![]() Upon his chest was the same star emblem that adorned the previous costume, and within the interior of his cape he retained the starscape. Most notably, this costume included a blue mask that left the hair and lower half of the face exposed Ĥ) After returning to life Quasar created his own costume for the first time consisting of a red torso and boots, blue pants and a triangular blue section on his chest that merges into a cape with prominent shoulders. The interior of his blue cape included a starscape. The costume was a marked change from the previous, adding long red sleeves, blue gloves and changing his chest emblem to a star akin to Mar-Vel’s. Vintage paper addict.3) Upon saving the cosmic entity known as Origin, Quasar was rewarded with a new costume, inspired by Captain Marvel’s. Bleeding Cool Managing Editor, tech and data wrangler. ![]() Posted in: Comics, Vintage Paper | Tagged: Operation Galactic Storm, quasar About Mark SeifertCo-founder and Creative director of Bleeding Cool parent company Avatar Press. View the certification for CGC Certification ID 3838422002 and purchase grader's notes if available. Manufactured with issue #1 printed on cover. #32 Printing Error (Marvel, 1992) CGC NM/MT 9.8 White pages. First appearance of Korath. An unusual variant, there's a Quasar #32 Printing Error (Marvel, 1992) CGC NM/MT 9.8 White pages in this week's 2021 September 26-27 Sunday & Monday Comic Books Select Auction #122139 from Heritage Auctions. There are only 5 copies of Quasar #32 "Printing Error" in CGC 9.8 on the CGC Census. All this said, CGC has labeled this as a printing error. So, there are three versions of all of the Quasar parts of Operation Galactic Storm, Quasar #32-34. The theory here is that Marvel did not want to release a #1 issue only to newsstand vendors, they released a direct market version labeled as #1 as well. However, as you will note from the scan here, the cover does not have a UPC code, which indicates that it is a direct market release. So in order to offer newsstand readers all the parts of the event, a newsstand version of Quasar #32 was sold to newsstand vendors as Quasar Special #1 (though it was not named as "Special" on the comic itself) in order to avoid confusing newsstand outlets as to why they had issue #32 of the series available to them. It seems that Quasar was a direct market-only series, but Quasar #32 was part of the Operation Galactic Storm event. Quasar #32 (Marvel, 1992).Īs far as I can tell from old discussions on this matter on the CGC boards, this is certainly an unusual variant edition but perhaps not an error… maybe. ![]() There's a Quasar #32 Printing Error (Marvel, 1992) CGC NM/MT 9.8 White pages in this week's 2021 September 26-27 Sunday & Monday Comic Books Select Auction #122139 from Heritage Auctions. Quasar got his own series in 1989, and Quasar #32 (1992) is the first appearance of Korath and also has some rather unusual variants. Glut had been a classmate of George Lucas at USC, and also was an avid amateur filmmaker who made a name for himself with fan films of the likes of Spider-Man (1969) and Superman among many others, and subsequently became a prolific writer for comics and television. While Thomas and Buscema are well known to Marvel fans, Glut is better known for writing the novelization of The Empire Strikes Back. This version of Quasar was created by Roy Thomas, John Buscema, and Don Glut. ![]() The character was renamed Quasar in Incredible Hulk #234 (April 1979). Called Marvel Boy in that issue, the character was based on a previous version of Marvel Boy who first appeared in Marvel Boy #1 (December 1950). The Wendell Vaughn version of Quasar first appeared in Captain America #217 (cover-dated January 1978).
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