Your 2025 Predictions, Part Three: Class Clown.
Just movin’ right along here, looking at how we all did back about a year ago, guessing what was going to happen in 2025. Here are links to parts one and two, and don’t forget to get in your 2026 predictions here while. you still can!
And thus it begins…or, rather, continues:
Jeff R. unleashed the following
“Miracleman: The Dark Age will be announced as a single graphic novel rather than a miniseries. It will be solicited with a 2025 date but will, as is traditional, be late.”
No news on the Miracleman: The Dark Age front yet, aside from “yeah, it’s on hold.” Honestly, it may be another 30 years before this story finally gets wrapped up.
“By years end there will be a least as many Absolute books than Bat-family books”
Huh, okay, time for me to pull off my shoes so I can count past ten. By the end of 2025, we had Absolute titles for Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, Flash, Green Lantern, Martian Manhunter, and let’s throw in that Absolute Evil one-shot, too. That makes 7.
Now, for Batman books by the end of 2025, we have Batman (um, twice, since the previous series and the new series are running concurrently, which, ugh), Detective, Batman/Superman: World’s Finest, Batgirl, Nightwing, Batman/Static Beyond, Immortal Legend Batman, DC K.O. Red Hood Versus the Joker, Gotham Academy: First Year, The Bat-Man: Second Knight, Catwoman, Poison Ivy, and would you still count Harley Quinn? Anyway, Your Standard Issue Batman is still the king of DC’s castle, even if you lose a couple of the specials and barely-related titles. But, you know, give DC time, I’m sure they’ll ride that Absolute cash cow long as they can.
“The Grendel TV project will be back on again, possibly on a different network/service.”
Not that I’ve seen, which really annoys me because I’m a huge Grendel fan and would have liked to have seen what they did with it. Even if it turned out terribly.
• • •
Nat Gertler talks about comics here
“1. Several small publishers will put out Popeye comics to exploit his public domain status… not noticing that Popeye has long been a hard sell. These attempts fade quickly.”
Haven’t seen much aside from the strip collections, but we had at least one:

…and sold reasonably well for me. Sold more copies than I usually do. I’m sure Popeye must have, um, popped up in other comics as well, but I think this was the most prominent example.
“2. A known artist will think they can put out primiarly-AI material without anyone noticing or caring. This will be wrong.”
Well, I can think of one example, at least, though I don’t know if “known artist” really applies here…the Kickstartered Stardust book that I talked about here. People were not happy with having even a minimal amount of A.I.-generated artwork, with folks saying that they wouldn’t have supported the project at all had this been known ahead of time. …Don’t use A.I. in your funnybooks, folks!
“3. Comics will, nonetheless, continue to rock.”
They sure do! Just ask these guys:

Gareth predicteth
“1)In the Marvel Universe, general public opinion will become favourable towards mutants. It’s the one variation of the Mutant Metaphor they’ve never done.”
Okay, gotta be honest…I’ve no idea if this is the case. I’m not an X-Men reader of any sort, so I can’t tell you for sure if this happened or not. Like, “a world that fears and hates them” is so baked into the premise, and its metaphorical weight, it’s hard to imagine, like, Nightcrawler rescuing a cat from a tree or something to the cheers of a surrounding crowd.
So I’m going to ask you, the reader of this very website…did this happen in the X-books this past year? The “popular opinion” thing in general, not specifically Nightcrawler rescuing cats.
“2)A famous conservative media personality will write a comic book. Even putting all political considerations aside, it will be terrible.”
I presume you mean, like, someone on TV or in podcasting, just somebody from outside the regular comics industry. If there was such a thing, I never heard about it, and Googling through some frankly appalling results reveals nothing as well. I suspect the money wasn’t there to attract them.
“3)In the Fantastic Four movie, there will be a scene where the Four discover to their horror that they’ve travelled to the Sony Spider-Villain universe.”
Didn’t happen, but just picture the confused looks on people’s faces as the Thing shouts “it’s Morbin’ time!”
ScienceGiant largely hypothesizes
“Happy New Year, Mr. Sterling! Here’s low-hanging fruit of the funnybook industry’s evergreen tree of predictions. Just pick the ones which interest you.”
So I think this year will be the last time I’ll have these sorts of “generalize” non-specific predictions…which, don’t get me wrong, I appreciate that they’re here for me to have a chance to riff on whatever thing happened in the past year that wasn’t otherwise covered. That’s fine, but in the future I may ask that folks stick to guesses that are more in the spirit of what we’re doing here.
That said, let’s give three of these a go!
“1) Oof! That highly anticipated adaptation of comic book/cartoon IP certainly under-performed at the box office. I’m sure the responsible party be held accountable, and soon be waiting tables at Dennys!”
The one in particular I’m thinking of was Marvel’s Fantastic Four: First Steps movie, which didn’t quite get the traction I think anyone was hoping for. (This probably applies Marvel’s other movies in this past year, too.)
Most people who saw FF thought it was good, and the Rotten Tomatoes scores kinda surprised me at how high they were, as I personally saw some “yeah, it was okay” responses here and there online. But I think the trouble was just getting folks into theaters to begin with, which is not quite the sure thing anymore with superhero movies that don’t feature Deadpool, or Wolverine, or both.
“2) Huh. The selection for Free Comic Book Day looks amazing this year. But it seems the event gotten away from its original goal of creating new readers. Glad we agree FCBD should/shouldn’t continue to exist.”
I’ve opined on this topic before (just check the, oh, last twenty years or so of this very website). “Creating new readers” is a tricky goal, but at the very least FCBD gets folks in the door with “free” and reminds folks not otherwise funnybook-inclined that 1) comic books exist, and 2) comic book stores exist, which is important for the longterm health for the industry overall, and on an individual case, for the stores that take proper advantage of the event.
Speaking of which, for a while there it looked like Free Comic Book Day had a possibility of not happening this year, or being rebranded to “Comics Giveaway Day” (yuck, phooey). I think everyone breathed a sigh of relief when the familiar Free Comic Book Day name came back into play, so yes, put me in the “should continue to exist” category.
“3) What?! There’s no way that the comic book with first appearance of Superhero (C) sold for that much at auction! What is going on?!”
Just a couple of months ago, we had a copy of Superman #1 from 1939 (not Superman’s first appearance, but close enough) sell for just over $9 million, which was a record price for that book. But then about a week ago, a copy of Action Comics #1, Supes’ actual first appearance, sold for $15 million, setting yet another record. Good gravy, that’s a lot of dough.
As to why exactly…this Action was apparently Nicolas Cage’s copy at one point, which had briefly been stolen from him then recovered. That adds a little bit of extra “sauce” to this collectible, I’d imagine. Plus, in troubled economic times like these, putting money into tangible assets provides a buffer against such uncertainty, which, as someone with no money, I presume is a thing that rich people do. On top of that…these comics aren’t exactly common as dirt. Harder to find means more competition for ’em when they’re up for sale. Anyway, I have reprints of both of these around my house somewhere, that’s good enough for me.
Rob Staeger gets us going with
“Time to peer into the future!”
Huh? Oh, wait., my mistake, didn’t see the “r” there.
“1) My annual Legion prediction. I predict Darkseid’s Omega Legion will get its first workout toward the end of the year…and in that appearance, we’ll get an inkling that one member of the Omega Legion is resisting Darkseid’s control.”
Yes, they did start showing up in the DC K.O. tie-ins in the Superman books! I don’t think I caught any of them wavering in their devotion to Darkseid, but a good call on this one.
“2) We’ll see another volume of Russell and Pugh’s Billionaire Island from AHOY!”
Not yet, but I imagine it’s just a matter of time!
“3) DC’s revival of Vertigo will see some classic creators return, such as Mike Carey and Peter Milligan.”
Again, not yet, but again, hopefull we will!
Patrick Gaffney (wait, him again?) adds
“Mike Sterling launches his first Kickstarter for his first comic featuring Popeye, Buck Rogers, Winnie the Pooh, and TinTin (all public domain the past couple of years).
“He cancels it when he realizes he still cannot use Sluggo.”
Honestly, I’m surprised something like thishhasn’t been done. Like a new version of League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. Man, I’d love to see a Popeye/Buck Rogers comic. And Sluggo…bah, Sluggo mocks your oppressive copyright laws!
And last, and probably least, for today’s installlment are…my predictions!
“1. Miracleman: The Dark Age will be announced with Mark Buckingham as the sole credited writer (though there may be an acknowledgement of some kind for Neil Gaiman).
As noted above…no movement on the Miracleman front. Somebody at Marvel is probably mad they spent so much money untangling the rights only to have, y’know, everything that happened happen.
“2. In other Neil Gaiman news, a new Sandman series (mini or ongoing) will be announced that will minimize Gaiman’s involvement in the franchise to just a ‘created by’ credit. (Like, no ‘FROM THE WORLD OF NEIL. GAIMAN’S SAMDMAN’ emblazoned on the cover.)”
Given that everyone’s reaction to seeing the Sandman Pals in the New History of the DC Universe was “…ew,” I think we’re still a way off from this.
“3. Either Marvel or DC (I’m guessing Marvel first) will see the last of their $3.99 comics as everything at that price point goes up to $4.99 (or more). If it’s DC, their kids books will go from $2.99 to $3.99.”
Wrong again! I actually still double-check as I’m ringing up customers that some of these Marvel comics are actually still only $3.99. Anyway, this day is coming, and I think we all know it.
And that’s enough of that nonsense for now. I’ll see you all back on Monday!











Andi Watson’s fantasy adventure series about a high schooler named Tamsin, who gains possession of the titular skeleton key, a magical item that can open any door and turn it into a path to other realities. Along the way she encounters Kitsune, a fox spirit, who becomes her partner in Skeleton Key-ness and adventures through all these other worlds with her. 







