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Howard the Duck

Howard the Duck

152 appearances · Bronze Age · 1973–2026 · 7 key issues
Who is Howard the Duck?

Pulled from his homeworld of Duckworld by a disruption in the Nexus of All Realities, Howard found himself stranded in a Cleveland, Ohio far weirder than he ever imagined — a world dominated by 'hairless apes.' Armed with Quack-Fu and boundless cynicism, he navigates a reality he never asked for.

Few characters in Marvel's history arrived as unexpectedly — or as unforgettably — as Howard the Duck, who waddled onto the scene in Fear #19 in 1973, the brainchild of the brilliantly offbeat Steve Gerber and artist Val Mayerik. A true Bronze Age original, Howard carved out a singular niche in the Marvel Universe as a sardonic, world-weary outsider whose own ongoing series became one of the era's most celebrated and unconventional reads. Over more than five decades of publishing history — stretching all the way to 2026 — he's racked up 152 catalog appearances and seven key issues that collectors prize, rubbing feathers with the likes of Spider-Man, Thor, the Hulk, and Captain America along the way. Whether you're a longtime Marvel devotee or a curious new reader drawn in by his sheer strangeness, Howard the Duck rewards the dig: a character so genuinely unlike anything else in superhero comics that his longevity feels less like survival and more like inevitability.

Identity

Real name. Howard

Powers. No superpowers; relies on a self-styled mix of "Quack-Fu" martial arts, sharp wit, cigar-chomping cynicism, and resourcefulness. Otherwise a normal (talking, bipedal) duck displaced from another dimension.

Affiliations. Defenders (ally), S.H.I.E.L.D. (ally); partner Beverly Switzler; no permanent team membership

★ First appearance
Fear #19
Dec 1973

Trivia

  • Howard the Duck's 1976 presidential campaign under the All-Night Party reportedly pulled genuine votes from real-world citizens, cementing it as one of the most bizarre intersections of comics fiction and actual U.S. electoral politics.en.wikipedia.org
  • When Disney sued Marvel in the 1980s over Howard's resemblance to Donald Duck, the dispute was settled with Marvel retaining the character — though only after altering details such as Howard's clothing and fleshing out a more explicit origin from Duckworld.en.wikipedia.org
  • Howard the Duck's solo series earned its status as one of Marvel's most notorious cult books by consistently blending surreal comedy with pointed social and political satire, building a reputation that reached far beyond anything expected of a typical funny-animal comic.en.wikipedia.org
  • Steve Gerber has written more of Howard the Duck's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 33 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1973–2023

Fear #19 1973
Fear #19
Spider-Woman #13 1979
Spider-Woman #13
Howard the Duck #9 1981
Howard the Duck #9
Marvel Super Special #41 1986
Marvel Super Special #41
Web of Spider-Man Annual #5 1989
Web of Spider-Man Annual #5
Slapstick #1 1992
Slapstick #1
Spider-Man Team-Up #5 1996
Spider-Man Team-Up #5
Great American Comic Books #[nn] 2001
Great American Comic Books #[nn]
She-Hulk #8 2004
She-Hulk #8
Civil War Chronicles #12 2008
Civil War Chronicles #12
Fear Itself: Fearsome Four #1 2011
Fear Itself: Fearsome Four #1
Guardians of the Galaxy #24 2015
Guardians of the Galaxy #24
Marvel Comics #1000 2019
Marvel Comics #1000
Avengers Assemble Omega #1 2023
Avengers Assemble Omega #1

Appearances (151–152 of 152, oldest first)

Predator Kills the Marvel Universe (2026)
Ultimates (2024)
#20