villains from acquiring the towers' secrets.

Hordak recognises the towers, and claims to have helped build Central Tower. The return of the Towers enhances the Sorceress' magic, and she helps King Randor in his search to discover what happened to his long-lost brother Keldor. Skeletor is determined to stop the search.

Princess of Power minicomics (1984-1986)

Included with the She-Ra dolls beginning in 1985, these differed from the cartoon series. She-Ra used the Crystal Castle as her home, and Catra (rather than Hordak) is the primary villain.

Marvel Star Comics series (1986-1987)

Marvel's Star Comics imprint published 13 issues in 1986.[7]

UK magazines (1986-1990)

Published in the UK by London Edition Magazines, the fortnightly comic series lasted for 72 issues with an additional monthly comic (Masters of the Universe Adventure) running for 28 issues. Storylines included the battle for control of Viper Tower, a team-up of the three villainous factions and the destruction and rebuilding of Eternos. The 'Secret Files of Scrollos' strip featured origin stories for many characters including Sy-Klone, Rio Blast and Snout Spout, and the series included the characters Horde Prime and Scrollos. There was also a short-lived She-Ra comic title, that lasted for 14 issues.

He-Man minicomics (1989)

Four minicomics were included with the 1989 space-themed relaunch. The story was similar to the UK magazine version of He-Man's New Adventures, differing from the cartoon series.

Dark Horse minicomics (2011)

Dark Horse Comics produced minicomics for inclusion in Mattel's Masters of the Universe Classics toy line, continuing the series of minicomics introduced in the 1980s Masters toys. The minicomics were written by Tim Seeley and drawn by Wellinton Alves, with covers by Eric Powell.

According to Seeley, the current minicomics would finish the story planned to be the new direction of the original action-figure line before it was cancelled. The story would deal with the Powers of Grayskull line, which included King Hiss, Tyrantisaurus Rex and He-Ro, tying the toy continuity to the He-Man line and known as The New Adventures of He-Man. Seeley said that the Mattel line intended to blend the He-Man continuities and select the best stories and ideas from MOTU history.[8]

DC Comics minicomics (2012-14)

DC took over the Masters of the Universe Classics minicomics in 2012, with artwork by Wellinton Alves and Axel Gimenez. Three issues were published; the first told the origin story of Keldor (Skeletor), the second dealt with He-Man and Skeletor's final battle after their intergalactic New Adventures and the third begins the Son of He-Man era.

DC Comics (2012)

In June 2012 DC Comics began publishing a weekly digital title, Masters of the Universe. The first chapter was written by Geoff Johns, with art by Howard Porter and John Livesay. The title planned to explore the world of Eternia, tying into the DC Comics print title He-Man and the Masters of the Universe.[9] DC later announced an ongoing print title.[10]

List of minicomics

The following is a list of the mini-comics released with the Masters of the Universe, Princess of Power, He-Man, and Masters of the Universe Classics toys.

Original minicomics

Second series minicomics

Third (Filmation MOTU) series minicomics

Fourth series minicomics

Fifth series minicomics

Sixth series minicomics

Princess of Power minicomics

He-Man (New Adventures) minicomics

MOTU Classics series minicomics

Collected editions

Some of the comic books have been collected into trade paperbacks:

DC collected editions

DC has collected editions of its comic series.

References

  1. "MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE Comic Book". Mania.com. Retrieved 2009-10-19.
  2. "Help Save He-Man!". Comics Bulletin. Retrieved 2009-11-05.
  3. "The Surprisingly Awesome Comics History of ‘Masters Of The Universe’". Comicsalliance.com. 2013-04-16. Archived from the original on 2014-10-29. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
  4. "What is Mineternia?". Dyerworks. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
  5. "GCD :: Story Search Results". Grand Comics Database. Retrieved 2015-08-26.
  6. "GCD :: Series :: Masters of the Universe". Comics.org. Retrieved 2015-03-21.
  7. https://www.mycomicshop.com/search?TID=85381. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. "CCI EXCLUSIVE: Seeley Scripts New Adventures of He-Man". Comic Book Resources. 2011-07-28. Retrieved 2011-08-05.
  9. Phillips, Brandy. "New Masters of the Universe Digital Comic Book Debuts Today". DC Comics. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  10. "EXCLUSIVE: DC Comics To Publish Masters Of The Universe Ongoing". MTV. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  11. Staples, Val (2003). Masters of the universe :The Shard of Darkness. Oldsmar, Fla.: CrossGen. ISBN 1-59314-017-7.
  12. Staples, Val (2004). Masters of the Universe :Dark Reflections. Lynchburg, VA: MVCreations. ISBN 0-9748008-1-3.
  13. Kirkman, Robert (2004). Masters of the Universe: Icons of Evil. [Lynchburg, Va.]: MVCreations. ISBN 0-9748008-0-5.
  14. "Dark Horse Readies "He-Man and the Masters of the Universe Minicomics Collection"". Comic Book Resources. 2014-06-11. Retrieved 2015-05-12.
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