Origins Longtime
magazine and
comic book publisher Martin Goodman, aware of the strong sales of
Justice League of America, directed his comics editor,
Stan Lee, to create a comic-book series about a team of superheroes. According to Lee, writing in 1974, "Martin mentioned that he had noticed one of the titles published by National Comics seemed to be selling better than most. It was a book called
The Justice League of America and it was composed of a team of superheroes. ... 'If the Justice League is selling', spoke he, 'why don't we put out a comic book that features a team of superheroes?'" Lee, who had served as editor-in-chief and art director of Marvel Comics and its predecessor companies,
Timely Comics and
Atlas Comics, for two decades, found that the medium had become creatively restrictive. Determined "to carve a real career for myself in the nowhere world of comic books", Lee concluded that, "For just this once, I would do the type of story I myself would enjoy reading ... And the characters would be the kind of characters I could personally relate to: They'd be flesh and blood, they'd have their faults and foibles, they'd be fallible and feisty, and — most important of all — inside their colorful, costumed booties they'd still have feet of clay." In the 1974 book
Origins of Marvel Comics, Lee described the creative process in more detail, stating that he developed the basic characters as well as a story synopsis for Jack Kirby to follow in the first issue. Lee noted the involvement of both Kirby and Publisher Martin Goodman prior to preparing his synopsis: "After kicking it around with Martin and Jack for a while I decided to call our quaint quartet the Fantastic Four. I wrote a detailed first synopsis for Jack to follow and the rest is history." Kirby recalled events somewhat differently. In a 1970 Fanzine interview he confirmed Lee's involvement in the creation of the Fantastic Four but took credit for the main characters and ideas, stating "It was my idea. It was my idea to do it the way it was; my idea to develop it the way it was. I'm not saying Stan had nothing to do with it. Of course he did. We talked things out." Years later, when specifically challenged with Lee's version of events in a 1990 interview, Kirby responded: "I would say that's an outright lie", although the interviewer,
Gary Groth, notes that this statement needs to be viewed with caution. Kirby claims he came up with the idea for the Fantastic Four in Marvel's offices, and that Lee merely added the dialogue after the story was pencilled. "[I]f you notice the uniforms, they're the same ... I always give them a skintight uniform with a belt ... the Challengers and the FF have a minimum of decoration. And of course, the Thing's skin is a kind of decoration, breaking up the monotony of the blue uniform." It is important to note, however, that the Fantastic Four wore civilian garb instead of uniforms, which were only introduced (along with the Baxter Building Headquarters) in the third issue of the series following readership feedback. The original submitted design was also modified to include the iconic chest insignia of a "4" within a circle that was designed by Lee. Given the conflicting statements, outside commentators have found it hard to ascertain who created the Fantastic Four. A typed synopsis by Lee for the introductory segment of the first Fantastic Four issue exists and outlines the characters and their origins, with various minor differences to the published version. However Earl Wells, writing in
The Comics Journal, points out that its existence does not assert its place in the creation: "[W]e have no way of knowing of whether Lee wrote the synopsis after a discussion with Kirby in which Kirby supplied most of the ideas". It is also notable that the Fantastic Four's first adventure in 1961 depicts a team of four adventurers (three men and a woman) led by a scientist travelling beneath the earth's surface and encountering giant monsters while contending with a human antagonist who is also from the surface world. Although neither Lee nor Kirby ever mentioned the 1959 film
Journey to the Center of the Earth as a direct inspiration, publisher Martin Goodman was well known for following popular entertainment trends to attract sales in his comics line. Comics historian
R. C. Harvey believes the Fantastic Four was a continuation of the work Kirby previously did, and so "more likely Kirby's creations than Lee's". But Harvey notes that the
Marvel Method of collaboration allowed each man to claim credit,
1960s and 1970s The Fantastic Four #1 (Nov. 1961) was an unexpected success. Lee had felt ready to stop working on comics at the time, but the positive response to
Fantastic Four persuaded him to continue with comic books. and Lee started printing the letters in a letter column with issue #3. Also with the third issue, Lee created the hyperbolic slogan "The Greatest Comic Magazine in the World!!" With the following issue, the slogan was changed to "The World's Greatest Comic Magazine!" and became a fixture on the issue covers into the 1990s, an aquatic
antihero who was a star character of Marvel's earliest iteration,
Timely Comics, during the late 1930s and 1940s period that historians and fans call the
Golden Age of Comics. Issue #5 (July 1962) introduced the team's most frequent nemesis,
Doctor Doom. These earliest issues were published bimonthly. With issue #16 (July 1963), the cover title dropped its
The and became simply
Fantastic Four. In
Fantastic Four #19 (October 1963),
Stan Lee announced that
Reed Richards would remain leader of the group, due to an overwhelming fan response in the affirmative (93.47%). Stan's comment of
Nuff Said would from here become an ongoing phrase in Lee's communications with fans. While the early stories were complete narratives, the frequent appearances of these two antagonists, Doom and Namor, in subsequent issues indicated the creation of a long narrative by Lee and Kirby that extended over months. According to comics historian
Les Daniels, "only narratives that ran to several issues would be able to contain their increasingly complex ideas". the
Black Panther, an African king who would be mainstream comics' first Black superhero; the rival alien races the
Kree and the shapeshifting
Skrulls; Him, who would become
Adam Warlock; the
Negative Zone and
unstable molecules. The story frequently cited as Lee and Kirby's finest achievement is the three-part "
Galactus Trilogy" that began in
Fantastic Four #48 (March 1966), chronicling the arrival of
Galactus, a cosmic giant who wanted to devour the planet, and his herald, the
Silver Surfer.
Fantastic Four #48 was chosen as #24 in the 100 Greatest Marvels of All Time poll of Marvel's readers in 2001. Editor
Robert Greenberger wrote in his introduction to the story that, "As the fourth year of the Fantastic Four came to a close, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby seemed to be only warming up. In retrospect, it was perhaps the most fertile period of any monthly title during the Marvel Age." Daniels noted that "[t]he mystical and metaphysical elements that took over the saga were perfectly suited to the tastes of young readers in the 1960s", and Lee soon discovered that the story was a favorite on college campuses. The following year's annual revealed the origin story of Doctor Doom.
Fantastic Four Annual #3 (1965) presented the wedding of Reed Richards and Sue Storm. Lee and Kirby reintroduced the
original Human Torch in
Fantastic Four Annual #4 (1966) and had him battle Johnny Storm. The series introduced Black Panther in issues #52-53 (July–August 1966). Sue Richards' pregnancy was announced in
Fantastic Four Annual #5 (1967), and the Richards' son,
Franklin Richards was born in
Fantastic Four Annual #6 (1968) in a story which introduced
Annihilus as well. Marvel filed for a
trademark for "Fantastic Four" in 1967 and the
United States Patent and Trademark Office issued the registration in 1970. Kirby left Marvel in mid-1970, having drawn the first 102 issues plus an unfinished issue, partially published in
Fantastic Four #108, with alterations, and later completed and published as
Fantastic Four: The Lost Adventure (April 2008),
Fantastic Four continued with Lee,
Roy Thomas,
Gerry Conway and
Marv Wolfman as its consecutive regular writers, working with artists such as
John Romita Sr.,
John Buscema,
Rich Buckler and
George Pérez, with longtime inker
Joe Sinnott adding some visual continuity.
Jim Steranko also contributed some covers during this time. A short-lived series starring the team,
Giant-Size Super-Stars, began in May 1974 and changed its title to
Giant-Size Fantastic Four with issue #2. The fourth issue introduced
Jamie Madrox, a character who later became part of the
X-Men.
Giant-Size Fantastic Four was canceled with issue #6 (Oct. 1975). Roy Thomas and George Pérez crafted a
metafictional story for
Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976) in which the
Impossible Man visited the offices of Marvel Comics and
met numerous comics creators. Marv Wolfman and
Keith Pollard crafted a multi-issue storyline involving the son of Doctor Doom which culminated in issue #200 (Nov. 1978).
John Byrne joined the title with issue #209 (Aug. 1979), doing pencil breakdowns for Sinnott to finish. He and Wolfman introduced a new herald for Galactus named
Terrax the Tamer in #211 (Oct. 1979).
1980s Bill Mantlo briefly followed Wolfman as writer of the series and wrote a crossover with
Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #42 (May 1980). Byrne wrote and drew a giant-sized Fantastic Four promotional comic for
Coca-Cola, which was rejected by Coca-Cola as being too violent and published as
Fantastic Four #220–221 (July–Aug. 1980) instead. Writer
Doug Moench and penciller
Bill Sienkiewicz then took over for 10 issues. With issue #232 (July 1981), the aptly titled "Back to the Basics", Byrne began his run as writer, penciller and inker, the last under the
pseudonym Bjorn Heyn for this issue only. Byrne revitalized the slumping title with his run. One of Byrne's changes was making the Invisible Girl into the Invisible Woman: assertive and confident. During this period, fans came to recognize that she was quite powerful, whereas previously, she had been primarily seen as a superpowered mother and wife in the tradition of television moms like those played by
Donna Reed and
Florence Henderson. Byrne staked new directions in the characters' personal lives, having the married Sue Storm and Reed Richards suffer a miscarriage and the Thing quitting the Fantastic Four, with
She-Hulk being recruited as his long-term replacement. He also re-emphasized the family dynamic which he felt the series had drifted away from after the Lee/Kirby run, commenting that, "
Family—and not
dysfunctional family—is the central, key element to the FF. It is an absolutely vital dynamic between the characters." [emphases in original]
1990s Writer-artist
Walt Simonson took over as writer with #334 (December 1989), and three issues later began
pencilling and
inking as well. With brief inking exceptions, two fill-in issues, and a three-issue stint drawn by
Arthur Adams, Simonson remained in all three positions through #354 (July 1991). Simonson, who had been writing the team comic
The Avengers, had gotten approval for Reed and Sue to join that team after Englehart had written them out of
Fantastic Four. Yet by
The Avengers #300, where they were scheduled to join the team, Simonson was told the characters were returning to
Fantastic Four. This led to Simonson quitting
The Avengers after that issue. Shortly afterward, he was offered the job of writing
Fantastic Four. Having already prepared a number of stories involving the Avengers with Reed and Sue in the lineup, he then rewrote these for
Fantastic Four. Simonson later recalled that working on
Fantastic Four allowed him the latitude to use original Avengers members
Thor and
Iron Man, which he had been precluded from using in
The Avengers. After another fill-in, the regular team of writer and Marvel editor-in-chief
Tom DeFalco, penciller
Paul Ryan and inker Dan Bulanadi took over, with Ryan self-inking beginning with #360 (Jan. 1992). That team, with the very occasional different inker, continued for years through #414 (July 1996). DeFalco nullified the Storm-Masters marriage by
retconning that the alien Skrull Empire had kidnapped the real Masters and replaced her with a spy named
Lyja. Once discovered, Lyja, who herself had fallen for Storm, helped the Fantastic Four rescue Masters. Ventura departed after being further mutated by Doctor Doom. Although some fans were not pleased with DeFalco's run on
Fantastic Four, calling him "The Great Satan", the title's sales rose steadily over the period. Other key developments included Franklin Richards being sent into the future and returning as a teenager; the return of Reed's time-traveling father, Nathaniel, who is revealed to be the father of time-travelling villain
Kang the Conqueror and Reed's apparent death at the hands of a seemingly mortally wounded Doctor Doom. It would be two years before DeFalco resurrected the two characters, revealing that their "deaths" were orchestrated by the supervillain
Hyperstorm. The ongoing series was canceled with issue #416 (Sept. 1996) and relaunched with vol. 2 #1 (Nov. 1996) as part of the multi-series "
Heroes Reborn"
crossover story arc. The yearlong volume retold the team's first adventures in a more contemporary style, and set in a parallel universe. Following the end of that experiment,
Fantastic Four was relaunched with vol. 3 #1 (Jan. 1998). Initially by the team of writer
Scott Lobdell and penciller
Alan Davis, it went after three issues to writer
Chris Claremont (co-writing with Lobdell for #4–5) and penciller
Salvador Larroca; this team enjoyed a long run through issue #32 (Aug. 2000).
2000s Following the run of Claremont, Lobdell and Larroca,
Carlos Pacheco took over as penciller and co-writer, first with
Rafael Marín, then with Marín and
Jeph Loeb. This series began using dual numbering, as if the original
Fantastic Four series had continued unbroken, with issue #42 / #471 (June 2001). At the time, the Marvel Comics series begun in the 1960s, such as
Thor and
The Amazing Spider-Man, were given such dual numbering on the front cover, with the present-day volume's numbering alongside the numbering from the original series. After issue #70 / #499 (Aug. 2003), the title reverted to its original vol. 1 numbering with issue #500 (Sept. 2003).
Karl Kesel succeeded Loeb as co-writer with issue #51 / #480 (March 2002), and after a few issues with temporary teams,
Mark Waid took over as writer with #60 / 489 (October 2002) with artist
Mike Wieringo with Marvel releasing a promotional variant edition of their otherwise $2.25 debut issue at the price of nine cents US. Pencillers
Mark Buckingham, Casey Jones, and Howard Porter variously contributed through issue #524 (May 2005), with a handful of issues by other teams also during this time. Writer
J. Michael Straczynski and penciller
Mike McKone did issues #527–541 (July 2005 – Nov. 2006), with
Dwayne McDuffie taking over as writer the following issue, and
Paul Pelletier succeeding McKone beginning with #544 (May 2007). As a result of the events of the "
Civil War" company-crossover storyline, the
Black Panther and
Storm temporarily replaced Reed and Susan Richards on the team. During that period, the Fantastic Four also appeared in
Black Panther, written by
Reginald Hudlin and pencilled primarily by Francis Portela. Beginning with issue #554 (April 2008), writer
Mark Millar and penciller
Bryan Hitch began what Marvel announced as a sixteen-issue run. Following the summer 2008 crossover storyline, "
Secret Invasion", and the 2009 aftermath "
Dark Reign", chronicling the U.S. government's assigning of the Nation's security functions to the seemingly reformed supervillain
Norman Osborn, the Fantastic Four starred in a five-issue
miniseries,
Dark Reign: Fantastic Four (May–Sept. 2009), written by
Jonathan Hickman, with art by
Sean Chen. Hickman took over as the series regular writer as of issue #570 with Dale Eaglesham and later Steve Epting on art.
2010s In the storyline "Three", which concluded in
Fantastic Four #587 (
cover date March 2011, published January 26, 2011), the
Human Torch appears to die stopping a horde of monsters from the other-dimensional
Negative Zone. The series ended with the following issue, #588, and relaunched in March 2011 as simply
FF. The relaunch saw the team assume a new name, the
Future Foundation, adopt new black-and-white costumes, and accept longtime ally
Spider-Man as a member. In October 2011, with the publication of
FF #11 (cover-dated Dec. 2011), the
Fantastic Four series reached its 599th issue. In November 2011, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Fantastic Four and of Marvel Comics, the company published the 100-page
Fantastic Four #600 (cover-dated Jan. 2012), which returned the title to its original numbering and featured the return of the Human Torch. It revealed the fate of the character of Johnny Storm after issue #587, showing that while he did in fact die, he was resurrected to fight as a gladiator for the entertainment of Annihilus. Storm later formed a resistance force called Light Brigade and defeated Annihilus. The hardcover compilation debuted at number four on
The New York Times Best Seller list for graphic novels. In the new title with its numbering starting at #1, the entire Fantastic Four family explore space together, with the hidden intent for Reed Richards to discover why his powers are fading. Writer
James Robinson and artist
Leonard Kirk launched a new
Fantastic Four series in February 2014 (
cover dated April 2014). Robinson later confirmed that
Fantastic Four would be cancelled in 2015 with issue #645, saying that "The book is reverting to its original numbers, and the book is going away for a while. I'm moving towards the end of
Fantastic Four. I just want to reassure people that you will not leave this book with a bad taste in your mouth." In the aftermath of the "
Secret Wars" storyline, the Thing is working with the Guardians of the Galaxy and the Human Torch is acting as an ambassador with the Inhumans. With Franklin's powers restored and Reed having absorbed the power of the Beyonders from Doom, the Richards family is working on travelling through and reconstructing the multiverse, but Peter Parker has purchased the Baxter Building to keep it "safe" until the team is ready to come back together. A new volume for the Fantastic Four was released in August 2018, written by
Dan Slott, as part of Marvel's
Fresh Start event. The first issue of the new series was met with strong sales, and a positive critical reaction. When the Future Foundation is threatened by the Griever at the End of All Things, Mister Fantastic plays on her ego to convince her to provide him with equipment that will allow him to summon his teammates. When Human Torch and Thing are reunited with Mister Fantastic and Invisible Woman, the other superheroes that were part of the Fantastic Four at some point in their lives also arrived, including, unexpectedly,
X-Men's
Iceman. With the gathered heroes assisted the Fantastic Four into causing so much damage to the Griever's equipment, she is forced to retreat in her final telepod or be trapped in that universe. This left the heroes to salvage components from the broken ship to create their own teleport system to return to their universe. The Fantastic Four and their extended family returned to Earth where they find that
Liberteens members Ms. America, 2-D, Hope, and Iceberg have come together as the Fantastix with Ms. America taking the codename of Ms. Fantastix. Following the staged bank robbery that the
Wrecking Crew committed and their involvement of being hired to humiliate the Fantastix in public, the Fantastic Four gave the Fantastix their blessing to continue using the Baxter Building while the FF operate in a house on Yancy Street with a dimensionally-transcendental interior. In the storyline
Point of Origin, the Fantastic Four entrust Alicia, H.E.R.B.I.E., Franklin and Valeria to protect Earth while they begin their mission to learn a further origin of the cosmic radiation that granted them their powers in the first place, piloting a new space ship called Marvel-2. While in the middle of a space adventure to find the origin, the Fantastic Four are attacked by a group who believed themselves to be the superheroes of Planet Spyre, the Unparalleled. Reed and Sue are separated from the Thing, Human Torch is revealed to be the soulmate of the Unparalleled member named Sky, and they learn that the Unparalleled's leader and the Overseer of Planet Spyre, Revos, was responsible for the cosmic rays that struck the team on their original trip, as he wanted to stop them coming to his planet. Revos subsequently mutated his people to "prepare for their return" before trying to eradicate the mutates who are unable to retain their original forms in the same manner as the Thing, accusing the mutates of being "villains and imperfects"; as a result, through his own paranoia and
xenophobia, the Overseer himself is responsible for the fateful creation of the Fantastic Four and mutated his entire race to face a non-existent threat. Revos challenges Mr. Fantastic to a fight over their differences, until it is settled and they finally made peace. As the Fantastic Four are about to depart Spyre after helping its citizens clean up the Planet (as well as Reed providing the mutates with a variation of the temporary 'cure' he has created for Ben), Skye join them to learn about Earth and every unseen galaxy. When the
incoming Kree-Skrull
Empyre occur at the same time as teen heroes are being
outlawed, the original Fantastic Four went to space with Avengers to stop this Empyre, leaving Franklin and Valeria being backed by Spider-Man and Wolverine to defend Earth.
2020s In August 2022, Marvel announced that writer
Ryan North and artist Iban Coello would launch a new volume of Fantastic Four in November of that year after Slott had concluded his run on the title with issue #46. ==Spin-offs==