The 10 Most Controversial Comic Book Stories Of All Time

Deaths, resurrections, and the sexual debauchery that made comic fans fume.

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Due to the serialized nature of comic books, publishing companies sometimes feel the need to take  risks and feature story lines designed to shock longtime readers. These stories often wind up being simple smoke and mirrors because, at the end of the day, not much usually changes in the world of the superhero genre. But every once in a while, a company will generate enormous controversy with a world-changing new story that fans loathe.

Oftentimes, these stories reveal a shocking twist from a hero’s past, deal with the death of a classic character, or the resurrection of a long-dead one. Sometimes these tales succeed despite the controversy, but they usually just come across as cheap publicity stunts that exist solely to boost sales.

This Wednesday, DC Entertainment is releasing another installment in its controversial, and highly enjoyable, Before Watchmen project, titled Before Watchmen: Silk Spectre #1. This project, which tells prequel stories to the comic classic Watchmen, but without writer Alan Moore or artist Dave Gibbons, has been debated up and down the industry, and everyone with knowledge of the situation seems to have an opinion on whether or not it should even exist. So we decided to reflect upon the stories that have gained the ire of fans everywhere in our list of The 10 Most Controversial Comic Book Stories of All Time.

Written by Jason Serafino (@serafinoj1

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10. Jeph Loeb destroys the Ultimate Universe in Ultimatum (Ultimatum #1-5, 2008-2009)

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9. Superman and Big Barda make a porno (Action Comics #592-593, 1987)

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8. Tarantula rapes Nightwing (Nightwing #93, 2004)

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7. Marvel reveals that the Green Goblin knocked up Gwen Stacy in “Sins Past” (The Amazing Spider-Man #509-514, 2004-2005)

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6. Elongated Man's wife, Sue Dibny, is raped and murdered in Identity Crisis (Identity Crisis #1-7, 2004)

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5. Mephisto dissolves Spider-Man’s marriage in “One More Day” (The Amazing Spider-Man #544, Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #24, The Sensational Spider-Man #41, and The Amazing Spider-Man #545, 2007-2008)

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4. DC reboots its entire universe in Crisis on Infinite Earths (Crisis on Infinite Earths #1-12, 1985-1986)

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3. Jason Todd is resurrected in "Under the Hood" (Batman #635, 2004)

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2. Bucky Barnes rises from the dead (Captain America #1, 2005)

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1. DC expands upon the hallowed Watchmen universe in Before Watchmen (2012)

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