Like many titles published by the company under Dez Skinn, Hulk Comic featured new material produced by British creators such as Steve Dillon, David Lloyd and Steve Parkhouse—along with a smattering of American reprints drawn from the Lee/Kirby Marvel back-catalogue.Once Skinn was replaced by Paul Neary, however, the title's original output dwindled, being supplanted by an increasing number of reprints.
Backup stories featured the two main characters' female counterparts, Spider-Woman and She-Hulk, as well as The Defenders (which was continued from Hulk Comic).
•
After co-starring for many years in the pages of The Mighty World of Marvel, the green goliath was given his own weekly title, Hulk Comic, in 1979.
American comic book | comic | The Incredible Hulk | Hulk Hogan | Last Comic Standing | The Incredible Hulk (1978 TV series) | San Diego Comic-Con International | Comic Relief | Hulk | Hulk (comics) | The Comic Strip | Golden Age of Comic Books | comic book artist | The Walking Dead (comic book) | Comic Relief (charity) | Wolverine (comic book) | Mutt and Jeff (comic strip) | Comic Strip Live | Comic Book Guy | The Incredible Hulk (1977 TV series) | McCaull Comic Opera Company | Let's Dance for Comic Relief | comic relief | Blondie (comic strip) | ''bande dessinée'' comic book | Adventures of Superman (comic book) | Waki (comic book) | Silver Age of Comic Books | Ratz (comic strip) | Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide |
Goodman, Lieber, Kurtzberg & Holliway, a fictional law firm in She-Hulk comic books