this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2023
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British Comics

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Comic fans might be interested to know what I'm finding kids to be enthusing about these days. I've just been doing a few weeks of summer classes, which have a higher proportion of comics enthusiasts, in comparison to my usual classes in schools. So, here's what seems to be hot and not:

Bunny Vs Monkey – Hot. A kid today was wearing the t shirt, lots of kids know them from the books. Way more than ever talked about The Phoenix (though one kid today, in Larne, was telling about this comic he gets as well as The Beano. "It's called The Poe-nicks" he said).

Dog Man – Hot. Followed by Cat Kid. Captain Underpants is a distant third.

Manga various – Hot. All the kids recognise Naruto. And 11+ kids will regularly ask me to draw someone I'm only vaguely familiar with. Today is was Deku from (checks notes) My Hero Academia.

Beano – Luke Warm. If they know it, they're fans. In inner-city schools, 75% of kids have never heard of it. In these summer schools, most recognise Minnie The Minx, and a couple have brought issues and annuals – with my work in, would you believe – to be signed.

Marvel – Luke Warm. Two years ago they were all over it. Now, the primary school kids seem almost unfamiliar with Marvel (Endgame was 5 years ago, which is pre-history to them, so Iron Man and Captain America have been dead as long as they can remember), and the teenagers have moved on since the movies stopped being any good. Everyone had, however, seen Guardians Of The Galaxy 3.

DC – Luke Warm. They are as likely to name a DC character as a Marvel one, when asked, but with no great fan enthusiasm.

Star Wars – Luke Warm. There are some leftover Baby Yoda t shirts around, and occasional kids want to know how to draw Darth Vader.

Stranger Things & Wednesday Addams – Cold. They have very quickly become last year's thing. They'll revive as fast, I'm sure.

Doctor Who – Cold. It's a rare child, always a geek, who has any interest in this particular franchise.

2000AD – Heat death of the universe. No child has ever mentioned 2000AD.

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[–] Emperor 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Also consider The Phoenix, it's a British anthology comic aimed at 7-14 year olds, bridging the gap between kids comics and more grown-up ones - they have a 6 issues for £1 Introductory offer.

[–] tenebrisnox 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I was desperate to get my sons into The Phoenix and we subscribed for 2 years until they just piled up. One of them did like Mega Robo Bros and bought a couple of the collections.

All my attempts to indoctrinate my kids into comics have always crashed to earth in a flaming failure. YouTube seems to have them in its thrall.

[–] Emperor 2 points 1 year ago

I was desperate to get my sons into The Phoenix and we subscribed for 2 years until they just piled up. One of them did like Mega Robo Bros and bought a couple of the collections.

I salute your dedication but feel anthologies are probably not the way for modern kids.

All my attempts to indoctrinate my kids into comics have always crashed to earth in a flaming failure. YouTube seems to have them in its thrall.

Yeah, once screens enter the equation reading can be a fight unless they love it. My nephew has a PS5 and got a VR headset for Christmas - good luck dragging him away from all that! He spent Christmas Day largely hunched over behind his bedroom door so he could keep the headset charged he was playing on it so much (I had a go too mind you).