comicbooks.com Join Free
HomeG.I. Combat › #29
G.I. Combat #29 cover
Cover: Dick Dillin & Chuck Cuidera
📖 Read freeFull issue · restored, free to read

G.I. Combat #29

Oct 1955 · Quality Comics · 0.10 USD
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join free

G.I. Combat #29 is an anthology war comic featuring multiple stories. "Patrol Ambush" depicts American soldiers executing an ambush against enemy forces in a snowy battlefield setting. Another story shows American bomber crews successfully completing a fuel-up and takeoff mission while under enemy fire, ultimately escaping over Japan toward home. A third narrative follows infantry Rangers conducting combat operations in a valley, engaging entrenched enemy positions with artillery and small arms fire while planning defensive maneuvers against potential counterattacks.

Contains 4 stories
Prisoners at War
9 pp · War

American airmen shot down over Korea during a bombing run find themselves imprisoned far behind enemy lines on false spy charges after the war ends. With nothing but their wits, the prisoners of war devise an ingenious underground escape plan hidden within their exercise routine—but breaking out of the camp is only half the battle when they're hundreds of miles deep in hostile territory without weapons, food, or supplies. Captain Dickson and his crew must decide whether to risk everything on a desperate bid for freedom or accept their fate in the Communist camp.

Red Treachery Assault
6 pp · War

American G.I.s testing cutting-edge radar-controlled weapons on a remote Pacific island find themselves under sudden attack by Soviet forces determined to steal the secret technology. With their radar systems destroyed and communications down, the soldiers must devise an improvised strategy to protect their precious cargo and survive until dawn when their ship arrives for extraction. It's a tense, high-stakes battle where quick thinking and courage become the only weapons left in their arsenal.

Ranger Onslaught
7 pp · War

U.S. Rangers leap from the sky to assault a heavily fortified Red base hidden in the Atlas Mountains, but with the clock ticking and the enemy dug in hard, Colonel William Clark must drive his men through a brutal gauntlet of mines, armor, and entrenched firepower to destroy the stronghold and escape before dawn breaks. Time is the real enemy in this high-stakes raid where every minute counts and the margin between victory and being cut off is razor-thin.

Patrol Ambush
6 pp · War

When a machine gun crew of seven G.I.'s is sent to guard a remote Philippine valley as part of routine battle maneuvers, they stumble upon an advancing Communist assault force—tanks, troops, and all—preparing to strike the nearly defenseless American base. With nothing but their 30mm gun and quick thinking standing between the enemy and thousands of incoming troops, the determined sergeant and his men wage a desperate holding action against overwhelming odds. Outnumbered and running low on ammunition and water, they must find ways to turn the tide before the Communists breach their position.

ComicBooks.com Value

Our Model is In Beta
Raw (Good) $20
CGC 7.5 · 1 in census $307*
CGC 7.0 none in existence
CGC 6.5 · 1 in census $214*
CGC 6.0 · 1 in census $185*
CGC 5.5 · 1 in census $156*
CGC 5.0 none in existence
Show all 12 grades
CGC 4.5 none in existence
CGC 4.0 none in existence
CGC 3.5 none in existence
CGC 3.0 none in existence
CGC 2.5 none in existence
CGC 2.0 · 1 in census $60*
* estimate — limited direct-sales data at this grade
Our model’s value — refined as new sales data arrives · CGC census counts shown where available

Find on

Search eBay for G.I. Combat #29
No confirmed live listings for this exact issue right now — this opens an eBay search.

Sell my copy

Have this issue — or a whole collection? Get a fair offer from us, skip the marketplace fees and the hassle.

We Buy Collections ▸
Fast, fair offers · we handle grading & shipping

Full credits

artist, inker Charles Nicholas
letterer Sam Rosen
cover pencils Dick Dillin
cover inks Chuck Cuidera

Reviews

Reader reviews

No reader reviews yet.