ComicsPRO 2026: Binc Awards Seven Scholarships to the Industry Meeting

Book Industry Charitable (Binc) Foundation

The Book Industry Charitable (Binc) Foundation has awarded seven comic retailers $1,500 scholarships to the ComicsPRO industry meeting in Glendale, CA, February 18-21, 2026, three of them to first-time attendees thanks to the co-owners of Comics Place in Bellingham, WA.

Scholarships were awarded to Sam Bolenbaugh and Miranda Nordell, Dreamers & Make-Believers, Baltimore, Maryland; Joey Martinez, Secret Identity Comics, Fresno, Calif.; and Robert Howard, Comicazi, Somerville, Mass. The three additional recipients, all first-time attendees, are Tim Hershey, Comic Zen, Lansdale, Penn.; Todd Rubin, Gorilla Todd Comics, Las Vegas, Nevada; and Michael Nelson, Resistance Comics and Games, Roanoke, Texas.

The funds, up to $1,500 per scholarship, may be used for travel, lodging, and meals; ComicsPRO covers the registration fee for the meeting.

ComicsPRO is the only trade organization for direct-market comic book retailers. The organization’s industry conference is a chance for all store-front comic retailers (members and non-members) to meet with comic publishers and distributors and other pop culture wholesalers.

The Walking Dead Deluxe #130 balances a lot of different stories while introducing the Whisperers!

The Walking Dead Deluxe #130 does a great job of balancing a lot of different plots lines while taking us to Hilltop!

The Walking Dead returns in full color with extras! The Walking Dead Deluxe takes us back to the beginning with each issue now featuring full color. There are also extras of what might have been with notes as part of “The Cutting Room Floor.”

What’s it like to revisit this modern classic? How does it change all these years later… and in color? Find out!

Story: Robert Kirkman
Art: Charlie Adlard
Ink: Stefano Gaudiano
Color: Dave McCaig
Letterer: Rus Wooton

Get your copy now! To find a comic shop near you, visit http://www.comicshoplocator.com or call 1-888-comicbook or digitally and online with the links below.

Zeus Comics
Kindle


This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site

Love finds its way through time, even when history tries to pull it apart in Aperture

A sweeping YA time-slip romance where love bridges a century, but history threatens to tear it apart. Nakama Press has announced Aperture, a standalone young adult OGN from Pacific Northwest-based writer Kirsten Thompson and acclaimed Brazilian illustrator Huenito. Blending romance, history, and quiet wonder, Aperture explores the fragile space where connection forms, and the forces that threaten to break it…

When Sage, a first-year university student, discovers a forgotten camera in the library archives, she’s thrust into a world beyond her own time. The camera links her to August, a student who walked the same halls more than a century earlier. What begins as a miraculous connection soon deepens into something neither of them expected. But history has a way of pulling people apart—and as WWI looms for August, the closer they grow, the more impossible it seems to hold on.

Rooted in emotional intimacy and longing, Aperture is a story about finding connection in unexpected places and choosing it even when time itself stands in the way. 

The 224-page OGN arrives August 25, 2026, and is now available for preorder at your favorite retailer and directly from Nakama Press.

Aperture

Final Boss: Masked Vigilante Ratchets Up the Body Count this April

From Tyler Kirkham’s explosive Final Boss series comes its most dangerous mystery yet. Final Boss: Masked Vigilante spotlights the shadowed assassin in a standalone one-shot that reveals her lethal origins and expands the Final Boss mythos. The issue hits shelves in April from Image Comics.

Long hidden in the shadows, the Masked Vigilante finally takes center stage. Her origin story unfolds as she unleashes a deadly, custom-built arsenal to dismantle a ruthless crime syndicate.

Final Boss: Masked Vigilante (one-shot) will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, April 29:

  • Cover A by Kirkham – Lunar Code 0226IM0330
  • Cover B by Leon Govender – Lunar Code 0226IM0331
  • Cover C by Mario Gully – Lunar Code 0226IM0332
  • Cover D 1:25 copy incentive by Kirkham – Lunar Code 0226IM0333
  • Cover E INC 1:50 copy incentive by David Finch – Lunar Code 0226IM0334
  • Cover F INC 1:100 copy incentive by Kirkham (Virgin) – Lunar Code 0226IM0335
  • Cover G INC 1:250 copy incentive by Finch Foil (Virgin) – Lunar Code 0226IM0336

Ordained #1 gets a Fourth Printing out in March

Ordained is back with a vengeance! After an electrifying debut, Ordained has routed its First, Second, and NOW Third Printings all before Ordained #2 hits the shelves in February.

Which is why Bad Idea is rolling the presses on a record Fourth Printing to try and match the intensifying demand.

Ordained #1 Fourth Printing arrives in comic shops on Wednesday, March 25th alongside the bone-breaking zero issue, Ordained #0: The Machine!

Ordained #1 is from writer Robert Venditti, art by Trevor Hairsine, color by Dave Stewart, and lettering by DC Hopkins.

With lightning-fast sell-outs, we expect allocations. So make sure to get your order in by Final Order Cutoff on Monday, February 23!

Ordained #1 Fourth Printing

Roots of Madness #4 reveals what’s going on and more about the mysterious Meridian Fellowship

The experiments are working! Etta is starting see the effects that the mysterious flowers that dot the landscape around the Meridian Fellowship can have on rabbits, and her benefactors are urging her to start testing her theories on human beings. She isn’t sure which terrifies her more: the potential consequences of such dangerous actions, or the agony of not knowing what amazing things her formulas could do for her fellow man.

Yet, the more she thinks she understands how the science works, the less she comprehends the influence the otherworldly forces that fuel her experiments is having over her own life.

Story: Stephanie Williams
Art: Letizia Cadonici
Color: Alessandro Santoro
Letterer: Andworld Design

Get your copy now! To find a comic shop near you, visit http://www.comicshoplocator.com or call 1-888-comicbook or digitally and online with the links below.

Zeus Comics


This post contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links and make a purchase, we’ll receive a percentage of the sale. Graphic Policy does purchase items from this site. Making purchases through these links helps support the site

Mini Reviews: Marian Heretic #4, Archie x Army of Darkness #1, Godzilla Infinity Roar #1, D’Orc #1, Batman #6

Batman #6

Sometimes, the staff at Graphic Policy read more comics than we’re able to get reviewed. When that happens you’ll see a weekly feature compiling reviews of the comics, or graphic novels, we just didn’t get a chance to write a full one for.

These are Graphic Policy’s Mini Reviews and Recommendations.

Logan

Marian Heretic #4 (BOOM! Studios) – Shit hits the highest heavens in Marian Heretic #4 as the titular character drops the charade of fighting for the patriarchy and kicks ass for the mother goddess instead. Tini Howard and Joe Jaro skillfully juxtapose Marian’s past and present and unpack that her power doesn’t come from a blessed Communion wafer, but from her background as mixed martial artist. Caught up in a whirling dervish of blends of Christianity and old school paganism, Marian ends up being at the eye of the storm. All the gloves are off, the torture devices and firearms are out, and Howard and Jaro have set the stage for a spiritual battle royale. Overall: 8.4 Verdict: Buy

Archie x Army of Darkness #1 (Dynamite) – I love Archie Comics (Especially the old house style!) and the Evil Dead so I’m kind of a biased mark for this kind of thing. Bill and Ben Galvan bring the carnage, splatter, and gore of Sam Raimi movies into wholesome, innocent Americana with a Deadite channeling Alien-meets-Temple of Doom by pulling Moose’s still-beating heart out of his jock body. But, unfortunately, Erik Burnham structures this story in a kind of jumbled together way. I appreciate the Archie working at S-Mart with Ash subplot, but it should have gone at the beginning or middle of the comic not the end. Maybe, this whole series would have worked bigger as a lengthy one-shot a la the excellentArchie/Jay and Silent Bob, but I’m still tuning in for the Archie/Ash banter and hopefully some lessons in chainsaw use. Overall: 6.6 Verdict: Read (If you’re a big Archie/Army of Darkness)/Pass (If not)

Godzilla Infinity Roar #1 (Marvel)Godzilla Infinity Roar #1 is big, dumb, and full of fun. Gerry Duggan, Ig Guara, and Javier Garron set the King of Monsters and symbiote god Knull loose on the Marvel Universe causing a cosmic scale of destruction and freaking out the various intergalactic players. They just want to let them find their way to Earth and be done with it, but not if elements from the Avengers, FF, and Guardians of the Galaxy have their way. Cue an utterly pointless battle scene between the Guardians, Knull, and a being of an unfathomable. However, this scene of total filler is counterbalanced by ending setting up a battle that I’ve been waiting almost my whole life to see. Overall: 7.4 Verdict: Read

D’Orc #1 (Image) – Both political sides sucking is a relatable refrain, and Brett Bean explores it in fantasy comedy kind of way in D’Orc #1, which features plenty of violence, gore, puns, and supernatural elements. But the best scene is a simple six panel grid of both the light and dark sides finishing each others’ sentences and having the same conversation about our half dwarf/half orc protagonist as some kind of violent harbinger of doom. Even in this first issue, the d’orc has his own little arc going from creeping in the trees with his talking shield to using the talking shield for active violence. What is likely to follow is a silly, yet timely take on the fantasy genre from Bean and the dark Saturday morning cartoon palette of colorist Jean-Francois Beaulieu. Overall: 8.0 Verdict: Buy

Batman #6 (DC Comics) – After last month’s single action sequence centric issue, Matt Fraction and Jorge Jimenez are back to the ratatat subplot/gadget heavy storytelling in Batman #6. Fraction seeds in lots of real world themes like AI as a substitute for companionship and police corruption while not neglecting the action. Jimenez and colorist Tomeu Morey really let Batman cut loose in a sequence versus the new and improved Monster Men. However, there is also room for moments with Bruce’s sons Tim Drake and Damian Wayne with this issue being a big milestone in Bruce and Tim’s relationship. I love for the awkward conversation that Bruce and Annika have at the beginning of the comic where he tries to explain why his son is Robin featuring some well-timed beat panels from Jorge Jimenez. Overall: 8.2 Verdict: Buy

David Ellison takes his case to the UK Committing to Theatrical and Home Video and HBO in his Warner Bros. Discovery Takeover Quest

Warner Bros.

The battle over Warner Bros. Discovery continues. David Ellison, the chairman and CEO of Paramount, continues to act like someone who can’t take no as an answer and has published a letter intended for UK audiences to win them over.

Paramount attempted to take over Warner Bros. Discovery putting in a bid of $30 cash per share. Netflix, and others, also put in offers and WBD eventually settled on Netflix’s offer. While Netflix’s offer was eventually shifted to $27.75 all cash (it was a mix of stock and cash before) it was also just for Warner Bros. and not the various television stations that are also part of WBD (but includes HBO and HBO Max).

In his letter, Ellison committed to theatrical and home video, the preservation of HBO, and “increased creative output.” They have previously stated they would release 30 movies a year from the combined Paramount Pictures and Warner Bros. Currently Warner Bros. plans to release 17 films this year and Paramount has stated it wants to double its output to 15 movies. So, 30 would be less than that 32…

Ellison has also stated that European regulators would never allow Netflix to buy Warner Bros. Discovery and that Paramount’s purchase would be a much “shorter and certain path to completion.” Paramount’s purchase would likely also face a lot of scrutiny in Europe, but might have an easier path in the US where the Ellisons are friends of Donald Trump. The European Commission has yet to block this kind of merger before, so unlikely to start now, but the process would likely be long and involve remedies to ensure continued competition. Paramount’s bid also involves foreign money from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, and more and Europe has “strong hesitation” about foreign investment in broadcast media. It’s an issue Paramount has raised in filings in the United States where Chinese media giant Tencent was an initial backer.

You can read the full letter below:

To the British creative community, fellow film lovers and television fans, the industry at large, and all who care deeply about the future of cinema and the arts.

As a producer and lifelong fan of movies and television, I am writing this open letter to speak clearly and unequivocally about the vital role visual storytelling plays in our society. Films and television transcend age, ethnicity, politics, and socio-economic status, connecting us through shared experience. They entertain and inspire us, transport us to new worlds, preserve our history, and expand our sense of what is possible. This art form is essential—and it must be protected and preserved for generations to come.

At Paramount, these beliefs are what drive us and our pursuit of Warner Bros. Discovery. We see an extraordinary opportunity to bring together our two celebrated companies, enabling us to tell more stories, reach broader audiences, and amplify impact. Just as important, we believe the creative community and audiences are best served by greater choice—not less—and by a marketplace that encourages the full spectrum of filmmaking, content creation, and theatrical exhibition, not one that eliminates meaningful competition by creating a monopolistic or dominant entity.

I want to be absolutely clear—if we succeed in acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery, here are the commitments I make to the creative community and to audiences:

  • Increased Creative Output: Paramount Studios and Warner Bros. Studios will each produce a minimum of 15 high-quality feature films per year, for a total of at least 30 films annually across the group—delivering great entertainment to audiences while supporting sustained job creation across the film and creative industries. We have already increased Paramount’s output from 8 to 15 films since closing the Paramount-Skydance transaction this past August.
  • Third-Party Content and Licensing: Both studios will continue to support a vibrant third-party ecosystem by licensing their films and shows across their own and third-party platforms, while remaining active buyers of content from third-party studios and independent producers.
  • Preserving HBO: HBO will continue to operate independently under our ownership, enabling it to create more of the world-class content it is renowned for.
  • Theatrical Commitment: Every film will receive a full theatrical release, with a minimum 45-day window globally before becoming available on paid video-on-demand (VOD), with the intention of 60–90 days or more to maximize the audience for our most successful releases. We will continue to adhere to the specific windowing commitments we have across the geographies we operate in.
  • Preserving the Home Video Window: Following its theatrical run, each film will transition to the current industry-standard home video window, preserving paid video-on-demand prior to availability on subscription streaming services.

Again, I make these commitments because I have a deep love and appreciation for storytelling—especially on screen—and because I firmly believe that uniting Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery presents a unique opportunity to build a true champion for the creative community, one that can and will bring more stories to life, support filmmakers and talent with real scale, and compete effectively on the global stage as an independent media leader. At the same time—and in stark contrast to Netflix’s path—this proposed combination is intended to strengthen competition by creating a more capable and effective rival to the dominant platforms.

At Paramount, we will do everything in our power to ensure the next generation of extraordinary films can be told and seen by the broadest possible audience on the biggest screens. And we will do so under conditions of fair access and vibrant marketplace choice—because we are pro-competition, pro-creative community, and pro-consumer. This commitment drives our pursuit of Warner Bros. Discovery, and we hope we can count on your strong support as we work tirelessly to safeguard the future of visual storytelling.

Sincerely,
David Ellison
Chairman and CEO
Paramount, a Skydance Corporation

Preview: G.I. JOE: A Real American Hero #325

G.I. JOE: A Real American Hero #325

(W) Larry Hama (A) Chris Mooneyham, (C) Francesco Segala (L) Pat Brosseau

Two new Joes, Downrange and R.C., make their FIRST APPEARANCE as Duke and Roadblock lead a dangerous cover op into Borovia. 

‘R.C.,’ file name Hector M. Salazar is the new Drone Operator. He hails from Boyle Heights in East LA, and he is to unmanned remote-control aircraft and land robotics what Roadblock is to the Ma-Deuce.

‘Down Range’ file name Hillevi S. Väisänen, is the Scout Sniper. Daughter of a legendary hunting guide from Redwing, MN, it has been said that she can split a Popsicle™ stick at 200 yards with iron sights on a National Match M-21 in 7.62 NATO.

G.I. JOE: A Real American Hero #325
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