![]() A quest for freedom that becomes the legend of a king. A crash-landed warrior from an unknown place. The big three reunited-and just in time to save the world from the 2,000-foot-tall space gods known as the Celestials! One of the Avengers’ most cosmically-epic arcs. The greatest space opera of all time returned in the mighty Marvel manner in this excellent entry point run! AVENGERS (2018) #1 New York Times Best-Selling author Ta-Nehisi Coates and artist Brian Stelfreeze steered King T’Challa through rebellion from within in this landmark run. Meet the cultural phenomenon that is Kamala Khan, Jersey City’s Inhuman hero! BLACK PANTHER (2016) #1 Clint Barton and Kate Bishop means double the trouble in this Eisner-winner. Matt Fraction and David Aja reunited to tell the ongoing tales of the Arrowed Avenger. ![]() THOR: GOD OF THUNDER (2012) #1Ī thunderous intro to Jason Aaron’s THOR. The result? A game-changing issue #1 that still maintains its record as a best-seller. X-MEN (1991) #1Ī seminal X-Men moment! The dynamic duo of Chris Claremont and Jim Lee divvied up the X-Men into two distinct squads following the X-TINCTION AGENDA event. Peter Parker gets a revamped origin in this resonant series, covering his first days as the radioactive Spider-Man. Or, if you’re a Marvel Unlimited member, discover your next series to binge! ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN (2000) #1Ī staff and fan-favorite, this Spidey run can’t be missed. To celebrate this enormous milestone, Marvel Unlimited is offering fans 30 free comics in honor of 30,000 starting points! From ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN (2000), classic X-MEN (1991), to modern hits like THOR: GOD OF THUNDER (2012), dive into these issue #1s and start your journey into comics. Get your first year of Marvel Unlimited for just $60! Use code MUSAVE60 at checkout.ģ0 starting points for 30,000 comics! Marvel Unlimited, an award-winning digital comics subscription service, now offers its readers instant access to 30,000+ issues from the latest and greatest stories to a back catalog spanning 80 years of Marvel Comics! But if inexpensive like these books, I'll go the quickservice at $8 per book - unless after this first submit they come back somehow damaged, which would really surprise me.Have you tried Marvel Unlimited yet? It’s your all-access pass to over 30,000 Marvel comics at your fingertips. If its valuable, I'll go the normal service. I think in the end, it will depend on the book I'm submitting. But then again, you would have to have experience from both services in order to compare, right? Your follow-up on the experience will be great. Īll we know right now from the new service is CCS is peeling off certain services from its full package to cut down on the turnaround rates. I guess I"ll get them back sometime next year. But for these moderns I'll do normal track and save the $10 grading per book, and that will pay for the pressing. I typically like CGC fast track as I'm too old for delayed gratification. I'm thinking about this because their quickservice is $8 per book, whereas their normal service at the level I was at was like $35. They have some flaws, and with pressing hoping they can get to the promised land (for me, 9.8s). I'm thinking about pressing some moderns that are cheapo but I like the covers, and then having them go directly to grading. It's cheap enough that I'll submit some books and report back. How has that worked out so far? By this I mean, just as in the case of CGC's grading standards, the collective "we" can ask for CCS' standards until we are blue in the face and we still won't get them. We have been casually (and sometime not-so-casually) asking for CGCs grading standards for what, 10 years now? To ask every once and awhile may produce the book or the answer. This is why I think it is a question worth asking. ![]() The answer could help the OP (and me) decide on future tiers of service. You may be right but then again someone may be aware of some technical differences between the two. I think even if you were to have all the services CCS offers done on comparably graded books, you'd be hard-pressed (seewhatIdidthere?) to know fully what was done to one that wasn't the other. I think everyone would be interested in the real answer. I think it as a great question and would have been interested in a real answer.
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