In 1979, in the process of recovering from the
DC Implosion, publisher
DC Comics experimented with a new format in the
World of Krypton "miniseries", as DC termed such short-run works. The new format allowed the company to tell stories that may not have fit into an ongoing series and to showcase characters in a short story without the risk and obligations of an ongoing monthly. In 1980, DC followed
World of Krypton with the three-issue series
The Untold Legend of the Batman, by
Len Wein,
John Byrne, and
Jim Aparo. DC produced three more limited series in 1981, featuring another Krypton series, the
Legion of Super-Heroes, and the
Green Lantern Corps.
The 1980s With the success of the miniseries format, DC followed by experimenting with longer stories and concepts outside their universe of superheroes. Debuting in 1982,
Camelot 3000 was the first limited series to run to 12 issues. DC coined the term "maxiseries" as a promotional description for this. It did not take long for other publishers to begin using the limited series format. In 1982,
Marvel Comics published its first limited series,
Marvel Super Hero Contest of Champions, followed shortly thereafter by miniseries' featuring the
X-Men's
Wolverine and the
Avengers'
Hercules, and then
The Vision and the Scarlet Witch. At first, Marvel used the limited series format to feature popular characters from team titles and put them in solo adventures.
Contest of Champions brought forth the idea of a major event affecting the Marvel Universe;
crossovers were introduced in limited series form before the concept of multi-title crossovers was even conceived. This would be taken further with the 12-issue
Secret Wars saga in 1984 and by DC's saga
Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1985-1986. DC Comics continued to invest in the format, which led to the release of some of the most influential and popular comics of all time, such as
Watchmen (1986) by
Alan Moore and
Dave Gibbons (12 issues) and
The Dark Knight Returns (1986) by Frank Miller, released as a 4-issue series in "prestige format". Miller also created another limited series for Marvel,
Elektra: Assassin (1986) with 8 issues written by Miller and illustrated by
Bill Sienkiewicz. ==See also==