Okay, once and for all.........

...Has anyone here seen comic books, standard-sized, on sale at ANY non-comics shop in 2020. The last 6 month's obviously everything has been upturned, but in the first 3 months of 2020 and since them, has ANYONE, other than Walmart and whatever other stores sold those Giants, in other words NOT counting them........(and not Archie Digests or any other format oddities such as HEAVY METAL)...are there/have there been any newsstand accounts that sell comic books? Barnes & Noble? Books-a-Million? Any other large chain or small store? ANYWHERE?

  Since and especially before COVID, have you seen newsstand regular comic books (Not these prepacked " collectible "s I've seen in Wal-Mart neither) ever?

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  • I’ve also wondered whether periodical comics were still available in regular stores. Years ago, I saw a small selection on the magazine shelf in a 7-11 convenience store. I just did an unscientific study using the Grand Comics Database.

    Comic covers there are posted by their contributors even if they have only slight differences (price, non-U.S. versions, direct market edition and newsstand edition).

    The following issues of these titles, as far as I can tell, were their last newsstand editions:

    Action Comics (2011 series) #984 cover-dated September 2017

    Amazing Spider-man (1999 series) #700 cover-dated February 2013

    Batman (2016 series) #24 cover-dated Early August 2017

    Detective Comics (2011 series) #953 cover-dated May 2017

    I suspect that the cost of producing a special version for diminishing newsstand sales was hard to justify, and it’s highly unlikely that regular stores would want to buy non-returnable comics. In an article I just read on ScreenRant, it was pointed out that seeing and buying comics in regular stores would bring in new readers. They aren’t going to a comic book store unless they know that they want a comic book.

  • The last time I recall seeing the standard comic book was in a Borders, Book and Music store, and that company went out of business nine years ago.

    Richard Willis said:

    I suspect that the cost of producing a special version for diminishing newsstand sales was hard to justify, and it’s highly unlikely that regular stores would want to buy non-returnable comics. In an article I just read on ScreenRant, it was pointed out that seeing and buying comics in regular stores would bring in new readers. They aren’t going to a comic book store unless they know that they want a comic book.

    Today's comic book stores have to reposition as specialty book stores. But I take your point. It's like the demise of Radio Shack; where do you go to find the wires, tools and electronic gizmos they used to sell? 

  • I don't remember the last time I saw a comic book for sale in anything other than a comic book shop.

  • To me, pricing and lack of easy availability are a big part of why I think kids aren't as much into comics anymore.

  • ...I-'ll say more later. On bridge, cold, smoky!

    • ...So. thank you especially to Richard - I don't follow GCD enough - of they consistently listed only-varying-through-UPC titles and that stops in 2017 for DC's Big Two, that would appear to logically show it. Logical that DC might make their Big Two the last ones. I had read that Marvel had withdrawn from newsstands before that.
  • Emerkeith Davyjack said:

    Logical that DC might make their Big Two the last ones. I had read that Marvel had withdrawn from newsstands before that.

    I just checked these four titles. I think you're right that they went with the issues that were more likely to attract buyers (ASM 700, Batman/Catwoman romance, etc).

  • It's smokey where I live, too, but not as bad as the SF Bay area. 

    Take good care of yourself, ED. From what you've told us, you are especially vulnerable to both Covid and the smoke.

    Emerkeith Davyjack said:

    ...I-'ll say more later. On bridge, cold, smoky!

  • ...Thank you, Richard! Those issues you list we're the last...with the issues leading up to them having also been sent to newsstands, yes? They gave them a last chance w/those numbers, guess.
  • ...Perhaps I can find it myself, but what was the last newsstand issue of the eponymous SUPERMAN title?

      It seems the dedicated chroniclers at GCD - I guess it got no comics press, or " real press, publicity - and " we ', certainly, did not notice it at the time:-(.

      My recent couple-months trip back to Westchester County, New York, where I grew up had an oddity developing regarding comics sales. The COVID close down was more in effect when I first hit the street there, then reversed a little. I saw comics shops listed in my area, even close to me, but they were almost all closed 1p0% - I think a couple in the area were listed in Google as open - I don't know how. Later a Barnes & Noble re-opened. I had the impression of B&N selling comic books but obviously they don't now - An employee at the store, when I asked about comic books, said they didn't get them in. They did have Archie Digests and format oddities in the " genre/fantasy magazines " section - Heavy Metal and Warrant's imitation of Warren Publishing B&W THE CREEPS, which latter I pull at my LCS.

      Late in my time in Westchester I went up-county to Mount Kisco (from the White Plains area where I had been). That was closer to where I actually lives when I was 14 (Chappaqua - I never did get there while I was there:-(). Now...

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