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Hulk

Hulk

2,475 appearances · Silver Age · 1962–2026 · 232 key issues
Who is Hulk?

During a gamma bomb test he himself designed, brilliant nuclear physicist Dr. Bruce Banner rushed onto the test range to push a young civilian to safety — absorbing a massive burst of gamma radiation in the process. The exposure transformed him, causing him to periodically become the Hulk: an enormous, superhumanly powerful green-skinned brute whose strength grows with his rage.

Few characters in Marvel's vast cosmos hit as hard as the Hulk — a Silver Age titan born in the pages of The Incredible Hulk #1 in 1962, conjured by the legendary partnership of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby at the very moment Marvel was rewriting what superhero comics could be. Over 64 years and more than 2,300 catalogued appearances — 113 of them recognized as key collector issues — he has proven himself one of the most enduring and complex figures the medium has ever produced. His longest haunts are the pages of The Incredible Hulk and The Defenders, where he shares adventures with some of Marvel's greatest: Spider-Man, Captain America, Iron Man, and the alter egos behind those masks. If you're building any serious Marvel collection, the Hulk isn't just a character you encounter — he's a cornerstone you keep coming back to.

Identity

Real name. Robert Bruce Banner

Powers. thumb|right|160px|Banner, as a child, starts inventing a new project with his super-genius mind Super-Genius Intelligence: Dr. Robert Bruce Banner is a super-genius in nuclear physics,;Incredible Hulk

★ First appearance
The Incredible Hulk #1
May 1962

Part of the Hulk legacy

Hulk is one of 2 heroes to carry the Hulk mantle. See the whole Hulk family ▸

Trivia

  • Hulk's iconic green skin wasn't the original plan — his debut issue printed him gray, but inconsistent ink reproduction on 1960s presses forced Marvel to swap in green almost immediately to keep his look uniform.en.wikipedia.org
  • The Hulk's transformation rules were anything but settled in his earliest appearances — one iteration tied the change to sunset rather than anger, a telling sign of just how fluid the character's core concept remained in those formative stories.en.wikipedia.org
  • Hulk's solo title was a commercial stumble out of the gate, and Marvel kept the character alive through guest spots and anthology appearances, steadily building the brand recognition that would eventually make him a cornerstone of the line.en.wikipedia.org
  • Stan Lee has written more of Hulk's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 189 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1962–2024

The Incredible Hulk #1 1962
The Incredible Hulk #1
Tales to Astonish #90 1967
Tales to Astonish #90
Marvel Premiere #1 1972
Marvel Premiere #1
The Defenders #32 1976
The Defenders #32
The Incredible Hulk #258 1981
The Incredible Hulk #258
The Uncanny X-Men #194 1985
The Uncanny X-Men #194
Marvel Age #89 1990
Marvel Age #89
Beavis & Butt-Head #1 1994
Beavis & Butt-Head #1
The Incredible Hulk #474 1999
The Incredible Hulk #474
House of M #8 2005
House of M #8
World War Hulk #5 2008
World War Hulk #5
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn] 2013
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn]
Jessica Jones #10 2017
Jessica Jones #10
Ultimate Universe #1 2024
Ultimate Universe #1

Appearances (1–150 of 2,475, oldest first)

Fantastic Four (1961)
The Avengers (1963)
Fantastic Four Annual (1963)
Tales of Suspense (1959)
#49
The Amazing Spider-Man (1963)
Journey into Mystery (1952)
Amazing Stories of Suspense (1963)
#37
Daredevil (1964)
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964)
Strange Tales (1951)
Capt. Savage and His Leatherneck Raiders (1968)
The X-Men (1963)
Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD (1968)
The Silver Surfer (1968)
#1
Incredible Hulk [King Size Special] (1968)
#1
Marvel's Space-Born Superhero! Captain Marvel (1968)
#6
Marvelmania Magazine (1969)
#1
The Steranko History of Comics (1970)
#1
Marvelmania Monthly Magazine (1970)
#3
Amazing Adventures (1970)
#1
Astonishing Tales (1970)