CGC Registry

A Few Fine Comics


Set Type: World's Finest #71-#121 (Specialized)
Owner: Mississippi Mudcats
Last Modified: 5/28/2024
Views: 130

Rank: 1
Score: 44224
Leading by: 43894
Points to Higher Rank: N/A

Set Description:

Synopsis: This is a set of 39 books with a minimum grade of 8.0.

Background: World's Finest Comics was published initially by National Periodical Publications and later by DC Comics beginning in the Summer of 1941 until January of 1986 spanning a total of 322 issues. The series was initially entitled World's Best Comics, but changed to World's Finest Comics after issue #1.

Originally, World's Finest Comics was an anthology series that featured DC's most popular characters from other anthology series—mainly Superman and Batman. The comic was 1.5 times larger than standard comics, and cost 15¢ (when standard comics were 10¢). The series was orginally issued on a quarterly schedule for the first twenty issues. It then went to a bi-monthly schedule but still retained more pages then the other DC Comics at the time.

With World's Finest #71, the comic was made regular-size (and price). In order to retain the draw of Superman and Batman without giving them both full-length stories, the series began chronicling the team-up adventures of Batman and Superman. Unlike their Post-Crisis counterparts, the early versions of these characters were the greatest of friends and routinely teamed up to battle the likes of villains such as Lex Luthor, Brainiac and the Joker. Although not considered an official part of the World's Finest team, the Golden Age Robin assisted them in many of their adventures.

For the best part of the Silver and Bronze Ages, the series continued publication with different formats going from regular size comics, featuring experimental ideas such as removing Batman from the lineup and making this series a team up book for Superman while Batman would team up with other heroes in the The Brave and the Bold (Volume 1). The sales of World's Finest Comics began to lag so Batman was brought back to the lineup. Other concepts included the Super-Sons storyline and the 80-pages Dollar Comics, which featured various back-up stories including Wonder Woman, Captain Marvel, Green Arrow and Hawkman among other notable characters, but always with a main focus on Batman and Superman. The series was eventually cancelled in 1986 after a series of failed attempts to revitalize the concept of the primary characters and the growing tensions between them as their new characterization made it impossible to keep the stories feasible.

Our Collection: We started out buying these books around 2018-2019 to get a sampling of Batman and Superman in our collection, as we did not collect either title. A big problem we have had with targeting these books is that we just did not know where to start or end our collection. This set at least gives us parameters that focus primarily on our time period of interest, which is the Silver Age.

Our collection currently starts with Issue #72 and extends into the early #200s. We have had a fair amount of luck with collecting Issues #90-#200, but still have several holes in the earlier part of this set and have lowered our bar to 8.0 for the books earlier than Issue #100. Right now, we still need 12 books to finish this one, so it has a very long ways to go, and many of the books we need are exceptionally rare in high grade. But about half of our books in this set are single highest graded in the census, so there is a lot of quality in what we do own here.
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