Showing posts with label Nerdin’ Out with Chip Hazard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nerdin’ Out with Chip Hazard. Show all posts

Friday, January 23, 2026


10 Daredevil Comics That Changed Street-Level Storytelling

Daredevil isn’t just one of Marvel Comics’ most enduring characters he’s the foundation upon which street-level superhero storytelling was built.

While cosmic heroes battle gods and universes, Daredevil stays grounded in alleyways, courtrooms, and crime-ridden streets. Over decades, his comics have transformed superhero storytelling into something darker, more psychological, and deeply human. In fact, many of the tropes we now associate with street-level comics moral ambiguity, noir crime drama, long-term consequences, and emotional trauma can be traced directly back to Daredevil.

In this guide, we’re breaking down 10 Daredevil comics that changed street-level storytelling forever, showing how each one reshaped not only the Man Without Fear, but the entire genre.


1. Daredevil #168–191 -Frank Miller’s Original Run (1981–1983)

Frank Miller’s original run on Daredevil is where street-level storytelling truly begins.

Before Miller, Daredevil was a fairly standard Marvel hero. After Miller, he became a noir crime figure operating in a morally compromised city where violence had consequences. Miller introduced Elektra a tragic embodiment of Matt Murdock’s personal failures and redefined Kingpin as a calculating crime lord whose power came from influence, not brute force.

This run transformed Hell’s Kitchen into a living, breathing character and set the template for grounded superhero narratives. Every gritty Daredevil story that followed and many Batman stories too owe their DNA to this era.


2. Daredevil: Born Again - Frank Miller & David Mazzucchelli (1986)

Often cited as one of the greatest superhero stories ever written, Born Again is a masterclass in psychological destruction.

Rather than attack Daredevil physically, Kingpin destroys Matt Murdock’s life piece by piece using legal systems, financial pressure, and institutional corruption. Matt loses his job, his home, and his sanity long before he ever throws a punch.

This story redefined what street-level threats could be. The villain wasn’t a monster or a god it was power, money, and influence. Born Again proved superheroes could face the same crushing systems as real people and still find a way to rise.


3. Daredevil: Love and War -Frank Miller & Bill Sienkiewicz (1986)

Love and War pushes street-level storytelling into psychological horror.

Told largely from Kingpin’s perspective, the story explores obsession, control, and emotional abuse — particularly in his relationship with Vanessa. Bill Sienkiewicz’s abstract, chaotic art reinforces the instability of the characters, abandoning traditional superhero visuals in favor of raw emotion.

This graphic novel showed that street-level comics didn’t need clean lines or conventional layouts. Mood, discomfort, and inner turmoil became just as important as plot.


4. Daredevil #226–233 -The Fall of the Kingpin (Frank Miller)

In this arc, Daredevil doesn’t just defeat Kingpin he dismantles him.

Matt systematically destroys Kingpin’s empire using manipulation and psychological warfare, crossing ethical lines he can’t uncross. When the dust settles, Daredevil wins but feels hollow and ashamed.

This story forced readers to confront an uncomfortable truth: winning doesn’t always equal justice. It cemented moral ambiguity as a defining feature of street-level superhero storytelling.


5. Daredevil: Guardian Devil -Kevin Smith & Joe Quesada (1998)

Guardian Devil ushered Daredevil into the modern Marvel era.

Kevin Smith leaned heavily into Matt Murdock’s Catholic faith, using religious symbolism to explore guilt, temptation, and belief. While divisive among fans, the story elevated Daredevil as a prestige character capable of anchoring emotionally driven, event-level storytelling.

The book demonstrated that street-level heroes didn’t need cosmic stakes to feel important emotional devastation was enough.


6. Daredevil: Yellow -Jeph Loeb & Tim Sale (2001)

Daredevil: Yellow is a reflective, deeply emotional look at Matt Murdock’s early years.

Told as a letter to Karen Page, the story reexamines Daredevil’s origins through grief, memory, and regret. Tim Sale’s warm, nostalgic art contrasts with the underlying sadness of the narrative.

This book helped legitimize quiet, introspective storytelling in superhero comics, proving that emotional reflection could be just as powerful as action.


7. Daredevil Vol. 2 #26–50 -Brian Michael Bendis & Alex Maleev (2001–2004)

Brian Michael Bendis transformed Daredevil into a crime drama.

Using decompressed storytelling and long-form arcs, this run treated Hell’s Kitchen like a real city with real consequences. Alex Maleev’s gritty, photo-realistic art grounded the story in shadow and tension.

The looming question whether the public knows Matt Murdock is Daredevil created sustained narrative pressure and influenced everything from Marvel’s Netflix shows to modern comic pacing.


8. Daredevil Vol. 2 #82–119 -Ed Brubaker & Michael Lark (2006–2009)

Ed Brubaker asked a question most superhero comics avoid: what happens after the hero is caught?

Matt Murdock goes to prison, surrounded by criminals he helped incarcerate. The story explores incarceration, identity erosion, and the limits of vigilantism within broken systems.

This run solidified street-level comics as a form of social critique rather than simple crime-fighting fiction.


9. Daredevil Vol. 3 -Mark Waid & Paolo Rivera (2011–2014)

Mark Waid’s run appears bright and upbeat but it’s built on emotional trauma.

Matt’s humor and swashbuckling tone mask depression and PTSD. By contrasting colorful visuals with serious mental health themes, this run proved street-level storytelling didn’t have to be relentlessly dark to be mature.

It expanded the genre’s emotional vocabulary, showing resilience as well as suffering.


10. Daredevil Vol. 6 -Chip Zdarsky & Marco Checchetto (2019–2023)

Chip Zdarsky’s run represents the modern evolution of street-level philosophy.

After accidentally killing someone, Matt questions whether vigilantism itself is ethical. The story interrogates legal responsibility, moral absolutism, and the legitimacy of heroes operating outside the law.

Marco Checchetto’s grounded, cinematic art makes every action feel heavy and irreversible. This run doesn’t just tell a Daredevil story it asks whether Daredevil should exist at all.


Why Daredevil Defines Street-Level Storytelling

Daredevil comics taught readers and creators that superhero stories could be:

  • Grounded and realistic

  • Psychologically complex

  • Morally ambiguous

  • Emotionally devastating

Street-level storytelling exists as we know it because Daredevil proved superheroes don’t need cosmic stakes they need human ones.

If you’re looking to understand why street-level comics resonate so deeply, there’s no better place to start than Daredevil.


Originally discussed on the YouTube channel Nerdin’ Out with Chip Hazard, where we break down the stories that shaped comic book history.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

10 Hulk Stories That Prove He’s More Than “Hulk Smash”



When most people think of the Hulk, they think of rage.

They think of destruction.

They think of one phrase: “Hulk Smash.”


And sure smashing is part of the package. But reducing the Hulk to nothing more than brute force misses what makes him one of Marvel Comics’ most complex, tragic, and enduring characters.


At his core, the Hulk isn’t about strength.

He’s about trauma, identity, fear, and survival.


Over the decades, writers have used Bruce Banner and the Hulk to explore everything from childhood abuse and mental illness to grief, alienation, and morality. These stories prove that Hulk isn’t just a monster he’s a mirror, reflecting humanity’s fear of what it doesn’t understand.


Here are 10 Hulk stories that show he’s more than just “Hulk Smash.”


1. The Incredible Hulk #377–378 — The Birth of Professor Hulk

Peter David’s legendary Hulk run fundamentally changed how fans understood the character. In these pivotal issues, David confirms what had long been implied: Hulk isn’t one personality he’s several.


Bruce Banner’s abusive childhood fractured his mind, creating distinct Hulk personas as coping mechanisms. The savage, childlike Hulk represents suppressed rage. Joe Fixit reflects cynicism and survival. Banner himself embodies repression and guilt.


When these personalities merge into Professor Hulk, it’s not a gimmick it’s psychological healing. This story reframes Hulk not as a curse, but as a defense mechanism born from trauma, making it one of the most important character developments in Marvel history.


2. The Incredible Hulk #312 — The Death of Jim Wilson

This issue proves Hulk doesn’t need a villain to break your heart.


Jim Wilson, one of Hulk’s closest friends, dies from AIDS a bold and painful topic for comics at the time. Hulk can fight gods and monsters, but here he faces something he can’t punch: mortality.


What makes this story powerful is its restraint. Hulk doesn’t rage against the world. He mourns quietly. He feels helpless. And for a character defined by strength, helplessness is the deepest tragedy of all.


3. Hulk: Gray — Fear Creates the Monster

Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale’s Hulk: Gray revisits Hulk’s earliest days through memory and regret. This isn’t a story about destruction it’s a story about fear.


The world reacts to Hulk with panic before he even understands what he is. Tim Sale’s artwork exaggerates Hulk’s size and shadows, making him feel monstrous even in moments of innocence.


The story argues that Hulk didn’t become a monster because of rage he became one because people treated him like one. It’s a powerful commentary on how fear shapes identity.


4. The Incredible Hulk #181–182 — Hulk vs. Wolverine

This story is famous for Wolverine’s first full appearance, but Hulk is the emotional center.


Here, Hulk isn’t the villain he’s the target. Governments and shadow organizations decide Hulk is a problem to be eliminated, and Wolverine is the weapon they unleash.


Hulk doesn’t instigate the violence he reacts to persecution. The story frames Hulk as a force of nature, something humanity refuses to understand and therefore tries to destroy. It’s an early example of Hulk as a metaphor for society’s fear of the uncontrollable.


5. Future Imperfect — When Survival Becomes Tyranny

Future Imperfect shows a chilling possible future where Hulk becomes The Maestro, ruler of a ruined world after all other heroes are gone.


The most unsettling part? The Maestro believes he’s right.


He survived when others didn’t, and he believes that survival justifies domination. This Hulk isn’t insane he’s logical, calculated, and terrifying because his worldview feels like a plausible evolution of endless trauma and survival.


The story forces readers to ask a haunting question:

If Hulk survives long enough, does he stop being a hero at all?


6. Planet Hulk — A Story About Belonging

At its heart, Planet Hulk isn’t about gladiator combat it’s about exile.


The Illuminati send Hulk away not because he’s evil, but because they’re afraid. That betrayal defines everything that follows. On Sakaar, Hulk is enslaved, forced to fight… but also allowed to earn respect.


For the first time, Hulk isn’t feared he’s valued. He becomes a leader, a king, and even finds love. The tragedy of Planet Hulk is that it proves Hulk could live peacefully if Earth would only let him.


7. World War Hulk — Rage with Purpose

World War Hulk isn’t about Hulk losing control. It’s about Hulk exercising it.


After losing everything on Sakaar, Hulk returns to Earth focused and deliberate. He targets those responsible. He punishes, but does not kill. His anger is righteous, his goals clear.


The tension of this story isn’t whether Hulk can be stopped it’s whether he should be. It challenges the moral authority of Earth’s heroes and forces readers to confront uncomfortable truths about betrayal and accountability.


8. The Immortal Hulk — The Monster as Protector

Al Ewing’s The Immortal Hulk redefines the character through horror body horror, cosmic horror, and psychological horror.


But the true horror isn’t the transformations. It’s trauma.


This series presents Hulk as Banner’s protector the embodiment of pain that refuses to die. Hulk exists not to destroy, but to endure. By tying Hulk to resurrection and cosmic mythology, the series suggests Hulk is eternal because trauma itself is eternal.


It’s one of the most ambitious and important Hulk runs ever published.


9. Hulk: The End — Immortality as Punishment

In Hulk: The End, Hulk survives the end of the world.


Banner dies. Humanity is gone. Hulk remains unable to die, alone for centuries. Banner’s final words echo in Hulk’s mind, haunting him across endless time.


There’s no villain here. No triumph. Just the slow realization that immortality without purpose is suffering. It’s Hulk at his quietest and his most tragic.


10. The Incredible Hulk #1 — The Tragedy Was Always There

From the very beginning, Hulk wasn’t meant to be a traditional superhero.


Inspired by Frankenstein and Dr. Jekyll, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby created a character defined by alienation and fear. Hulk was dangerous, misunderstood, and hunted not celebrated.


Everything that came later, from Peter David to Al Ewing, simply refined what was already there. Hulk has always been more than “Hulk Smash.” We just had to learn how to read him.


Why Hulk Still Matters

Hulk endures because he represents something universal:

The parts of ourselves we’re afraid of.

The anger we suppress.

The pain that doesn’t go away.


Hulk isn’t just about destruction he’s about survival.


And that’s why, decades later, he’s still one of Marvel’s most powerful characters not because of how hard he hits, but because of how much he carries.



Thursday, January 1, 2026

The Best Ongoing Comics You Should Be Reading in 2026

 



If you’re building a pull list heading into 2026, the comic book landscape has never been more exciting or more overwhelming.

With dozens of new series launching every year and long-running titles constantly reinventing themselves, it can be tough to figure out which books are actually worth your time and money. That’s where this guide comes in.

In this edition of Nerdin’ Out with Chip Hazard, we’re breaking down the best ongoing comic book series you should be reading right now spanning Marvel, DC, Image Comics, BOOM! Studios, and beyond. These aren’t classic trades or one-off minis these are monthly books that continue to deliver issue after issue.

Let’s dive in.


10. Green Lantern (DC Comics)

The Green Lantern franchise is fully back in cosmic form.

This ongoing series leans heavily into large-scale science fiction, political tension between sectors, and the emotional weight of being part of the Corps. It balances legacy characters with fresh ideas, making it accessible to new readers while still rewarding longtime fans.

If DC Cosmic storytelling is your thing, Green Lantern deserves a spot on your pull list.


9. Daredevil (Marvel Comics)

Few characters in comics have the level of consistency that Daredevil enjoys and 2026 is no exception.

This ongoing series continues to deliver gritty, street-level storytelling packed with moral dilemmas, religious symbolism, and intense character work. Whether Matt Murdock is acting as a lawyer, vigilante, or something in between, this book remains one of Marvel’s most reliable titles.

Crime noir fans, take note.


8. Transformers (Image Comics / Skybound)

The Energon Universe has been one of the biggest success stories in modern comics, and Transformers remains its crown jewel.

This series combines explosive action, surprisingly emotional character moments, and a deep respect for the franchise’s legacy. It’s bold, fast-paced, and wildly accessible even if you’ve never read a Transformers comic before.

Simply put: this book is still that good.


7. The Immortal Thor (Marvel Comics)

The Immortal Thor doesn’t just tell superhero stories it tells myths.

This ongoing series embraces Thor’s godhood, exploring ancient legends, cosmic threats, and philosophical questions about power and purpose. Every issue feels epic in scale, making Thor feel truly larger than life again.

If you want Marvel comics that feel grand and operatic, this is essential reading.


6. Spawn (Image Comics)

Over three decades in, Spawn continues to prove its staying power.

The main title remains a dark fantasy juggernaut filled with brutal artwork, dense lore, and horror elements that haven’t lost their edge. Alongside the expanded Spawn Universe, this series shows how a creator-owned comic can evolve while staying true to its roots.

Legacy readers and new fans alike will find something to love here.


5. Batman (DC Comics)

Love him or feel the fatigue Batman remains one of the most important ongoing comics on the shelves.

The current run pushes psychological storytelling to the forefront, with Gotham City feeling more dangerous and unpredictable than ever. Big creative swings, bold narrative risks, and deeply flawed characters keep this series at the center of DC’s publishing line.

Batman still matters and this book proves it.


4. Something Is Killing the Children (BOOM! Studios)

Modern horror comics don’t get much better than this.

Something Is Killing the Children continues to deliver chilling storytelling, unforgettable characters, and a growing mythology that deepens with every arc. It blends monster horror with emotional trauma in a way that sticks with you long after you turn the final page.

If you’re not reading this series yet, 2026 is the perfect time to start.


3. X-Men (Marvel Comics)

Post-Krakoa, the X-Men have entered a new era and the flagship X-Men title is once again essential.

This series balances classic team dynamics with modern storytelling, making mutants feel politically relevant, emotionally complex, and genuinely dangerous. It’s a strong entry point for returning readers and a rewarding continuation for longtime fans.

The X-Men are back where they belong.


2. Void Rivals (Image Comics / Skybound)

One of the most underrated ongoing series in comics today.

Void Rivals is a sci-fi epic built on political conflict, ancient rivalries, and massive universe-building. It’s smart, deliberate, and incredibly well-written, rewarding readers who enjoy long-form storytelling without traditional superhero tropes.

If you love cosmic stories without capes, this book is a must-read.


1. Ultimate Spider-Man (Marvel Comics)

There was no contest here.

Ultimate Spider-Man has completely redefined what fans love about Peter Parker focusing on heart, responsibility, family, and grounded storytelling while still feeling fresh and modern. It’s approachable for new readers and deeply satisfying for longtime fans.

Consistently excellent, emotionally resonant, and incredibly readable, this is the best ongoing comic to be reading heading into 2026.


Honorable Mentions

A few more ongoing titles that deserve recognition:

  • Saga (Image Comics)

  • The Flash (DC Comics)

  • Radiant Black (Image Comics)

  • The Walking Dead Deluxe (Image Comics / Skybound)

  • Ice Cream Man (Image Comics)


Final Thoughts

The comic book industry is in a fantastic place heading into 2026, with strong ongoing series across every genre and publisher. Whether you’re into superheroes, horror, sci-fi, or creator-owned storytelling, there’s never been a better time to build a pull list.

Now I want to hear from you
What ongoing comic are you loving right now, and which one should everyone be reading in 2026?

For more comic book breakdowns, countdowns, and deep dives, make sure to follow Nerdin’ Out with Chip Hazard and keep nerdin’ out.

10 Daredevil Comics That Changed Street-Level Storytelling Daredevil isn’t just one of Marvel Comics’ most enduring characters he’s the foun...