Warlock #10 - FN/VF 7.0

$30.00

Marvel Comics Group · Warlock #10 · December 1975 · $0.25 · 32 pages · Bi-Monthly

Grade: FN/VF 7.0

Edited by Len Wein.
Cover by Jim Starlin.

“Death Ship” (17 pages), written and illustrated by Jim Starlin — Adam Warlock finds himself caught in the escalating conflict between two cosmic powerhouses: the death-obsessed Thanos and Warlock's own future evil self, the Magus. Starlin's cosmic vision is at full strength here, balancing philosophical weight with the kind of space opera that made his reputation.

Part of Starlin's defining run that established the modern Marvel cosmic hierarchy and made Thanos a cornerstone villain.

Condition [GRADE PLACEHOLDER] with light corner wear visible on all corners, minor spine stress lines, and slight color fading on red background areas, complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.

We use AI to research and write our descriptions — we think Klaatu would approve of this miniscule relinquishment of power to the robots. Details are verified where possible but comics are complicated and we're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If something looks off, just ask.

Marvel Comics Group · Warlock #10 · December 1975 · $0.25 · 32 pages · Bi-Monthly

Grade: FN/VF 7.0

Edited by Len Wein.
Cover by Jim Starlin.

“Death Ship” (17 pages), written and illustrated by Jim Starlin — Adam Warlock finds himself caught in the escalating conflict between two cosmic powerhouses: the death-obsessed Thanos and Warlock's own future evil self, the Magus. Starlin's cosmic vision is at full strength here, balancing philosophical weight with the kind of space opera that made his reputation.

Part of Starlin's defining run that established the modern Marvel cosmic hierarchy and made Thanos a cornerstone villain.

Condition [GRADE PLACEHOLDER] with light corner wear visible on all corners, minor spine stress lines, and slight color fading on red background areas, complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.

We use AI to research and write our descriptions — we think Klaatu would approve of this miniscule relinquishment of power to the robots. Details are verified where possible but comics are complicated and we're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If something looks off, just ask.