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Purely because I'm curious, this really has nothing to do with my channel.

For those of you who read comics, i want to see your top 5 or top 10 list of all time greatest limited comic series (rather than neverending ongoing stuff like Superman)

Here's mine:

1) The Unwritten (a truly spectacular masterpiece)

2) Locke and Key (not bad for Stephen King's son)

2) Sandman

3) The Sword

4) Revival

5) Watchmen

6) East of West

7) Lucifer (only spinoff written by a different author than the original that even comes close to the excellence that spawned it)

8) Girls (The Luna Brothers are the only writers with two entries, and Jonathan came close to getting another with his excellent Alex + Ada series but he didn't really stick the landing 100%)

9) American Vampire

10) Morning Glories (the fact that it makes this list when it's only half finished and will probably never be completed shows just how good it is)

Honorable mention: Bunker (the first half is better than the second half)

Comments

Alice Flagg

This was harder than I thought but I’ve Nailed my top five to these: Watchmen Creator(s): w/Alan Moore, a/David Gibbons, c/John Higgins Date: September 1986 – October 1987 Issues: 12 Starman Creator(s): w/James Robinson, a/Tony Harris, Peter Snejbjerg, and others Date: 1994-2001 Issues: 81 (plus issues #0 and 1,000,000; 2 Annuals; and various specials and miniseries) The Sandman Creator(s): Neil Gaiman Date: (1989-1996) Issues: 75 All-Star Superman Creator(s): w/Grant Morrison, a/Frank Quietly Issues: 12 (November 2005 – October 2008) Transmetropolitan Creator(s): w/Warren Ellis, a/Darick Robertson Date: 1997–2002 Issues: 60 Kingdom Come Creator(s): w/Mark Waid, a/Alex Ross Date: (May–August 1996) Issues: 4

Alice Flagg

Never heard of Bunker but I like the idea characters warning themselves their past selves in order to prevent an apocalypse, so I'll add it to my watchlist. I wonder how time travel is handled in that comic, I'm of the preference of branching timelines as opposed to the bootstrap paradox or the grandfather paradox.