The definitive guide to the most valuable, influential, and culturally significant comics of the 1970s and early 1980s.

Welcome to the Bronze Age Archive
Between 1970 and 1984, comic books underwent one of the most dramatic cultural evolutions in their history. This hub collects every year of my ongoing series — providing a master index for collectors, historians, and fans.
Each year’s guide includes:
- The Top 25 most valuable issues
- Key first appearances
- Cultural/historical background
- Market analysis + value insights
- Hidden gems & undervalued picks
Year-by-Year Guides
Below are the first five completed entries. As additional years are written, this page will expand into the definitive Bronze Age resource on the web.
1970: The Bronze Age Begins
Most Valuable Comics of 1970
A transitional year marked by darker themes, emerging social awareness, and early tremors of the horror revival.
1971: The Comics Code Breaks Open
Most Valuable Comics of 1971
January’s CCA revision unleashed Gothic horror — leading to Morbius, revamped Batman, and a wave of experimentation.
1972: The Gothic Revival Explodes
Most Valuable Comics of 1972
Tomb of Dracula. Werewolf by Night. Supernatural Thrillers. DC’s brooding counterparts like Swamp Thing, The Demon and Dark Mansion of Forbidden Love. A turning point for horror and storytelling ambition.
1973: The Year Comics Grew Up
Most Valuable Comics of 1973
Gwen Stacy’s death. Blade’s debut. Thanos emergence. Neal Adams’ iconic Joker Cover.
A year of shock, realism, and character reinvention.
1974: The Era of the Anti-Hero
Most Valuable Comics of 1974
Within 12 months: Wolverine, Punisher, Nomad, Deathlok.
Watergate, the oil embargo, and soaring inflation shaped the year’s tone and themes.
1975: Coming Soon
Most Valuable Comics of 1975
Martial arts boom, Iron Fist momentum, Shang-Chi popularity, Bronze Age horror still running strong.
As this list continues to expand, I hope that you will return again. No other Bronze Age lists were consulted or viewed before I created these lists. These are 100% researched and created by me, for your enjoyment. So if these lists are unique and different from the typical, you know why.
by Ron Cloer
Source: Comics Price Guide




