Marvel Comics Group · The Incredible Hulk #145 · November 1971 · 25¢ · Double-length issue
Grade: FN+ 6.5
Issue #145 is a double-length entry in the Bronze Age Hulk run — more pages, more room to breathe, and a villain the series doesn't revisit often enough: Godspawn, named Colossus on the cover, a Marvel antagonist who predates the X-Men's Piotr Rasputin by several years and shares nothing with him but a name. The Hulk is the same Hulk he always is — enormous, wronged, furious — but the expanded format gives the story space to build genuine menace around the threat rather than rush to a resolution.
Specific story title, precise page count, and full creator credits for this issue are not confirmed in our records. We're not going to invent them. If you know the breakdown cold, reach out — we'd rather be corrected than wrong.
The 25-cent price variant is the detail that earns a second look here. Standard copies of this issue ran at 15 cents — this is the higher-priced variant, distributed through channels that charged more. Marvel price variant tracking is a legitimate corner of the hobby, and #145 in double-length format at the 25-cent price point is a specific configuration worth noting in any Bronze Age Hulk collection.
Condition FN+ 6.5 — .
We use what the scientists are calling artificial intelligence to research and write our descriptions — it gives us more time to add books to our website and provide you with a wider array of inventory. We think Klaatu would approve. Details are verified but the robot does slip up. We're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If anything ever looks off, reach on out at robopictocomics@gmail.com.
Marvel Comics Group · The Incredible Hulk #145 · November 1971 · 25¢ · Double-length issue
Grade: FN+ 6.5
Issue #145 is a double-length entry in the Bronze Age Hulk run — more pages, more room to breathe, and a villain the series doesn't revisit often enough: Godspawn, named Colossus on the cover, a Marvel antagonist who predates the X-Men's Piotr Rasputin by several years and shares nothing with him but a name. The Hulk is the same Hulk he always is — enormous, wronged, furious — but the expanded format gives the story space to build genuine menace around the threat rather than rush to a resolution.
Specific story title, precise page count, and full creator credits for this issue are not confirmed in our records. We're not going to invent them. If you know the breakdown cold, reach out — we'd rather be corrected than wrong.
The 25-cent price variant is the detail that earns a second look here. Standard copies of this issue ran at 15 cents — this is the higher-priced variant, distributed through channels that charged more. Marvel price variant tracking is a legitimate corner of the hobby, and #145 in double-length format at the 25-cent price point is a specific configuration worth noting in any Bronze Age Hulk collection.
Condition FN+ 6.5 — .
We use what the scientists are calling artificial intelligence to research and write our descriptions — it gives us more time to add books to our website and provide you with a wider array of inventory. We think Klaatu would approve. Details are verified but the robot does slip up. We're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If anything ever looks off, reach on out at robopictocomics@gmail.com.