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Luke Cage
Luke Cage

Luke Cage

914 appearances · Bronze Age · 1972–2026 · 60 key issues
Who is Luke Cage?

Wrongly imprisoned under his birth name Carl Lucas, he volunteered for a experimental cell-regeneration procedure — a Super-Soldier variant known as the Burstein Process — which backfired and instead granted him steel-hard, bulletproof skin and superhuman strength. Escaping prison and adopting the name Luke Cage, he set up shop in Harlem as a Hero for Hire.

Few Marvel characters have logged a run as impressive as Luke Cage — debuting in 1972 at the height of the Bronze Age, he's been a vital presence in the House of Ideas for over five decades, racking up more than 800 catalog appearances and 32 key issues that collectors rightly prize. His heaviest footprint falls across New Avengers, Daredevil, and the beloved Power Man and Iron Fist, and the company he keeps tells you everything about his stature: Spider-Man, Captain America, and Danny Rand all share his pages regularly. From a street-level Bronze Age breakthrough to a fixture of Marvel's biggest modern titles, Luke Cage is the rare character who has never stopped mattering — and if you're building a serious Marvel collection, his long, rich history makes him essential reading.

Identity

Real name. Carl Lucas (legally changed to Luke Cage)

Powers. Superhuman strength and durability with unbreakable, bulletproof steel-hard skin, gained via the experimental Burstein Process (a variant Super-Soldier cell-regeneration experiment); enhanced stamina and accelerated healing.

★ First appearance
Hero for Hire #1
Jun 1972

Trivia

  • Luke Cage was Marvel's first solo African American superhero title, making Hero for Hire a publishing milestone rather than just another new character launch.en.wikipedia.org
  • His early run was a direct blaxploitation-era response to the popularity of films like Shaft, which shaped his street-level, hardboiled presentation.en.wikipedia.org
  • The character's famous catchphrase 'Sweet Christmas!' was a deliberate workaround for Marvel's inability to print the real slang the creators wanted to use.en.wikipedia.org
  • Luke Cage was later merged into a team book with Iron Fist largely because both solo series were underperforming, a behind-the-scenes move that helped keep the character in print.en.wikipedia.org
  • Brian Michael Bendis has written more of Luke Cage's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 82 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1972–2024

Iron Man #46 1972
Iron Man #46
Black Goliath #1 1976
Black Goliath #1
Power Man #66 1980
Power Man #66
Power Man and Iron Fist #116 1985
Power Man and Iron Fist #116
The Infinity Gauntlet #2 1991
The Infinity Gauntlet #2
Marvel Comics Presents #131 1993
Marvel Comics Presents #131
Heroes for Hire #1 1997
Heroes for Hire #1
Alias #1 2001
Alias #1
New Avengers #1 2005
New Avengers #1
World War Hulk #1 2007
World War Hulk #1
Fear Itself #2 2011
Fear Itself #2
Hawkeye #2 2017
Hawkeye #2
Marvel Comics #1000 2019
Marvel Comics #1000
Avengers: Twilight #1 2024
Avengers: Twilight #1

Appearances (1–150 of 914, oldest first)

Iron Man (1968)
#46
Hero for Hire (1972)
Journey into Mystery (1972)
#1
Fantastic Four (1961)
The Avengers (1963)
Jungle Action (1972)
#12
The Defenders (1972)
Captain Marvel (1968)
#35
Marvel Tales (1966)
#55
Thor (1966)
L'Inattendu (1975)
Astonishing Tales (1970)
Marvel Two-in-One (1974)
Black Goliath (1976)
#1
Marvel Premiere (1972)
#29
Marvel Treasury Edition (1974)
#12
Comic Reader (1973)
The Complete Fantastic Four (1977)
#1
Spider-Woman (1978)
Godzilla (1977)
#21
The Incredible Hulk (1968)
The X-Men (1963)
The Comics Journal (1977)
#48
Battlestar Galactica (1979)
#6
Tarzan (1977)
#27
Daredevil (1964)
Hulk Comic (1979)
Année Zéro (1979)
#5
Hulk (1979)
#5
Captain Britain (1980)
Incredible Hulk Weekly (1979)
#53
Master of Kung Fu (1974)
Marvel Team-Up Annual (1976)
Gamma la bombe qui a créé Hulk (1979)
#15
The Spectacular Spider-Man (1976)
#54
Spécial Strange (1975)
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964)
#15
Rom (1979)
De Verdedigers (1980)
#21
Marvel Graphic Novel (1982)
Marvel Super Hero Contest of Champions (1982)
Superaventuras Marvel (1982)
The Marvel No-Prize Book (1983)
#1
Marvel Team-Up (1972)
The Daredevils (1982)
#5
Top BD (1983)
#2
Homem-Aranha (1983)
#1
Marvel Fanfare (1982)
#9
Titans (1976)
U.S. 1 (1983)
#5
G.I. Joe, a Real American Hero (1982)
Strange Spécial Origines (1981)
Camelot 3000 (1983)
#4
The Transformers (1984)
#6