Dark Reign limited series look at the impact of the story-line on specific characters and groups.
All-New Savage She-Hulk Following the failed assassination attempt during which a key component of the male genetic birthing matrix—stolen to replace an identical component of the Femizon's matrix—is destroyed, Lyra is dispatched back in time to the era of Dark Reign on Earth-616 in a last-ditch attempt to prevent the extinction of her people.
Captain America: Reborn A six-issue limited series.
Dark Avengers: Ares This saw Ares training H.A.M.M.E.R agents and then tackling some enemies from the past, including his son.
Dark Reign: Elektra A five-issue limited series written by
Zeb Wells with artwork by Clay Mann, the series explores the reaction of the world to the return of Elektra in the aftermath of the Secret Invasion.
Dark Reign: Fantastic Four A five-issue limited series, written by
Jonathan Hickman, explores the impact of an assault by H.A.M.M.E.R. on the
Baxter Building and the team.
Dark Reign: Hawkeye Written by
Andy Diggle and drawn by
Tom Raney, this five-issue limited series follows the adventures of Bullseye in his identity as Dark Avengers member Hawkeye. The writer notes that the premise of the series is, "What happens when you hide that behind a hero mask? And what happens when the public is only allowed to see the hero mask, and not the monster behind it?"
Dark Reign: Lethal Legion Written by
Frank Tieri with art by Mateus Santolouco, the story shows
Grim Reaper assembling a new Lethal Legion to combat Osborn. Writer Tieri notes that "they don't care who's in charge. They don't trust Norman, and they're not buying his talk. Not for a minute. Obviously that will bring them into conflict with Norman and the Dark Avengers." The series reveals more about the character, something creator
Dan Slott had planned. Van Lente says: "One of the major subplots of the book is
Betty Brant, who in the '
New Ways to Die' arc of
The Amazing Spider-Man was assigned the job of digging up as much dirt as she possibly could on Martin Li... She's continuing that investigation in the
Mister Negative series and inadvertently digs closer and closer to his actual origin and her life will be put in jeopardy as a result."
Dark Reign: The Hood A five-issue mini-series that details the actions of
Hood and the entity possessing the Hood. It shows that Hood has weakness in the form of his family and how he will do anything to keep their presence secret.
Dark Reign: The Sinister Spider-Man A four-issue mini-series by writer Brian Reed and artist
Chris Bachalo. On the genesis of the series, the writer notes: "The whole Marvel Universe thinks Spider-Man is living in Avengers Tower, when it's really
Mac Gargan, who has a long history as a sociopath."
Dark Reign: Young Avengers A five-issue mini-series by writer
Paul Cornell and artist
Mark Brooks, offered to Cornell based on the strength of his previous
Young Avengers Presents story, Following the events in Secret Invasion, the Young Avengers team heals the splits caused by the "
Civil War", but find themselves fighting an even younger team. According to Cornell: "This is a story about what happens when the next generation come along, and suddenly you aren't the new young thing... There's this group of new super heroes who call themselves the Young Masters. They're young rebels on the run from the establishment, feared and hated by a world they've sworn to protect." Cornell further said: "This is about what happens when a bunch of kids follow Osborn's lead, decide the world is hard and needs hard heroes." The series follows the adventures of a villain known as Zodiac (who kills the members of the criminal organization of the
same name) and gathers a group of villains around him to take on Osborn.
Dark X-Men: The Beginning & Dark X-Men It details the story of Dark X-Men members and how they come to join this team and the return of
X-Man to Marvel Universe.
Doctor Voodoo: Avenger of the Supernatural A five-issue limited series, it shows how Doctor Voodoo faces the consequences of becoming Sorcerer Supreme and also takes down
Nightmare.
New Avengers: The Reunion A four-issue limited series, it deals with the reunion of Clint and Mockingbird and how they come to terms with each other.
Skrull Kill Krew A five-issue limited series written by
Adam Felber, in which the original team is brought back together to fight the descendants of the original Cow-Skrulls.
The Torch The series brings original Human Torch and Toro back to Marvel Universe.
Timestorm 2009–2099 The series is a crossover between the mainstream Marvel Universe and a universe very similar to, but with notable differences from, the Marvel 2099 universe. A
4-issue limited series titled
Strange and
2-issue limited series
X-Men vs Agents of Atlas was also released during Dark Reign.
Dark Reign: The List A collection of one-shots dealing with different characters in the Marvel Universe who are hunted by Osborn,
The List sets the status quo for many books. Every story also contains a back-up feature. •
Avengers was written by Bendis and
Marko Djurdjevic. After the events of "Utopia",
Clint Barton (Ronin), enraged that Osborn has been able to continue his rule despite his best efforts, decides to storm Avengers Tower and kill Osborn himself. After throwing Venom out the window and shooting Bullseye (who took his place as Hawkeye) five times, Barton confronts Moonstone and
Daken. After killing Daken and using a security force field to eliminate Moonstone, Clint storms Osborn's lab and begins shooting what looks like him, but it is only a
Life Model Decoy.
Ares knocks Clint out and Osborn then arrests him. This issue gives a lettered preview of
The List – Daredevil and an unlettered preview of
The List – X-Men. •
Daredevil was written by
Andy Diggle and
Billy Tan. After a group of black-clad ninjas kill a group of crooked cops and lawyers, Osborn turns his attention to the
Hand and their new leader, Daredevil. Sending Bullseye out in his old suit along with H.A.M.M.E.R. agents, Bullseye and Daredevil clash. The two duel until they make it to the top of a condemned building that is about to be demolished. Bullseye announces that the building will be destroyed, but the 107 people inside refuse to leave. When Daredevil does not help the people, the building explodes and kills them all. Bullseye then retreats and Daredevil is shocked. It turns out later that the ninjas were led by
Lady Bullseye and
Kingpin, and were used to set up Daredevil. This issue contains a preview of
Daredevil #501. •
Uncanny X-Men was written by
Matt Fraction and
Alan Davis. After Emma Frost and Namor's betrayal, Osborn decides to send Namor's former lover,
Marrina Smallwood, to kill the
Atlanteans. After Smallwood's attack, the X-Men sense her approach and
Iceman freezes the water with
Psylocke's help. The X-Men then attack Marrina, and Namor eventually kills her. He throws her head into Avengers Tower and threatens to kill Osborn for what he has done. This issue contains "Dead Man Walking", Matt Fraction's first story at Marvel Comics. •
Secret Warriors was written by Hickman and
Ed McGuiness. Fury goes to Avengers Tower and walks into Osborn's office. Osborn tries to frighten Fury by showing him his List (which contains: "Neutralize Clint Barton; Eliminate Daredevil; Kill Namor; Kill Nick Fury; Neutralize Bruce Banner; Kill Frank Castle; Control "The World"; Kill Spider-Man"), but Fury laughs it off because he has made a list of his own (whose items are: "Save the world; Punch Norman in the face; Have a beer"). He tells Osborn that he needs to take a man named Seth Waters into custody, a former S.H.I.E.L.D. agent funneling money into accounts such as that of a group called Leviathan. Osborn interrogates Waters before Bullseye tortures him. After Fury gets what he needs, a data retrieval device, his partner Garrett shoots Waters; Fury punches Osborn in the face; and the two escape with the device. Ares throws off the choppers pursuing them to let them escape. Fury opens the device to reveal that Hydra is a part of Leviathan, or Zodiac. This issue contains "Today Earth Dies", a reprint of a Nick Fury story first published in
Strange Tales #168. •
Hulk was written by
Greg Pak and
Ben Oliver. In order to get rid of
Bruce Banner and his son
Skaar, Osborn sends a heavily armed
Victoria Hand and Moonstone to attack the duo. Banner finds a way around everything the Hand throws at him, but during the battle, he is exposed to
gamma radiation that eventually turns him back into the Hulk. The Hand and Moonstone are defeated, but they succeed in their task: ensuring Banner will turn into the Hulk and that Skaar will be there to fight him, hopefully leading to them killing each other. Banner tells Skaar that when he turns into the Hulk, Skaar must be prepared to kill him. This issue contains a reprint of
Amazing Spider-Man #14. •
Punisher was written by
Rick Remender and
John Romita, Jr. Following repeated failed attempts to kill Castle, Osborn sends Daken and a platoon of H.A.M.M.E.R. troops to complete the mission. After a bloody round of hand-to-hand combat, Daken butchers Castle before kicking his remains from a rooftop. Castle's body parts are collected and spirited away by
Moloids, seemingly operating under the protection of
Man-Thing. This issue contains a preview of
Punisher #11. •
Wolverine was written by
Jason Aaron and Esad Ribic. During his tenure as leader of H.A.M.M.E.R., Osborn tries to take control of the
World and the
Weapon Plus creations.
Wolverine and
Noh-Varr head to the World to try to stop Osborn, but are soon attacked by a large army of Weapon Plus creations infected by
Allgod (Weapon XVI), the living religion. Noh-Varr is rescued by
Fantomex, who admits he should have kept an eye on the World. The two of them make their way to the World's brain (now a sentient being) where they are confronted by the Allgod drones, Wolverine included. Noh-Varr is able to disarm Allgod by kissing the World's brain, thus showing it some compassion, and disabling Allgod. Immediately after this, Wolverine regains his senses and the three of them defeat Osborn's invading army of
Deathlok prototypes. Fantomex then uses a shrink-ray he reportedly stole from
Doctor Doom to shrink the World and take it for his own. This issue contains Jason Aaron's never-before-reprinted first Wolverine story, from
Wolverine (first series) #175. •
Spider-Man was written by
Dan Slott and
Adam Kubert.
Peter Parker teams-up with several other members of the Front Line to expose Osborn as a maniac. As Spider-Man, he breaks into Osborn's lab and downloads a video showing Osborn using a live human as a test subject. However, he is caught by Osborn, who was already planning on killing him. Spider-Man escapes, with Osborn chasing him as the Iron Patriot. After a long battle in which Spider-Man is assaulted by his former fans, now adamantly defending Iron Patriot, he is able to damage the Iron Patriot Uni-Beam, whose star-shape was already structurally unsound. While Osborn recovers from the attack, Spider-Man changes back into Peter Parker. As Parker, he is then able to upload the video to all his friends online, who are all either involved in the media or tech-savvy. When Osborn confronts him, prepared to kill him, Parker states that as a taxpaying American citizen who has not broken any laws, Osborn has no legal ground to assault him. Osborn storms off to attempt to suppress the video, claiming he has added another name to his List: Peter Parker. This issue contains the story from
The Pulse #5 outing Norman Osborn as the Green Goblin to the world. ==Issues==