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Using Calibre and AO3

Installing Calibre and Plugins

(My site has decided to eat all the images I posted here, which was causing endless load loops.  To stop that, I took them off.  I don’t know why it does this.)

Here’s a detailed and hopefully helpful walkthrough for using Calibre with AO3, using the FanFicFare plugin.  Follow these steps to download fic, keep track of what you’re reading (or not reading), and sync eBooks from one device to another.

The first thing you need to do is download Calibre.  It currently has releases for Windows, Mac, and Linux.  I’m running Windows and iOS, which you’ll notice isn’t officially supported.  I’ll show you how to make that happen in a bit.  There are a few ways to do it.

Installing Calibre works like anything else.  Download it, run the file you’ve downloaded (whichever format it happens to be), and on we go to the next step.  When you run the Welcome Wizard, make sure your library is in a cloud folder.  Dropbox is best.  This will make syncing to a mobile device easiest, because the baked-in methods have got unnecessarily complicated.  If you don’t have Dropbox, that’s fine.  There are other ways to do it.

Once installed, the first thing we want to do is install FanFicFare.  For the sake of my own sanity and not going back through everything I’ve already done, I am not doing this from a clean install, so just pretend that my screenshots are blank.  Click on the Preferences button on the top of the menu, and then click on plugins on the bottom of the pop up.

Then, click on the Get new plugins button on the bottom, with the yellow jigsaw piece.

And then in the filter by name box, type in fanfic.  The only one that pops up at this point should be FanFicFare.  Select it and click install.

It may give you a security warning about not being monitored or supported or something, and ask you if you accept the risk.  Click OK or Accept or whatever affirmative button pops up (I’m not sure exactly and don’t want to reinstall this whole thing).  Optional, you can do this again for the Generate Cover plugin, if you want to make some fancy covers for your fic.  Or you can use the default ones Calibre gives you, which aren’t half bad themselves.  I just got bored.

Configuring Calibre for Use

Now, we need to configure FanFicFare.  You will need to give it your AO3 credentials in order for it to see locked and explicit fic.  Click on the down arrow on the side of the FanFicFare icon and select Configure FanFicFare.  Then, click on the personal.ini tab.  Scroll until you find the Archive Of Our Own section, and make sure it looks like this, adding your username and password:

[archiveofourown.org]
[defaults]
is_adult:true
username:XXXXXXXX
password:XXXXXXXX

If it’s not there, add the above text to the bottom of the document and replace your username and password with your own.  Calibre and FanFicFare cannot make changes to your account.  You are giving it read only access to be able to see the site and scrape fic content that is otherwise hidden from view.  If you are concerned about safety, you can create a separate account only for Calibre to use, but it’s not really worth doing since it would mean waiting in the invite queue.

There is more customisation to be done within the FanFicFare plugin, but it’s easier to do after you customise Calibre itself at this point.  If you right click on any column header, you’ll get a context menu with an option to add your own columns.

This is where you’ll be able to set your own custom information, such as read status, word count, ships, characters, and more.  Some of them can be auto-populated from AO3’s metadata, others will need to be manually entered.  There are loads of options, and it’s easy to use the wrong one in the wrong situation.  Rather than walk through every option a person could possibly want, I’ll explain what the options do and how they might be used in this context.

  • Lookup name: This is how Calibre stores the column information.  It should be all one word, and in lowercase.  If you do it wrong, it will tell you, and give you a pop-up telling you how to fix it.
  • Column Heading: This is how it looks client-side.  It can have capital letters and spaces and look nice.  If the lookup name is readstatus, your column heading can be Read Status.
  • Column Type: This is the tricky one that can cause a lot of confusion, because there are a lot of options.  I haven’t even used all of them yet, but here are the ones you may find the most helpful:
    • Text, column shown in the Tag browser: The default.  You get one entry and it doesn’t matter how it’s formatted.  Anything that goes in this field is the whole entire tag, even if it contains a comma.
    • Comma separated text, like tags, shown in the Tag browser: Proper tags.  Multiple entries, separated by commas, how you’re probably used to tags working.
    • Long text, like comments, not shown in the Tag browser: A space for notes to yourself.  Leave yourself reminders about where you’ve left off on a fic, or keep records of your own comments, or put anything you like in here.
    • Text, but with a fixed set of permitted values: If you want a drop down menu, and know you’re not going to be adding any more options, you can use this instead of the default text option.
    • Date: What it says on the tin.
    • Integers: Numbers.  Calibre alphabetises numbers.  I mean, three comes before two, because of how they’re spelt.  If you want to include word count or chapters, you need to use integers.  Ask me how I found that out.  Has options for formatting numbers, but you need to get into Python for that, and you probably won’t need to get that detailed.
    • Ratings, shown with stars: What it says on the tin.  Has an option to allow half-stars
    • Yes/No: What it says on the tin.  Has a few display options.  You can use this for whether or not you’ve read a fic, but I choose to use the default text so I can mark fics in progress.

There are a few others that I haven’t touched on, because they are a bit too fiddly and not really.  The text column for series-like information, and columns built from other columns are something you can play around with if you like, but I haven’t personally found them terribly useful.  All of these will have a field for Default value, which you can set to save yourself some time.  For instance, on a Read Status column, you can set the default value to Unread, which will save you having to manually set the status for every new import.

This is useful not only for tracking read status, but loads of other AO3 metadata as well.  By default, Calibre will import all of the basic tags, such as fandom, characters, ship, etc, but it will lump them all together into the “tags” category and not separate them out very well.  You can use custom columns to separate that information out, so that characters, ships, ratings, etc are easier to filter.  So far, the only one I have not been able to get to work is fandoms, which I have been doing manually.  You can also add in columns for word count and chapters, which is where those integers come in handy.  Another one I’ve found useful is to replace the default Date column, which only has the month and year, with a Date Updated column, which includes the day the fic was posted or updated.  You can’t delete default columns, but you can hide them from view, which is more or less the same thing.

Once you’ve got your custom columns set up for the information you’d like to track, Calibre will ask you to restart.  This is necessary for the next step, so do that.

Then, you’ll go back to configure FanFicFare, and click on the Custom Columns tab there.  Here, you can have FanFicFare pull any metadata from AO3 and match it up to the columns you’ve created.  It’s likely not everything you created will have a matching option, and that’s fine.  You can do some things manually, and some things by default.

Next, go to the Basic tag on the FanFicFare configure menu, and take a look at how you’d like to set up your reading and import experience.  I’m not going to tell you how to set this page up, because it’s going to vary depending on how you like things done, but I can explain some of the options.  I won’t go through all of them, because it’s a lot, but here are some of the important ones:

  • Default Output Format: When you scrape AO3 for fic, this is the format the fic will download as.  You have the options for ePub, MOBI, HTML, or txt.
  • Default of Story Already Exists: In this one case, I will say set it to Overwrite Always.  Otherwise, you won’t catch new chapters or edits when they’re made.
  • Keep existing tags when updating metadata?: If the author on AO3 deletes a tag, do you want Calibre to delete it as well?
  • Check for existing series anthology books?: Do you want Calibre to store series information?
  • Check for changed story url?: This will check if a oneshot has turned into a multi-chapter fic.
  • Take URLs from clipboard?: This saves you the step of pasting the URL from AO3 into a tiny little box.
  • Reject without confirmation?: If a fic is on your reject list, do you want Calibre to skip the fic entirely?
  • Delete on reject by default?: If you reject a fic, do you want Calibre to delete whatever information it has already stored?

There’s quite a lot more here, and I strongly encourage you to play around with all of them.  You can’t break anything, and if you don’t like the way something imports, delete it from your library, change some settings, and try again until it works the way you want it to work.  In fact, you’ll probably notice that we’ve ignored Calibre’s settings entirely, and only played with FanFicFare’s.  Calibre’s settings and preferences are much more intense and far less user friendly, so we won’t be touching them as much.

If you’d like to play around with the Generate Cover plugin, it’s a fairly intuitive plugin to use.  Again, you can’t break anything.  Just play around with it and see what happens.  Since it’s a visual plugin, it’s a lot harder to explain without screenshots, but if you need help I can show you in the discord.  Import some images, create some templates, and apply them to different fics.  I’m working on figuring out if there’s a way to apply covers to fics based on specific metadata, but so far it seems like that’s not possible.  I’ll update that page if anything changes.

Importing Fic

Now here’s the bit you’ve been wanting to get to.  And there are multiple ways to do it.  The way I did it is stupid and it will take all day, and I will show you how to do it that way if you like.  Or there’s a far more sensible way of going about it.  It amounts to more or less the same thing.  We’ll do the simple version first.

Importing fic one at a time

To import a single fic, copy the url from AO3 and click on the down arrow on the FanFicFare button on the menu, and then select the Download from URLs option.  Depending on your settings, the URL may already paste into the big box.  Double check that the settings are as they ought to be, and then click OK.  It will take its time fetching metadata, which for a single fic, is usually just a few moments.  Then, you’ll get a pop-up in the lower right corner, telling you that it’s complete.  If it’s worked, it will tell you that it found 1 good and 0 bad updates.  Click the Yes button to add the fic to your library.

Importing multiple fics

If you want to import an entire fandom, or maybe there have been a few posted at once that you want to read, you can do multiple fics at once.  And there are a few ways to do it.  You can do it the same way as above, pasting URLs individually, one per line, and then follow the same process.  This is best if you only want a few fics.  If you want to download an entire fandom, or you already have done and you want to update the day’s uploads, you can do a bulk download.

Go to the page in question that lists the fic.  This is going to be any page.  Say, for instance, this page.  Copy the URL, click that down arrow on the FanFicFare button, and this time select Get Story URLs From Web Page.  Make sure your URL is pasted in correctly, and then click the For Individual Books button.  It’ll take a minute for something to happen, and you may think that the whole thing has frozen.  Don’t worry about it.  Eventually, that same dialogue box as before will pop up with 20 URLs listed from that page you just pasted in.  Again, make sure everything is as it should be, and click OK.  It’ll take a lot longer this time to make import everything, but it will get to the same end result, with the entire page of fics importing.  I find on average, it takes about 5-6 minutes per page, but this can skew longer if there are more longfics than usual on a given page.

Updating fics

There are multiple ways to update fics.  When you import multiple fics using the method above, if there are any fics already in your library, Calibre will update them if they need updating.  When I go in to grab the 2-3 new fics that may be uploaded on a given day, it will also catch the ongoing WIPs that have also been updated as well.

You can also update fics by highlighting them in your library and just clicking on the FanFicFare icon directly.  Whether you do it one at a time, or in a batch, you’ll get the same window, titled Update Existing List.  It will have similar options to the window above.  Check those to make sure they are set to do what you want them to do, and click OK.  Calibre will then go through the same process as before, to fetch the metadata from AO3, and then download the fic from the site.  I generally find it easier to do it the copy/paste way, because in almost every situation, updated fic will be moved to the top of the tag anyway.

Editing Metadata

The only time you’ll want to really use Calibre’s built-in options is when editing metadata.  You can do this in bulk or individually, and the times you’d want to do either depend on which metadata you’re editing.  In most cases, you really need to only double click on the relevant field right there in your library and it will let you edit it, but sometimes that will pull up the book because it thinks you want to read it.  You can right click to get a context menu, which will have options to edit metadata individually or in bulk, or use the metadata icon in the menu to do the same.  To edit metadata in bulk, you will need to have multiple items selected, and to do that, click on one item, hold down shift, and click on another.  All items in between will highlight.  To highlight multiple discrete items, hold down ctrl/cmd and click.  Each individual item you click on will highlight.  When you select edit metadata in bulk, the metadata you edit will apply to all highlighted items.

Calibre will separate out what they call the Basic metadata from the Custom metadata, allowing you to tweak your own separately to the default fields.  This should be fairly straightforward, but if you have issues, let me know.

Getting Fic to your Mobile Device

This used to be a lot easier, and I don’t know what happened.  It’s been years since I’ve been able to plug my iPad into my computer and just sync it that way.  Now, they want you to use this Server thing, and I cannot make it work for anything. I’m kind of convinced it doesn’t work at all.

Directly via Dropbox

As long as you have set up Calibre and FanFicFare to put your fic in an accessible place, and download fic in a format that is readable on your device, you are pretty much there.  You may not even need to go any further.  If you’ve used Dropbox, and your mobile device is capable of using a Dropbox app, you’re done!  You can go to your Calibre folder, and start navigating through all of the folders in there and start reading.  It’s a bit unwieldy though, and that might not be for you.

Another option is to not use Dropbox as your main library, in which case you can click that Calibre icon up top, and move your library elsewhere, and then copy books individually to Dropbox as you need them.  I really dislike the way Calibre structures its library, but I get it.  It’s structured like a library, by author.

For Kobo users, here’s some information and troubleshooting on how to get Dropbox working.

Dropbox via Companion App

On iOS and Android, there are a variety of companion apps, some paid, some free.  On iOS, I use Calibre Sync, which was about $4 or so.  It talks to Calibre and sees all of my custom metadata, and then pulls the ePubs from my dropbox and puts them into my Books app.  I see it as a $4 convenience fee to keep me from having to dig through hundreds of folders.  If you’re on iOS or Android, look around and find the app that works best for you.

Drag and Drop

You don’t need Dropbox for this to work, so if you don’t have it, this is the one for you.  If you’re on iOS, you’ll use iTunes for this.  If you’re on Android or any other device, I can’t offer as much help, because I don’t know how those systems work.  Plug your device into your computer, or use Wifi Sync if your set up supports it.  Go to your Calibre folder where all your books are, and drag the folders into iTunes or wherever they go on your specific device.  Especially if you’re on iOS, you might want a better eBook reader than the one that’s built in, because you won’t be able to see any of your metadata.  In fact, I have just tested and the Books app cannot even see the metadata that AO3 imports, much less the custom metadata.  But if you just want to read, and do all of your organising on Desktop, this works.

I need a different file type than what FanFicFare offers

Not a problem!  The reason most people are likely familiar with Calibre is eBook conversion.  Like the metadata above, you can convert individually or by bulk.  Select the books you want to convert, and click the Convert Books icon in the menu.  You’ll get a big, giant window this time with a whole bunch of options, but the main one you need to focus on is a tiny little button in the top right labelled Output Format.  Click that, and you’ll get a whole list of formats that FanFicFare doesn’t offer.  Select the one you need and click OK.

If know you are going to need to convert your files, I would recommend not changing FanFicFare’s download options.  It will be set to ePub by default, which convert fairly nicely to a wide variety of other formats.

Misc Notes

A few things of import that seem worth pointing out:

  • Your custom columns in the tag browser will all have the same ugly icon unless you change them.  I went to emojipedia and got some cute emoji for mine.  You can use whatever you like.
  • Tags in the book details pane are always listed alphabetically, which is not always helpful if authors use them to build off of one another.  However, if you get confused, like I do, you can always click on the archiveofourown.org link in the IDs field, which will take you to the fic (it looks like it goes to the site’s home page, but it does go to the fic).
  • Anonymously-posted fic will populate as being posted by an Anonymous author unless it is your own and you have given Calibre your own credentials.  Then it will know that you posted the thing.  I got jumpscared by this and I did not like it, because I forgot that you have to sign into the plugin.
  • There is a tiny, almost invisible button in the lower right that says Layout.  Click it!  There are loads of options hidden in there that are actually useful and user friendly!
  • You truly cannot break anything.  If something goes a bit funny, delete what you’ve done, fix the messed up setting, and re-import it.  I have re-imported my entire library about eight times, because I keep fucking around and finding out.  But that’s how you learn.  I’m on the discord and can (hopefully) answer any questions you have.
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Update History

Dec 10 2022
  • Updated Beta Ray Bill’s appearances
  • Updated Loki’s appearances
  • Updated Thor’s appearances
  • Updated additional character information
  • Updated date information for delayed releases
  • Updated December Releases
  • Moved Infinity Comics to their own list because they’re weird
  • Began adding arc and title information

Total entries: 2128

Dec 03 2022
  • Updated Amora’s appearances
  • Updated Balder’s appearances
  • Updated Beta Ray Bill’s appearances
  • Fixed erroneous dates
  • Removed duplicate entries
  • Paginated the master list to a maximum of 500 entries

Total entries: 2081

« ||

Mog’s Reading List

More or less in release order.  I deliberately skipped over series like Agent of Asgard and most of the recent main continuity in favour of finding hidden issues that give greater context for events like Siege and War of the Realms.

#TitleVolumeIssueRelease DateCover DateNotes
1Thor: Season One (2013)1#1Oct 2 2013Dec 2013This is a weird one that I absolutely love. It's main continuity, but also really, really not. It's a primer for the lore, quickly establishing who the main players are and what makes the world turn. Don't look for a Season Two, because there isn't one. This is part of an ongoing process by Marvel to make it as difficult as possible to get into comics. I'm putting this one right here at the top because if you read this one, you don't have to slog through all those Silver Age comics that can make you want to claw your eyes out from silted dialogue and bizarre art. This is more about the overall lore, and less about the characters, but it's still a fantastic place to start.
2Thor (2007)3#5Dec 28 2007Jan 2008This is where things start to get sticky. It's the infamous "Lady Loki" arc, and whatever you've heard about it from Tumblr, throw it all out the window. This arc is Loki at his absolute most depraved. It has nothing to do with his sexuality or gender, although he may have learned some things about himself during this arc. This is the arc where he steals Sif's body and parades it around half-naked because he can. TL;DR backstory: Ragnarok happened, Asgard was gone, Thor willed himself back into existence, and is on a quest to find all the missing Asgardian souls who have become trapped in human bodies.
3Thor (2007)3#12Dec 24 2008Jan 2009I don't even know how to explain this issue without spoiling it. Loki is a great big back of dicks. Laufey is a great big back of dicks. Odin is a great big bag of dicks. That's basically it.
4Dark Reign: The Cabal (2009)1#1Apr 29 2009Jun 2009Only appears in story #5 "Dinner with Doom." This is one of those random backstory things that was easy to miss if you weren't keeping up with solicits. It helps explain why Loki is such a piece of shit during Siege.
5Thor (1966)1#602Jun 24 2009Aug 2009This issue ends the "Lady Loki" arc, which is not as cute and wholesome as some on Tumblr would have you believe.
6Thor (1966)1#603Sep 30 2009Nov 2009This one isn't about Loki, per se. In fact, he's only in it briefly. The story is about Bill, a human from Broxton who has found himself in the strangest situation possible. But Loki is the one orchstrating all of this, and these few issues are what allow Siege to play out.
7Thor Giant-Size Finale (2009)1#1Nov 25 2009Jan 2010This directly follows Vol 1 #603, and wraps up that bit of the story before leading into Siege.
8Thor (1966)1#604Dec 3 2009Feb 2010Loki is a bag of dicks.
9Siege: Loki (2010)1#1Apr 14 2010Jun 2010This is the issue where all of Loki's plans are finally revealed in full.
10Siege (2010)1#4May 12 2010Jun 2010Loki dies in this issue. It's actually kind of horrific, even though he deserves it.
11Thor (1966)1#617Nov 10 2010Jan 2011The series goes on without Loki for a while, cuz well. He dead. But then Thor gets a big sad again and decides that he misses his brother, and decides to go out and find him again. This begins the "Kid Loki" era, which is still not the same Loki that is running around today. But we'll get to that soon.
12Thor (1966)1#620.1Mar 23 2011May 2011This is a "Point One" issue, which for a while were being used as unofficial starting points in order to avoid launching a new volume. Unfortunately for Marvel, they wound up being confusing as hell and tended to take place somewhere other than the comic it was released after. There is a huge event in here that is impossible to sum up succinctly. Loki runs around with a disembodied hand (Leah) and an echo of his former self (Ikol).
13Journey into Mystery (1952)1#645Oct 24 2012Dec 2012This is the issue that Agent of Asgard keeps making callbacks to, and why Agent of Asgard makes no sense in a vacuum. The whole of Journey into Mystery is well worth the read, but TL;DR, the bird is the version of Loki that blew up in Siege. The kid is a horcrux. Everything is awful
14Young Avengers (2013)2#1Jan 23 2013Mar 2013At this point, Loki almost completely vanishes from the main title, save the odd appearance here or there. He is once again dead, but in a different sort of way. His previous soul has taken over his new body, but the new body is weak and lacks power. Enter Billy Kaplan. This is still not the Loki currently running around. The whole series is worth a read, but I'm not gonna list it all here.
15Young Avengers (2013)2#11Oct 23 2013Dec 2013Loki ages up in this issue, but is still not the Loki currently running around. Soon. Ish. I promise. Agent of Asgard starts immediately following this series' final issue.
16Ms Marvel (2014)3#12Feb 18 2015Apr 2015This issue takes place before AoA #10. It's kind of a goofy one, but Loki starts showing up in a lot of random books once AoA is over, and that's important later.
17Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)1#8Aug 12 2015Oct 2015Also takes place before AoA #10. This is a very brief appearance by Loki, but it becomes absolutely vital that Loki starts making a few more friends who actually like him.
18Mighty Thor (2016)3#2Dec 16 2015Feb 2016This is where stuff gets weird again. There's a lot that's been left out, because this isn't meant to be a comprehensive list. (If you want that, go to the main list and search for Loki; you'll get everything). But this is another area that got very confusing for some people, so here's another quick and dirty TL;DR: Loki is playing the double agent through this entire thing. He's joining the bad guys so that he can counter their plans by covertly building up allies from outside of Norse titles. I'm mostly going to be focusing on those, and will have a full, comprehensive list for War of the Realms soon. This entire arc is worth reading on its own, but it is very much Jane's story, with Loki popping in and out to play his scripted role.
19Ms Marvel (2016)4#6Apr 27 2016Jun 2016All of these appearances in other people's books are completely at odds with what Loki's doing in the main Thor title. It's meant to be a little jarring and confusing, because of what he's doing. We're actually going to see him getting pretty decent at the "hero" thing, which is impressive considering the amount of apparent murder going on in the main story.
20Doctor Strange (1968)1#381Nov 15 2017Jan 2018Wonky numbering strikes again. It may be listed as (2015) in some apps. TL;DR Background: Magic has a cost, and Strange didn't pay the bill. Because of reasons that totally make sense, this attracted the Empirikul, a science cult bent on destroying all magic and martyring the Sorcerer Supreme across all dimensions. Strange defeated the Empirikul by killing the Dragon Lines (the force that binds Yggdrasil and runs magic through the realms) and using their power as a battery. With a war on the horizon, Midgard without magic is very bad. Obviously, Strange cannot be trusted.
21Doctor Strange (1968)1#382Dec 6 2017Feb 2018
22Doctor Strange (1968)1#383Dec 20 2017Feb 2018
23Doctor Strange (1968)1#384Jan 17 2018Mar 2018
24Doctor Strange (1968)1#385Feb 14 2018Apr 2018
25Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#27Dec 13 2017Feb 2018Sorcerer Supreme Loki and Squirrel Girl team up properly this time. Her comics are always a delight.
26Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#28Jan 10 2018Mar 2018
27Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#29Feb 14 2018Apr 2018
28Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#30Mar 14 2018May 2018
29Amazing Spider-Man (1963)1#795Feb 7 2018Apr 2018More wonky numbering. Some apps may list it as (2015). Loki continues his shenanigans as the Sorcerer Supreme.
30Free Comic Book Day (Avengers) (2018)1#1May 5 2018May 2018Prelude to Avengers. It's released after #1 because reasons.
31Avengers (2018)8#1May 2 2018Jul 2018This is a delightfully meta callback to Avengers #1, only this time instead of the Avengers forming as a consequence of his stupidity, forming the Avengers is the plan. A lot's happened, the band broke up (like the Beatles), and that war is getting desperately close. So Loki plays his role as the villain to gaslight and manipulate the heroes into doing hero stuff.
32Avengers (2018)8#2May 16 2018Jul 2018
33Avengers (2018)8#3Jun 20 2018Aug 2018
34Avengers (2018)8#4Jul 4 2018Sep 2018
35Avengers (2018)8#5Jul 18 2018Sep 2018
36Avengers (2018)8#6Aug 22 2018Oct 2018
37War of the Realms (2019)1#1Apr 3 2019Jun 2019Oh guess what. He's dead again.
38Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#43Apr 10 2019Jun 2019This issue happens at the same time as War of the Realms #1, and shows what Loki is up to right before the whole ordeal that happens.
39War of the Realms (2019)1#6Jun 26 2019Aug 2019So, this one is gross.
40War of the Realms Omega (2019)1#1Jul 10 2019Sep 2019A quick bridge between stories.
41Loki (2019)3#1Jul 17 2019Sep 2019This series is unbelievably confusing and convoluted, but I'm including it because it was obviously trying to set something up. It tried to build a mystery by starting the story in the middle and going back and forth through the narrative, but all it accomplished was being a mess. It's a cute read, but don't expect it to make a whole lot of sense. TL;DR: Loki is king of Jotunheim and he hates it. It's tedious and boring, and he keeps leaving Drrf in charge while he goes back to Midgard to hang out in illegal sky casinos and get wasted. Thor gets fed up with this, and lets him in on a bizarre meta secret that made for funny jokes, but doesn't really work if you think about it too hard. Loki makes a deal to become the God of Stories, with a few promises and caveats. Also, he flat out murders Nightmare in the dumbest way, and goes on another weird adventure with Wolverine, where they are both cowboys. The series got cancelled after five issues, presumably because nobody could understand what was going on. I've included it because all that nonsense is extremely relevant in the current Thor series.
42Thor (2020)6#1Jan 1 2020Mar 2020Where Loki's series fits in relation to this issue is a mystery. Because even though it was released before this issue, it very clearly takes place after. Thor is still very angry with Loki over that whole war thing, and Loki isn't even pretending to try when it comes to being king. This entire run has been very good and I highly recommend the whole thing.
43Thor (2020)6#9Nov 4 2020Jan 2021If I had to guess, Loki's series takes place somewhere before this issue. At this point, Thor has significantly warmed up to Loki, which is odd since Loki wasn't even here for seven issues. But this is the bit where Loki's series becomes relevant.
44Thor (2020)6#14Apr 14 2021Jun 2021One of the promises made in Loki's series has been fulfilled at this point. He is no longer the God of Lies.
45Thor (2020)6#20Jan 5 2022Mar 2022Loki does not play a significant part in this issue, but it's also one of the first times we see him taking his role as king seriously, and playing an active part in realm politics.
46Thor (2020)6#24Apr 27 2022Jun 2022This is the 60th Anniversary issue. Loki plays a rather touching role in the main story, and has his own story that leads into a new series. The side story is cute, but the main one is the one I liked better, because it does show that he and Thor have finally seemed to repair their relationship and can move the hell on with their lives.
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MCU Tie-Ins

All those comics that deal with the MCU, and have nothing to do with anything else.

Last Updated: Jul 8 2022


📵 – Not available on Marvel Unlimited
💥 – Recommended starting points
✨ – Core/Recommended reading
⚡ – Thor-related titles
📱 – Marvel Unlimited exclusive

#TitleVolumeIssueRelease DateCover DateCharactersNotes
1Marvel: The Avengers Prelude: Fury's Big Week (2012)1#1Mar 7 2012Apr 2012
2Marvel: The Avengers Prelude: Fury's Big Week (2012)1#2Mar 21 2012May 2012
3Marvel: The Avengers Prelude: Fury's Big Week (2012)1#3Apr 4 2012Jun 2012
4Marvel: The Avengers Prelude: Fury's Big Week (2012)1#4Apr 18 2012Jun 2012
5Marvel: The Avengers: Black Widow Strikes (2012)1#1May 2 2012Jul 2012
6Marvel: The Avengers: Black Widow Strikes (2012)1#3Jun 6 2012Aug 2012
7Marvel's Thor Adaptation (2013) ⚡1#1Jan 16 2013Mar 2013
8Marvel's Iron Man 3 Prelude (2013)1#2Feb 6 2013Apr 2013
9Marvel's Thor Adaptation (2013) ⚡1#2Feb 20 2013Apr 2013
10Marvel's Thor: The Dark World Prelude (2013) ⚡1#1Jun 5 2013Aug 2013
11Marvel's Thor: The Dark World Prelude (2013) ⚡1#2Jul 10 2013Aug 2013
12Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy Prequel Infinite Comic (2014)1#1Apr 2 2014Apr 2014
13Marvel's The Avengers (2015)1#1Dec 24 2014Feb 2015
14Marvel's The Avengers (2015)1#2Jan 7 2015Mar 2015
15Avengers: Age of Ultron Prelude: This Scepter'd Isle Infinite Comic (2015)1#1Feb 3 2015May 2015
16Marvel's Thor: Ragnarok Prelude (2017) ⚡1#1Jul 5 2017Sep 2017Despite being a Thor title, no Thor characters are present in this issue
17Marvel's Thor: Ragnarok Prelude (2017) ⚡1#2Jul 19 2017Sep 2017Despite being a Thor title, no Thor characters are present in this issue
18Marvel's Thor: Ragnarok Prelude (2017) ⚡1#3Aug 2 2017Oct 2017
19Marvel's Thor: Ragnarok Prelude (2017) ⚡1#4Aug 16 2017Oct 2017
20Marvel's Avengers: Infinity War Prelude (2018)1#1Jan 24 2018Mar 2018
21Marvel's Avengers: Infinity War Prelude (2018)1#2Feb 28 2018Apr 2018
22Marvel's Captain Marvel Prelude (2019)1#1Nov 14 2018Jan 2019
23Marvel's Avengers: Untitled Prelude (2019)1#1Dec 5 2018Feb 2019
24Marvel's Avengers: Endgame Prelude (2019)1#2Jan 9 2019Mar 2019Presumably, issue #1 is that untitled prelude
25Marvel's Avengers: Endgame Prelude (2019)1#3Feb 20 2019Apr 2019
26Marvel's Black Widow Prelude (2020)1#1Feb 19 2020Apr 2020
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Loki Primer for New Readers

A note on the choices I made while curating this list.

Because Loki’s story is so convoluted, I’m going to break it down into mostly chronological chunks.  Because of that, this list starts on two very intense notes.  I always like to start with Ragnarok, back in 2004, but it’s not wholly necessary and you can skip of it and come back later if you like.  Marvel wanted to reboot the lore, and had a convenient way to do that baked in, so they went balls to the wall insanity with it as a send off.  This is the arc where Thor gouges his own eyes out and literally rips Loki’s head off.  Which are both presented in a way that are just as horrific as you’d expect, and absolutely hilarious at the same time.

After Ragnarok, the main title took a break for a few years, while Marvel tinkered and puttered around with new directions to go.  It came back with J Michael Straczynski doing intentionally what Wonder Woman 84 accidentally did.  Loki’s arc in this is extremely uncomfortable by design, and for some reason Marvel have forgotten what this arc is about, and likes to use it to promote his queerness.  It’s an extremely violent arc, in which he steals Sif’s body, wears it for his own, and is just overall a nasty, disgusting creep.

Yes, these are spoilers, but I’ve seen people go into this arc expecting it to be about Loki’s gender identity, and getting slapped in the face by how poorly represented this arc is both online and by Marvel itself.

If that is not for you, I understand.  I’ll mark out the issue where that arc stops and Loki goes back to garden variety mass murder and war crimes.

There is a very good reason Marvel went absolutely ridiculous with him after the reboot, and it’s one Marvel have even addressed somewhat directly in the 2022 Pride issue: the Comics Code Authority.  Marvel were the first major publisher to realise the CCA were a scam, and stopped submitting their comics for approval in 2001.  If you ever look at older comics, you’ll notice a little white stamp up in the corner on the cover, which says “Approved by the Comics Code Authority.”  This was an independent censor board that laid out very clear and restrictive rules on how characters were allowed to behave.  Being any flavour of queer was all the way out for the vast majority of the CCA’s existence.  There were also a lot of things comics couldn’t depict, both for how villainous a villain could be, and in how a hero was allowed to respond.

Thor ripping his brother’s head off and then wearing it on his belt was probably a big no-no, had Marvel submitted that issue to the CCA.  The entire era leading up to Siege, and the creation of Ultimate Marvel, was a coordinated effort to see how far Marvel could push and break characters, tropes, and narratives (if you don’t know about Ultimates, that’s the one where Loki is a wholeass swastika-wearing Nazi, Hulk is a rape monster, and Miles Morales’ black father is named after the confederate president.  I will not be recommending any Ultimates titles on this list).

Once the CCA became defunct, Marvel chilled all the way out in its defiance of it, and that’s when Loki as a character got rebooted again and became the goofy weirdo he is now.  But I am including those arcs before the reboot because they are important to understanding why the rebooted version is the way he is, and does the things he does, because those things have not been forgotten in-universe.  They still happened.  He’s still the villain.  He’s just trying very hard not to be.


This list is very big, and yet not at all comprehensive.  I’ve left a lot out for a variety of reasons.  Some arcs are simply too enormous to even try to break down in an accessible way, while others are wholly irrelevant and have little to do with the continuity.  If you would like to see everything Loki has been in, you can go to any of the other lists and search for him.

📵 – Not available on Marvel Unlimited
💥 – Recommended starting points
✨ – Core/Recommended reading
📱 – Marvel Unlimited exclusive

#TitleVolumeIssueRelease DateCover DateNotes
1Thor: Season One (2013)1#1Oct 2 2013Dec 2013This is a weird one that I absolutely love. It's main continuity, but also really, really not. It's a primer for the lore, quickly establishing who the main players are and what makes the world turn. Don't look for a Season Two, because there isn't one. This is part of an ongoing process by Marvel to make it as difficult as possible to get into comics. I'm putting this one right here at the top because if you read this one, you don't have to slog through all those Silver Age comics that can make you want to claw your eyes out from silted dialogue and bizarre art. This is more about the overall lore, and less about the characters, but it's still a fantastic place to start.
2Thor (1998)2#80Aug 2004This starts Ragnarok, which is balls to the wall insanity. The main Thor title stopped for a few years after this while Marvel took a step back and fiddled with a bunch of different ways to reboot the lore. Some of those, I've listed below. I can't find solid release info for this run, but the Marvel apps tend to default to the cover date anyway.
3Thor (1998)2#81Aug 2004
4Thor (1998)2#82Sep 2004
5Thor (1998)2#83Oct 2004
6Thor (1998)2#84Nov 2004
7Thor (1998)2#85Dec 2004
8Thor (2007)3#1Jul 5 2007Sep 2007After the break, Marvel came back with this run. I recommended reading Ragnarok before, because this run is a direct result. If Ragnarok seems a bit too intense for you, just know that it happened, was brutal, and it was supposed to be the end of all suffering. So there's a certain irony in this run even existing at all, which is the entire point of it. It's very self-aware about the fact that it's picking up after the entire world was ended.
9Thor (2007)3#2Aug 1 2007Oct 2007
10Thor (2007)3#3Sep 12 2007Nov 2007
11Thor (2007)3#4Nov 14 2007Dec 2007
12Thor (2007)3#5Dec 28 2007Jan 2008This is where things start to get sticky. It's the infamous "Lady Loki" arc, and whatever you've heard about it from Tumblr, throw it all out the window. This arc is Loki at his absolute most depraved. It has nothing to do with his sexuality or gender, although he may have learned some things about himself during this arc. This is the arc where he steals Sif's body and parades it around half-naked because he can.
13Thor (2007)3#6Feb 27 2008Feb 2008
14Thor (2007)3#7Mar 19 2008May 2008
15Thor (2007)3#8Apr 23 2008Jun 2008
16Thor (2007)3#9May 29 2008Jul 2008
17Thor (2007)3#10Jul 30 2008Sep 2008
18Thor (2007)3#11Oct 29 2008Nov 2008
19Thor (2007)3#12Dec 24 2008Jan 2009
20Thor (1966)1#600Feb 11 2009Apr 2009After #12, volume 3 was re-numbered to 600 and slots back into volume 1. It picks up the exact same story, but the numbering is different. I don't know why they do this.
21Thor (1966)1#601Apr 22 2009Jun 2009
22Thor (1966)1#602Jun 24 2009Aug 2009This issue ends the "Lady Loki" arc. If you want to start here, and avoid the previous two arcs, here's a spoliery TL;DR for what you need to know: Thor realised that stopping Ragnarok would only cause more pain and suffering. Similarly, allowing the rebirth cycle to happen was equally as bad, so instead he ended the wholeass world. He had to ensure Ragnarok happened and that everything die and stayed dead forever. This was too much even for Loki, but Loki didn't have a say. Everyone died. Thor's soul was flying through the void for a few years, until he got bored I guess and willed himself back to existence and raised Asgard in the middle of Oklahoma because reasons?? He slowly began seeking out other souls that had been reincarnated, but trapped in human vessels, and restoring them one by one to avoid restoring his shithead brother and all his villain friends. But when he couldn't find Sif, he resurrected the whole lot. Curiuously, Sif was still absent, and Loki was restored as a woman. During this time, Loki allied with Doctor Doom in a plan to get the Asgardians to move from Oklahoma to Latveria. He also went back in time to make sure Odin kidnapped him as a child. When he did this, he had to give the body he was wearing to Hela for safekeeping, who recognised it as Sif, revealing that he's been going around wearing her skin, while her soul has remained trapped in the body of an old woman dying of cancer. Loki let this go on for a little while longer, before conveniently "figuring it out" and going to Don Blake for help, so that he could be restored to his true form as a trustworthy ally who would not be suspected of trying to murder everyone all over again.
23Thor (1966)1#603Sep 30 2009Nov 2009
24Thor Giant-Size Finale (2009)1#1Nov 25 2009Jan 2010This directly follows Vol 1 #603, and wraps up that bit of the story before leading into Siege.
25Thor (1966)1#604Dec 3 2009Feb 2010
26Thor (1966)1#605Dec 23 2009Feb 2010
27Siege (2010)1#1Jan 6 2010Mar 2010This is a four-part series that concludes all of the above. There were a lot of moving parts that I haven't included on this list, but which will be fully-compiled in the dedicated list for the event.
28Thor (1966)1#606Jan 27 2010Mar 2010
29Siege (2010)1#2Feb 3 2010Apr 2010
30Thor (1966)1#607Feb 24 2010Apr 2010This begins Siege, which was an entire ordeal that encompassed almost every facet of the Marvel Universe. I am compiling a full list for this event elsewhere, if you would like to read the whole thing. Otherwise, you should be able to follow this story with minimal confusion with the issues listed here.
31Siege (2010)1#3Mar 17 2010May 2010
32Thor (1966)1#608Mar 24 2010May 2010
33Siege: Loki (2010)1#1Apr 14 2010Jun 2010This is the issue where all of Loki's plans are finally revealed in full.
34Thor (1966)1#609Apr 28 2010Jun 2010
35Siege (2010)1#4May 12 2010Jun 2010Loki dies in this issue. It's actually kind of horrific, even though he deserves it.
36Thor (1966)1#617Nov 10 2010Jan 2011The series goes on without Loki for a while, cuz well. He dead. But then Thor gets a big sad again and decides that he misses his brother, and decides to go out and find him again. This begins the "Kid Loki" era, which is still not the same Loki that is running around today. But we'll get to that soon.
37Thor (1966)1#618Dec 8 2010Feb 2011
38Thor (1966)1#619Jan 19 2011Mar 2011
39Thor (1966)1#620Feb 23 2011Apr 2011
40Thor (1966)1#620.1Mar 23 2011May 2011This is a "Point One" issue, which for a while were being used as unofficial starting points in order to avoid launching a new volume. Unfortunately for Marvel, they wound up being confusing as hell and tended to take place somewhere other than the comic it was released after.
41Thor (1966)1#621Mar 30 2011May 2011Inexplicably, the series was renamed BACK to Journey into Mystery after this. Marvel were just going all out of their way to confuse and alienate readers at this point.
42Journey into Mystery (1952)1#622Apr 12 2011Jun 2011Okay, buckle up, because this is the stuff I deliberately excluded from the new reader primer. This is the point where Marvel desperately wanted to start attracting new readers coming in from the MCU, but instead of like, idk. Releasing annuals and checklists, they started doing all these weird reboots and Point Ones and Point Nows that only made it more difficult to get into. For a while, you can read Journey into Mystery and Mighty Thor separately. Once Everything Burns starts, they need to be read in tandem, or else you lose half the plot.
43Journey into Mystery (1952)1#623May 11 2011Jul 2011
44Journey into Mystery (1952)1#624Jun 8 2011Aug 2011
45Journey into Mystery (1952)1#625Jul 13 2011Sep 2011
46Journey into Mystery (1952)1#626Aug 17 2011Oct 2011
47Journey into Mystery (1952)1#626.1Aug 31 2011Oct 2011Another Point One. This issue actually takes place during #622, between panels 4 and 5 on Page 21. Why is it this specific? I have no idea. But that's where it goes.
48Journey into Mystery (1952)1#627Sep 14 2011Nov 2011
49Journey into Mystery (1952)1#628Sep 28 2011Nov 2011
50Journey into Mystery (1952)1#629Oct 19 2011Dec 2011
51Journey into Mystery (1952)1#630Oct 26 2011Dec 2011
52Journey into Mystery (1952)1#631Nov 9 2011Jan 2012
53Journey into Mystery (1952)1#632Dec 14 2011Feb 2012
54Journey into Mystery (1952)1#633Jan 11 2012Mar 2012
55Journey into Mystery (1952)1#634Feb 8 2012Apr 2012
56Journey into Mystery (1952)1#635Mar 14 2012May 2012
57Journey into Mystery (1952)1#636Apr 11 2012Jun 2012
58Journey into Mystery (1952)1#637May 9 2012Jul 2012
59Journey into Mystery (1952)1#638May 23 2012Jul 2012
60Journey into Mystery (1952)1#639Jun 6 2012Aug 2012
61Journey into Mystery (1952)1#640Jun 20 2012Aug 2012
62Journey into Mystery (1952)1#641Jul 18 2012Sep 2012
63Mighty Thor (2011)2#1Apr 27 2011Jun 2011Why is this Mighty Thor, and not Thor? I don't know. Why did Thor branch off to JiM, only to pick up immediately in Mighty Thor anyway? I don't know that either. The only good thing about this was that if you were following this story as it was released, you got two comics each month, instead of just one. Not that it's at all relevant now. Now it's just confusing as hell for no reason.
64Mighty Thor (2011)2#2May 25 2011Jul 2011
65Mighty Thor (2011)2#3Jun 22 2011Aug 2011
66Mighty Thor (2011)2#4Jul 27 2011Sep 2011
67Mighty Thor (2011)2#5Aug 31 2011Oct 2011
68Mighty Thor (2011)2#6Sep 28 2011Nov 2011
69Mighty Thor (2011)2#7Oct 26 2011Dec 2011Loki isn't actually in this issue, but it's relevant to the plot and explains who the big bad coming up is.
70Mighty Thor (2011)2#8Nov 23 2011Jan 2012
71Mighty Thor (2011)2#9Dec 28 2011Feb 2012
72Mighty Thor (2011)2#10Jan 25 2012Mar 2012
73Mighty Thor (2011)2#11Feb 22 2012Apr 2012
74Mighty Thor (2011)2#12Mar 28 2012May 2012
75Mighty Thor (2011)2#12.1Apr 11 2012Jun 2012Another Point One. It's kind of a flashback, kind of not.
76Mighty Thor (2011)2#18Aug 8 2012Oct 2012Loki was absent for the previous arc. It's still worth reading, but not listed here for obvious reasons. Up until this point, Thor and Journey into Mystery could be read separately. Going forward, the story spans both titles, requiring you to bounce between the two.
77Journey into Mystery (1952)1#642Aug 29 2012Oct 2012
78Mighty Thor (2011)2#19Sep 5 2012Nov 2012
79Journey into Mystery (1952)1#643Sep 12 2012Nov 2012
80Mighty Thor (2011)2#20Sep 19 2012Nov 2012
81Journey into Mystery (1952)1#644Sep 26 2012Nov 2012
82Mighty Thor (2011)2#21Oct 17 2012Dec 2012
83Journey into Mystery (1952)1#645Oct 24 2012Dec 2012
84Mighty Thor (2011)2#22Oct 31 2012Dec 2012
85Young Avengers (2013)2#1Jan 23 2013Mar 2013At this point, Loki almost completely vanishes from the main title, save the odd appearance here or there. He is once again dead, but in a different sort of way. His previous soul has taken over his new body, but the new body is weak and lacks power. Enter Billy Kaplan. This is still not the Loki currently running around.
86Young Avengers (2013)2#2Feb 27 2013Apr 2013
87Young Avengers (2013)2#3Mar 27 2013May 2013
88Young Avengers (2013)2#4Apr 24 2013Jun 2013
89Young Avengers (2013)2#5May 22 2013Jul 2013
90Young Avengers (2013)2#6Jun 26 2013Aug 2013
91Young Avengers (2013)2#7Jul 10 2013Sep 2013
92Young Avengers (2013)2#8Jul 24 2013Sep 2013
93Young Avengers (2013)2#9Aug 28 2013Oct 2013
94Young Avengers (2013)2#10Sep 25 2013Nov 2013
95Young Avengers (2013)2#11Oct 23 2013Dec 2013Loki ages up in this issue, but is still not the Loki currently running around. Soon. Ish. I promise.
96Young Avengers (2013)2#12Nov 20 2013Jan 2014
97Young Avengers (2013)2#13Dec 4 2013Feb 2014
98Young Avengers (2013)2#14Dec 18 2013Feb 2014
99Young Avengers (2013)2#15Jan 8 2014Mar 2014
100Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#1Feb 4 2014Apr 2014This is the arc a lot of people like to rec to start with, because it was very popular and it has Loki's name in the title. If you really want to start here, some spoilery TL;DR: Yes, Asgard is in Oklahoma. Yes, it makes sense. It's been there since 2007. Just roll with it. Yes, Loki writes fanfiction. He's been chronically online for years, and apparently has a very popular Instagram account as well. Just roll with it. The Avengers don't like him because a few years ago he did a big war crime, and then exploded. That's a thing that happened, and nobody's over it. He also murdered a little boy fairly recently. That little boy was himself, and this is not a metaphor. This is also not actually Loki, except it is. It's a horcrux named Ikol who possessed Loki's body after murdering him. He's managed to keep this secret for about a year at this point, and managed to do this whole nasty thing through a deal with Hela and Mephisto which means that when he dies, his soul does not move on to an afterlife, making him more immortal than all the other gods, as long as he can find another body to possess before getting eaten by a Dísir.
101Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#2Mar 5 2014May 2014
102Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#3Apr 2 2014Jun 2014
103Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#4May 7 2014Jul 2014
104Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#5Jun 4 2014Aug 2014
105Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#6Sep 24 2014Nov 2014
106Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#7Oct 15 2014Dec 2014
107Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#8Nov 19 2014Jan 2015
108Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#9Dec 24 2015Feb 2015
109Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#10Jan 21 2015Mar 2015
110Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#11Feb 18 2015Apr 2015
111Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#12Mar 18 2015May 2015
112Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#13Apr 15 2015Jun 2015Loki has once again blown up. He has gone and died right in the middle of his own comic.
113Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#14May 20 2015Jul 2015There is an eight-month gap between the previous issue and this one. Which means he's been dead for eight months, and has presumably murdered someone else and stolen their body. Based on some dialogue in Vote Loki, we can presume this mystery person was from Maryland. I've not listed Vote Loki because while it happened, it really isn't relevant to anything, and in a lot of unfortuante ways undoes the character development achieved in Agent of Asgard. By all reconing, this greasy little gremlin is the Loki we see in the current comics.
114Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#15Jun 24 2015Aug 2015
115Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#16Jul 22 2015Sep 2015
116Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)1#17Aug 19 2015Oct 2015
117Ms Marvel (2014)3#12Feb 18 2015Apr 2015This issue takes place before AoA #10. It's kind of a goofy one, but Loki starts showing up in a lot of random books once AoA is over, and that's important later.
118Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)1#8Aug 12 2015Oct 2015Also takes place before AoA #10. This is a very brief appearance by Loki, but it becomes absolutely vital that Loki starts making a few more friends who actually like him.
119Mighty Thor (2016)3#2Dec 16 2015Feb 2016This is where stuff gets weird again. There's a lot that's been left out, because this isn't meant to be a comprehensive list. (If you want that, go to the main list and search for Loki; you'll get everything). But this is another area that got very confusing for some people, so here's another quick and dirty TL;DR: Loki is playing the double agent through this entire thing. He's joining the bad guys so that he can counter their plans by covertly building up allies from outside of Norse titles. I'm mostly going to be focusing on those, and will have a full, comprehensive list for War of the Realms soon. This entire arc is worth reading on its own, but it is very much Jane's story, with Loki popping in and out to play his scripted role.
120Ms Marvel (2016)4#6Apr 27 2016Jun 2016All of these appearances in other people's books are completely at odds with what Loki's doing in the main Thor title. It's meant to be a little jarring and confusing, because of what he's doing. We're actually going to see him getting pretty decent at the "hero" thing, which is impressive considering the amount of apparent murder going on in the main story.
121Doctor Strange (1968)1#381Nov 15 2017Jan 2018Wonky numbering strikes again. It may be listed as (2015) in some apps. TL;DR Background: Magic has a cost, and Strange didn't pay the bill. Because of reasons that totally make sense, this attracted the Empirikul, a science cult bent on destroying all magic and martyring the Sorcerer Supreme across all dimensions. Strange defeated the Empirikul by killing the Dragon Lines (the force that binds Yggdrasil and runs magic through the realms) and using their power as a battery. With a war on the horizon, Midgard without magic is very bad. Obviously, Strange cannot be trusted.
122Doctor Strange (1968)1#382Dec 6 2017Feb 2018
123Doctor Strange (1968)1#383Dec 20 2017Feb 2018
124Doctor Strange (1968)1#384Jan 17 2018Mar 2018
125Doctor Strange (1968)1#385Feb 14 2018Apr 2018
126Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#27Dec 13 2017Feb 2018Sorcerer Supreme Loki and Squirrel Girl team up properly this time. Her comics are always a delight.
127Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#28Jan 10 2018Mar 2018
128Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#29Feb 14 2018Apr 2018
129Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#30Mar 14 2018May 2018
130Amazing Spider-Man (1963)1#795Feb 7 2018Apr 2018More wonky numbering. Some apps may list it as (2015). Loki continues his shenanigans as the Sorcerer Supreme.
131Free Comic Book Day (Avengers) (2018)1#1May 5 2018May 2018Prelude to Avengers. It's released after #1 because reasons.
132Avengers (2018)8#1May 2 2018Jul 2018This is a delightfully meta callback to Avengers #1, only this time instead of the Avengers forming as a consequence of his stupidity, forming the Avengers is the plan. A lot's happened, the band broke up (like the Beatles), and that war is getting desperately close. So Loki plays his role as the villain to gaslight and manipulate the heroes into doing hero stuff.
133Avengers (2018)8#2May 16 2018Jul 2018
134Avengers (2018)8#3Jun 20 2018Aug 2018
135Avengers (2018)8#4Jul 4 2018Sep 2018
136Avengers (2018)8#5Jul 18 2018Sep 2018
137Avengers (2018)8#6Aug 22 2018Oct 2018
138Thor (2018)5#1Jun 13 2018Aug 2018I'm going to break this series up a little bit, because it does need to be read in a certain order along with something else. At this point, there are about two or three people who know what Loki is doing. Thor is not one of them.
139Thor (2018)5#2Jun 27 2018Aug 2018
140Thor (2018)5#3Jul 18 2018Sep 2018
141Thor (2018)5#4Aug 15 2018Oct 2018This issue branches off to several different titles. One of them is Asgardians of the Galaxy, which is very fun, but not listed here for reasons. It has a phantom Kid Loki, and his older sister Angela, who was introduced in another thing I didn't list here, but which you can find elsewhere.
142Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019)1#1Feb 20 2019Apr 2019While Marvel were neck-deep in this enormous war, someone decided that they also needed to do Infinity Stones to tie the comics to the movies. What happened was the weirdest arc which I am not listing here because it's enormous. Gamora gathers the stones, there's another universe where Loki is the hero in Thor's place, and 616 Loki picks a fight with a Celestial and gets squished. However, continuing in the theme of showing all of the friends Loki is making before the Main Event, here's that time he and Wolverine went on a drunken space bender and fought the TVA together. The series itself was released overlapping with War of the Realms, but the whole thing happens before the war
143Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019)1#2Mar 20 2019May 2019
144Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019)1#3Apr 17 2019Jun 2019
145Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019)1#4May 22 2019Jul 2019
146Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019)1#5Jun 19 2019Aug 2019
147Thor (2018)5#11Mar 20 2019May 2019
148War of the Realms (2019)1#1Apr 3 2019Jun 2019Oh guess what. He's dead again.
149Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015)2#43Apr 10 2019Jun 2019This issue happens at the same time as War of the Realms #1, and shows what Loki is up to right before the whole ordeal that happens.
150Thor (2018)5#12Apr 17 2019Jun 2019
151War of the Realms (2019)1#6Jun 26 2019Aug 2019So, this one is gross.
152War of the Realms Omega (2019)1#1Jul 10 2019Sep 2019
153Thor (2018)5#15Jul 10 2019Sep 2019
154Thor (2018)5#16Aug 28 2019Oct 2019
155Loki (2019)3#1Jul 17 2019Sep 2019This series is unbelievably confusing and convoluted. It tried to build a mystery by starting the story in the middle and going back and forth through the narrative, but all it accomplished was being a mess. It's a cute read, but don't expect it to make a whole lot of sense. TL;DR: Loki is king of Jotunheim and he hates it. It's tedious and boring, and he keeps leaving Drrf in charge while he goes back to Midgard to hang out in illegal sky casinos and get wasted. Thor gets fed up with this, and lets him in on a bizarre meta secret that made for funny jokes, but doesn't really work if you think about it too hard. Loki makes a deal to become the God of Stories, with a few promises and caveats. Also, he flat out murders Nightmare in the dumbest way, and goes on another weird adventure with Wolverine, where they are both cowboys. The series got cancelled after five issues, presumably because nobody could understand what was going on. I've included it because all that nonsense is extremely relevant in the current Thor series.
156Loki (2019)3#2Aug 14 2019Oct 2019
157Loki (2019)3#3Sep 11 2019Nov 2019
158Loki (2019)3#4Oct 9 2019Dec 2019
159Loki (2019)3#5Nov 20 2019Jan 2020
160Thor (2020)6#1Jan 1 2020Mar 2020Where Loki's series fits in relation to this issue is a mystery. Because even though it was released before this issue, it very clearly takes place after. Thor is still very angry with Loki over that whole war thing, and Loki isn't even pretending to try when it comes to being king. This entire run has been very good and I highly recommend the whole thing.
161Thor (2020)6#9Nov 4 2020Jan 2021If I had to guess, Loki's series takes place somewhere before this issue. At this point, Thor has significantly warmed up to Loki, which is odd since Loki wasn't even here for seven issues. But this is the bit where Loki's series becomes relevant.
162Thor (2020)6#13Mar 17 2021May 2021
163Thor (2020)6#14Apr 14 2021Jun 2021One of the promises made in Loki's series has been fulfilled at this point. He is no longer the God of Lies.
164Thor (2020)6#20Jan 5 2022Mar 2022Loki does not play a significant part in this issue, but it's also one of the first times we see him taking his role as king seriously, and playing an active part in realm politics.
165Thor (2020)6#24Apr 27 2022Jun 2022This is the 60th Anniversary issue. Loki plays a rather touching role in the main story, and has his own story that leads into a new series. The side story is cute, but the main one is the one I liked better, because it does show that he and Thor have finally seemed to repair their relationship and can move the hell on with their lives.
166Loki (2004)1#1Jul 8 2004Sep 2004Sometimes also titled Thor & Loki: Blood Brothers, because it gets confused with the motion comic. This is a short, non-canon series that explores the idea of what would happen to Asgard if Loki won.
167Loki (2004)1#2Jul 21 2004Sep 2004
168Loki (2004)1#3Aug 18 2004Oct 2004
169Loki (2004)1#4Oct 6 2004Nov 2004
170Loki (2010)2#1Oct 20 2010Dec 2010This one is a retelling of some of the more well-known myths surrounding Loki, reframed to fit within the main continuity. It shows how he went from Thor's beloved brother to the biggest problem Asgard has ever faced. This recently got a reprint with Ikol on the cover. It was very weird and I don't know why they did that.
171Loki (2010)2#2Dec 15 2010Feb 2011
172Loki (2010)2#3Feb 16 2011Apr 2011
173Loki (2010)2#4Mar 16 2011May 2011
174What If? Thor (2018)1#1Oct 24 2018Dec 2018Cute little oneshot that takes place outside the main continuity and flips the roles: What if Thor were raised by frost giants?
175Alligator Loki (2022)1OngoingMar 11 2022Mar 2022This is a Marvel Unlimited exclusive that gets a release every couple of weeks (I'll update this list to include all the issues once the series completes). It's completely stupid, and funny as hell, running with one of the stranger parts of the TV show. Loki's an alligator, and he's here to cause chaos. That's all.
« || »

Recommended Reading List

This is my personal recommended reading list for new readers.  This is a collection of my favourite arcs, and what I would consider “core” reading.  You may notice that it is not necessarily in order, and that much of it is within around 10-15 years old.  This is because as a title gets much older than that, it becomes less relevant and can even become an outright chore to read, and the newer stuff is an absolute nightmare to start with.

I like to recommend from around this point in the comics because it’s all fairly straightforward (as much as a Marvel comic can be), and doesn’t require a lot of title hopping to keep up.  Once the main series starts branching off and doing weird things, I suggest going on to some of the other lists and following titles marked with ✨. 

I’ve also included a lot of random little things that don’t have anything to do with anything, but which are very fun, low-stakes reads that aren’t convoluted to all hell.


📵 – Not available on Marvel Unlimited
💥 – Recommended starting points
✨ – Core/Recommended reading
📱 – Marvel Unlimited exclusive

#TitleVolumeIssueRelease DateCover DateNotes
1Thor: Season One (2013)1#1Oct 2 2013Dec 2013This is a weird one that I absolutely love. It's main continuity, but also really, really not. It's a primer for the lore, quickly establishing who the main players are and what makes the world turn. Don't look for a Season Two, because there isn't one. This is part of an ongoing process by Marvel to make it as difficult as possible to get into comics. I'm putting this one right here at the top because if you read this one, you don't have to slog through all those Silver Age comics that can make you want to claw your eyes out from silted dialogue and bizarre art.
2Thor (1966)1#617Nov 10 2010Jan 2011Sometimes this run gets lumped in with vol 3, which is also quite good and elsewhere on this list. I recommend starting here for new readers because this is a quick arc that establishes what the current stuff is doing now.
3Thor (1966)1#618Dec 8 2010Feb 2011
4Thor (1966)1#619Jan 19 2011Mar 2011
5Thor (1966)1#620Feb 23 2011Apr 2011
6Thor (1966)1#620.1Mar 23 2011May 2011This is a "Point One" issue, which for a while were being used as unofficial starting points in order to avoid launching a new volume. Unfortunately for Marvel, they wound up being confusing as hell and tended to take place somewhere other than the comic it was released after.
7Thor (1966)1#621Mar 30 2011May 2011Inexplicably, the series was renamed BACK to Journey into Mystery after this. Marvel were just going all out of their way to confuse and alienate readers at this point.
8Thor (2007)3#1Jul 5 2007Sep 2007Taking a step backwards to what came before. If the Point One, and renaming to JiM weren't confusing enough, volume 3 takes place and was even released before the above volume 1 issues. This run explains why Asgard is in Oklahoma, and why Loki is a small child. It also takes place after Ragnarok, which I've listed below because I highly recommend it, although many people found it very intense.
9Thor (2007)3#2Aug 1 2007Oct 2007
10Thor (2007)3#3Sep 12 2007Nov 2007
11Thor (2007)3#4Nov 14 2007Dec 2007
12Thor (2007)3#5Dec 28 2007Jan 2008This is where things start to get sticky. It's the infamous "Lady Loki" arc, and whatever you've heard about it from Tumblr, throw it all out the window. This arc is Loki at his absolute most depraved. It has nothing to do with his sexuality or gender, although he may have learned some things about himself during this arc. This is the arc where he steals Sif's body and parades it around half-naked because he can.
13Thor (2007)3#6Feb 27 2008Feb 2008
14Thor (2007)3#7Mar 19 2008May 2008
15Thor (2007)3#8Apr 23 2008Jun 2008
16Thor (2007)3#9May 29 2008Jul 2008
17Thor (2007)3#10Jul 30 2008Sep 2008
18Thor (2007)3#11Oct 29 2008Nov 2008
19Thor (2007)3#12Dec 24 2008Jan 2009
20Thor (1966)1#600Feb 11 2009Apr 2009After #12, volume 3 was re-numbered to 600 and slots back into volume 1. It picks up the exact same story, but the numbering is different. I don't know why they do this.
21Thor (1966)1#601Apr 22 2009Jun 2009
22Thor (1966)1#602Jun 24 2009Aug 2009
23Thor (1966)1#603Sep 30 2009Nov 2009
24Thor (1966)1#604Dec 3 2009Feb 2010
25Thor (1966)1#605Dec 23 2009Feb 2010
26Thor (1966)1#606Jan 27 2010Mar 2010
27Thor Giant-Size Finale (2009)1#1Nov 25 2009Jan 2010This directly follows Vol 1 #603, and wraps up that bit of the story before leading into Siege.
28Thor (1966)1#607Feb 24 2010Apr 2010This begins Siege, which was an entire ordeal that encompassed almost every facet of the Marvel Universe. I am compiling a full list for this event elsewhere, if you would like to read the whole thing. Otherwise, you should be able to follow this story with minimal confusion with the issues listed here.
29Thor (1966)1#608Mar 24 2010May 2010
30Thor (1966)1#609Apr 28 2010Jun 2010
31Thor (1966)1#610May 26 2010Jul 2010
32Thor (1966)1#611Jun 30 2010Aug 2010
33Thor (1966)1#612Jul 28 2010Sep 2010
34Thor (1966)1#613Aug 25 2010Oct 2010
35Thor (1966)1#614Sep 8 2010Nov 2010
36Thor (1966)1#615Sep 22 2010Nov 2010
37Thor (1966)1#616Oct 13 2010Dec 2010
38Journey into Mystery (1952)1#646Nov 21 2012Jan 2013After Siege, the main title got obscenely convoluted and has not managed to un-arse itself since. There's a lot of good stuff that comes next, but I can't recommend it to a new reader because the story bounces between two titles at once in the most bizarre way. To follow everything after Siege in order, see the Kid Loki list (Agent of Asgard is absent from this list because it needs Loki's run of Journey into Mystery to understand). Instead, this is a short run that Sif helmed for a while, continuing the ongoing themes of identity and self-worth. It's a very fun, light-hearted romp which unfortunately can't stand on its own too well, and needs all that stuff up there to kind of understand.
39Journey into Mystery (1952)1#647Dec 19 2012Feb 2013
40Journey into Mystery (1952)1#648Jan 20 2013Mar 2013
41Journey into Mystery (1952)1#649Feb 27 2013Apr 2013
42Journey into Mystery (1952)1#650Mar 27 2013May 2013
43Journey into Mystery (1952)1#651Apr 24 2013Jun 2013
44Journey into Mystery (1952)1#652May 22 2013Jul 2013
45Journey into Mystery (1952)1#653Jun 26 2013Aug 2013
46Journey into Mystery (1952)1#654Jul 24 2013Sep 2013
47Journey into Mystery (1952)1#655Aug 28 2013Oct 2013After this point if you would like to continue on with the main continuity, I would recommend either visiting the Siege or Kid Loki reading lists, and following any titles marked with ✨. If you choose to launch into the Current Continuity reading list, here's a spoilery TL;DR: The Loki who got blown up during Siege made a deal with Hela and Mephisto that resulted in his soul not carrying on to an afterlife. He made himself a horcrux of sorts and hid it in a trans-dimensional pocket, which his reincarnated child self found and stuffed into a magpie that didn't really exist, and named it Ikol. Despite not existing, that magpie killed the kid and took over his body. Something went wrong; either enough of the kid survived, or somehow the horcrux was made wrong and Ikol found himself burdened with a big old disgusting conscience loaded with guilt. He stole some powers while on a mad romp with the Young Avengers and aged himself up to a young adult, just in time for another, older version of Loki to start running around and causing problems. Ikol again blows himself up and seemingly reincarnates once more into a greasy chaos gremlin who seems to be the version currently running around today. Also, he's king of Jotunheim, and once ran for President of the USA. War of the Realms was a wholeass acid trip. Read that for more on whatever's going on with Loki.
48Thor (1998)2#80Aug 2004This starts Ragnarok, which is balls to the wall insanity. The main Thor title stopped for a few years after this while Marvel took a step back and fiddled with a bunch of different ways to reboot the lore. Some of those, I've listed below. I can't find solid release info for this run, but the Marvel apps tend to default to the cover date anyway.
49Thor (1998)2#81Aug 2004
50Thor (1998)2#82Sep 2004
51Thor (1998)2#83Oct 2004
52Thor (1998)2#84Nov 2004
53Thor (1998)2#85Dec 2004
54Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#1Nov 14 2012Jan 2013This technically picks up from a run that I didn't list above, but it really has nothing to do with anything that happened before it. Love and Thunder is heavily influenced by this run. The art is gorgeous, the story terrifying, and this run remains one of my favourites.
55Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#2Nov 28 2012Jan 2013
56Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#3Dec 19 2012Feb 2013
57Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#4Jan 9 2013Mar 2013
58Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#5Feb 20 2013Apr 2013
59Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#6Mar 13 2013May 2013
60Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#7Apr 10 2013Jun 2013
61Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#8May 8 2013Jul 2013
62Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#9Jun 12 2013Aug 2013
63Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#10Jul 17 2013Sep 2013
64Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#11Aug 14 2013Oct 2013
65Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#12Aug 28 2013Oct 2013
66Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#13Sep 18 2013Nov 2013
67Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#14Oct 9 2013Dec 2013
68Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#15Nov 13 2013Jan 2014
69Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#16Dec 18 2013Feb 2014
70Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#17Jan 15 2014Mar 2014
71Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#18Jan 29 2014Mar 2014
72Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#19Feb 12 2014Apr 2014
73Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#20Mar 19 2014Mar 2014
74Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#21Apr 16 2014Jun 2014
75Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#22May 7 2014Jul 2014
76Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#23Jun 18 2014Aug 2014
77Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#24Jul 2 2014Sep 2014
78Thor: God of Thunder (2013)1#25Sep 17 2014Nov 2014This issue leads into Jane becoming Thor, which spans multiple runs in the most confusing way possible. For that one, you'll want the War of the Realms list, particularly those marked with ✨. I don't know why Marvel insists on making their comics as difficult to follow as possible.
79Loki (2004)1#1Jul 8 2004Sep 2004Sometimes also titled Thor & Loki: Blood Brothers, because it gets confused with the motion comic. This is a short, non-canon series that explores the idea of what would happen to Asgard if Loki won.
80Loki (2004)1#2Jul 21 2004Sep 2004
81Loki (2004)1#3Aug 18 2004Oct 2004
82Loki (2004)1#4Oct 6 2004Nov 2004
83Loki (2010)2#1Oct 20 2010Dec 2010This one is a retelling of some of the more well-known myths surrounding Loki, reframed to fit within the main continuity. It shows how he went from Thor's beloved brother to the biggest problem Asgard has ever faced. This recently got a reprint with Ikol on the cover. It was very weird and I don't know why they did that.
84Loki (2010)2#2Dec 15 2010Feb 2011
85Loki (2010)2#3Feb 16 2011Apr 2011
86Loki (2010)2#4Mar 16 2011May 2011
87Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#1Jul 8 2010Sep 2010This is another primer for the lore, but done in a very different way that I really like. It takes Don Blake out of the equation entirely and leaves Thor confused and stumbling around very similarly to the way we saw in the first film. This is also notable for being the first time we see Loki being genuinely helpful in his own irritating way, rather than being slotted into the role of the villain.
88Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#2Jul 28 2010Sep 2010
89Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#3Aug 11 2010Oct 2010
90Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#4Sep 9 2010Nov 2010
91Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#5Oct 13 2010Dec 2010
92Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#6Nov 24 2010Jan 2011
93Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#7Dec 8 2010Feb 2011
94Thor: The Mighty Avenger (2010)1#8Jan 12 2011Mar 2011
95What If? Thor (2018)1#1Oct 24 2018Dec 2018Cute little oneshot that takes place outside the main continuity and flips the roles: What if Thor were raised by frost giants?
96Alligator Loki (2022)1OngoingMar 11 2022Mar 2022This is a Marvel Unlimited exclusive that gets a release every couple of weeks (I'll update this list to include all the issues once the series completes). It's completely stupid, and funny as hell, running with one of the stranger parts of the TV show. Loki's an alligator, and he's here to cause chaos. That's all.

There is so, so much more to read after this, but if you’re a brand new to comics, this is where I would suggest starting off before using the other lists to explore different avenues.  If you’re here for Loki, you may have been recced Agent of Asgard, Vote Loki, or the 2019 run, but those are honestly the last places I would suggest starting.  I have not included any of these runs because they are all so complicated and convoluted that even long-time readers had a hard time following some parts without a second or third read.

« || »

Ultimates

The inclusion of Ultimates on this list is not endorsement of this series. I’ve listed everything here for completion’s sake, but I honestly can’t recommend reading any of it unless you’re in the mood to get really angry.


📵 – Not available on Marvel Unlimited
💥 – Recommended starting points
✨ – Core/Recommended reading
📱 – Marvel Unlimited exclusive

TitleIssueRelease DateCharactersNotes
« || »

HeyKinky’s Reading List (Loki’s many deaths)

This list contains the relevant deaths and rebirths and reincarnations, which help explain why Loki’s brain is currently made of Swiss cheese.  There is one other event that happens before all the rest, but it’s not really a death in the true fashion, and it’s contained in issues that are very difficult to find anyway.  Instead, I’ve only included issues available through Marvel Unlimited, because they are overall the easiest to find in general, even without the app.

This list contains a lot of context and build-up, though not the full events for which most of his deaths take place. 

✨ – Denotes issues which can be read to get the minimum context necessary
☠ – Denotes issues where the actual deaths occur

TitleIssueRelease DateNotes
Thor (1998)#80 ✨Aug 2004Disassembled - The Avengers have broken up in the wake of chaos and calamity. Thor goes back to Asgard, where all hell is breaking loose as Ragnarok is upon them.
Thor (1998)#81 ✨Aug 2004
Thor (1998)#82 ✨Sep 2004
Thor (1998)#83 ✨Oct 2004
Thor (1998)#84 ✨Nov 2004
Thor (1998)#85 ☠Dec 2004This one ended the series for quite a while, and is why Thor was not present during Civil War. There wasn't another main continuity Thor title until 2007.
Thor (2007)#1 ✨Jul 5 2007This starts the Straczynski run, which is widely regarded as one of the best. This also begins the very slow lead-up to Siege, for which I will eventually make a full list containing all the moving parts within and without Asgardia. I'll include here some of the highlights that help add context to the end of the event. The whole thing is very worth reading.

This is also where Asgard begins to be known as Asgardia, which stuck around until very recently.
Thor (2007)#4Nov 14 2007
Thor (2007)#5 ✨Dec 28 2007The beginning of the infamous "Lady Loki" arc. Again, part of the larger picture that is Siege, and not at all how fandom at large likes to represent this character.
Thor (2007)#6Feb 27 2008Bill and Kelda are kind of the important ones here. They don't directly play a role in what's to come, but their presence is part of a larger scheme.
Thor (2007)#12Dec 24 2008The retcon and the reveal. Loki is up to several layers of shady shit.
Thor (1966)#600Feb 11 2009Jumps from vol 3 back to vol 1. idk why. Continues from the previous issue to finalise part of Loki's plan.
Thor (1966)#601 ✨Apr 22 2009
Thor (1966)#602 ✨Jun 24 2009
New Avengers (2005)#56 ✨Aug 26 2009The Norn Stones enter the equation. Similar to the Infinity Stones, but from Asgard, basically.
New Avengers (2005)#57 ✨Sep 23 2009
Thor (1966) #603Sep 30 2009
Thor Giant-Size Finale (2010)#1Nov 25 2009Loki's plan is now almost completely in motion
Thor (1966)#604Dec 3 2009The next few issues are direct aftermath of the finale, and all take place in rapid succession. This whole thing isn't directly related to Siege and what follows, but it sets a mood concerning gods living amongst humans
Thor (1966)#605Dec 23 2009
Thor (1966)#606Jan 27 2010Because this all happens so quickly, despite being spread out, there's a lot that happens in other titles in between, some concerning Asgard, some not. Between the Asgardians appearing to align with Doom, and the events of the next item on this list, everything very quickly goes to hell.

The Thor series continues on alongside the Siege events, focusing primarily on his own involvement in everything.
Siege (2010)#1 ✨Jan 6 2010
Siege (2010)#2 ✨Feb 3 2010
Siege (2010)#3 ✨Mar 17 2010
Siege: Loki (2010)#1 ✨Apr 14 2010A flashback, which reveals the final part of Loki's insane plan.
Thor (1966)#609 ✨Apr 28 2010
Siege (2010)#4 ☠May 12 2010Loki has regret.
Thor (1966)#611Jun 30 2010Honestly worth it just for Thor's hilarious eulogy.
Thor (1966)#617 ✨Nov 10 2010Thor misses his brother, and nothing good will come of it. Or, in which that shady deal with Mephisto and Hela has led to a little boy from Paris.
Thor (1966)#618Dec 8 2010
Thor (1966)#619Jan 19 2011Loki's back, everyone knows, nobody's happy about it.
Journey into Mystery (1952)#622 ✨Apr 13 2011The magpies come into play.
Journey into Mystery (1952)#623 ✨May 11 2011
Journey into Mystery (1952)#624Jun 8 2011This is part of something much, much bigger (they usually are), but it's largely irrelevant to this list. I've included this issue only for Leah, who is important to Loki and instrumental in some of his decisions.
Journey into Mystery (1952)#626.1 ✨Aug 31 2011This takes place during #622. Specifically, between panels 4 and 5, on page 21.
Mighty Thor (2011)#18 ✨Aug 8 2011Part of Fraction's run, which is a complete acid trip, and worth reading in its entirety. Starts the Everything Burns arc, which spans both this title, and Journey into Mystery
Journey into Mystery (1952)# 642 ✨Aug 29 2011Leah dies in the preceding issue. Again, the entirety of Loki's run of this title is worth it, but largely irrelevant to this list.
Mighty Thor (2011)#19 ✨Sep 5 2012
Journey into Mystery (1952)# 643 ✨Sep 12 2011
Mighty Thor (2011)#20 ✨Sep 19 2012
Journey into Mystery (1952)# 644 ✨Sep 26 2012
Mighty Thor (2011)#21 ✨Oct 17 2012
Journey into Mystery (1952)#645 ☠Oct 24 2012This is weird, and it took some people several reads to understand. Basically, Ikol (the magpie) was a horcrux; a copy Old Loki made of his own soul as insurance. When the boy reincarnated "wrongly" in his eyes, the copy manipulated him into carrying out a sequence of events which led to the copy being able to kill the boy and immediately possess his body, stealing his work toward redemption, while having his formally evil motives and desires.

The character known as Kid Loki is dead, however his vessel remains. Ikol is also not truly Old Loki, as he's a cheap copy; an imitation made quickly and with sloppy work. While the body still technically remains the same, this is the fourth unique soul to bear the name and title.

It's important to note that nobody knows any of this has happened. It is a secret Ikol alone knows.
Young Avengers (2013)#1Jan 23 2013The problem with taking over the body of a 12 year old boy is that it's the body of a 12 year old boy. This entire run is worth reading, but I'm including it here just to help establish what comes next. TL;DR, Loki becomes a Young Avenger after trying to steal some magic.
Young Avengers (2013)#11 ✨Oct 23 2013Introducing the current character design, and explaining how he aged up to passably adult-ish.
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#1 ✨Feb 5 2014Again, this entire run is extremely worth reading in its entirety. I'm only going to include the relevant issues, concerning King Loki's role in this story (who is not Old Loki, despite a similar character design).

Mobius' joke about throwing a stone and hitting a Loki was very accurate. There are a lot of them, even in 616.
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#3 ✨Apr 2 2014
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#5 ✨Jun 4 2014
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#10 ✨Jan 21 2015
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#11 ✨Feb 18 2015
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#12 ✨Mar 18 2015
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#13 ☠Apr 15 2015The "Ego Death" as it's called. It seems to be a lot more than just that, since he comes back with an entirely new body that seems unfamiliar even to him, as better seen in the next issue.

This new iteration, whilst utterly unhinged and clearly missing half his brain, is the one who seems to the most likely to succeed in bettering himself.
Loki: Agent of Asgard (2014)#14 ✨May 20 2015
War of the Realms (2019)#1 ☠Apr 3 2019There is a LOT to get into here, that's very difficult to condense into a small list. TL;DR: Loki has been playing the double agent ever since the conclusion of Agent of Asgard (possibly longer; the lead-up to this event had been going for about four or five years). He's been playing both sides, feeding Malekith information to gain favour, whilst manipulating Earth's heroes into preparing for a war they don't yet know is coming. This is that war.

Some characters know he's been playing the double agent, and one or two even know whose side he's truly on.
Unbeatable Squirrel Girl vol 2 (2015)#43 ✨Apr 10 2019Includes Loki's perspective of the events in the previous comic.
War of the Realms (2019)#6 ✨Jun 26 2019
Loki (2019)#1 Jul 17 2019This does not strictly lead up to a death, but it it's in a similar vein. Following the events of War of the Realms, Loki is now the King of Jotunheim. He hates it. It is the most boring, awful, tedious thing he has ever done and he would much rather be out getting wasted in illegal sky casinos and bullying high school students.

This is a brief miniseries that begins a quest to actively shed his titles and solidify the new ones he has chosen for himself.

This series happens out of order, just to make things extra confusing for no reason at all.
Loki (2019)#2Aug 14 2019
Loki (2019)#3Sep 11 2019
Loki (2019)#4Oct 9 2019
Loki (2019)#5Nov 20 2019
Thor (2020)#9 ✨Nov 4 2020Continuation of the above. This arc actually has very little to do with Loki directly; Don Blake goes fucking insane and embarks on something uncomfortably close to a genocidal rampage to cleanse the world of all Thors.
Thor (2020)#10Dec 2 2020
Thor (2020)#11Jan 6 2021
Thor (2020)#12Feb 17 2021
Thor (2020)#13Mar 17 2021
Thor (2020)#14 ✨Apr 14 2021Loki has officially shed his titles at this point. He is no longer the God of Lies.
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What-Ifs, Non-Canon, and Weird Things

Side stories and other weird things that do not fit into the main continuity.  This list does not include other long-running continuities, such as Ultimates or MCU tie-ins.  Mostly, you will find What-Ifs, small series, and weird little oneshots where people at Marvel apparently just got bored and wanted to do something silly.

This list is still being assembled using information from Marvel Unlimited and the unofficial fan wiki.  Its contents have not been fully verified, and are subject to change.  Items may get moved to or from this list at a later date.

Last Updated: Jul 8 2022


📵 – Not available on Marvel Unlimited
💥 – Recommended starting points
✨ – Core/Recommended reading
⚡ – Thor-related titles
📱 – Marvel Unlimited exclusive

#TitleVolumeIssueRelease DateCover DateCharactersNotes
1Not Brand Echh (1967)1#3Jul 11 1967Oct 1967
2What If? (1977)#3Mar 22 1977Jun 1977
3What If? (1977)#9Mar 28 1978Jun 1978
4What If? (1977)#10May 23 1978Aug 1978
5What If? (1977)#7Nov 22 1978Feb 1978
6What If? (1977)#25Nov 25 1980Feb 1981
7What If? (1977)#29Jul 21 1981Oct 1981
8What If? (1977)#32Jan 19 1982Apr 1982
9What If? (1977)#34May 18 1982Aug 1982
10What If? (1977)1#47Jul 17 1984Oct 1984
11What If...? (1989)1#4Jun 20 1989Oct 1989
12Excalibur (1988)1#45Oct 1 1991Dec 1991
13Excalibur (1988)1#46Nov 5 1991Jan 1992
14Fantastic Four Annual (1963)1#1998Dec 9 19981998
15Avengers (1998)3#2Jan 28 1998Mar 1998
16Avengers: Forever (1998)1#11Nov 10 19991999
17Fantastic Four: Big Town (2000)1#1Nov 15 2000Dec 2000
18Fantastic Four: Big Town (2000)1#2Dec 13 2000Jan 2001
19Fantastic Four: Big Town (2000)1#3Jan 24 2001Feb 2001
20Fantastic Four: Big Town (2000)1#4Feb 28 2001Mar 2001
21Marvel Universe: The End (2003)#2Mar 26 2003May 2003
22Marvel Universe: The End (2003)#3Apr 9 2003Jun 2003
23Marvel Universe: The End (2003)#4Apr 30 2003Jun 2003
24Marvel Universe: The End (2003)#5May 14 2003Jul 2003
25Marvel 1602 (2003)1#1Aug 13 2003Nov 2003
26Marvel 1602 (2003)1#2Sep 10 2003Nov 2003
27Marvel 1602 (2003)1#4Nov 12 2003Jan 2004
28Marvel 1602 (2003)1#5Dec 10 2003Feb 2004
29Marvel 1602 (2003)1#6Jan 14 2004Mar 2004
30Marvel 1602 (2003)1#7Feb 4 2004Apr 2004
31Marvel 1602 (2003)1#8Apr 14 2004Jun 2004
32Loki (2004) ⚡#1Jul 8 2004Sep 2004Sometimes called "Blood Brothers"
33Loki (2004) ⚡#2Jul 21 2004Sep 2004
34Loki (2004) ⚡#3Aug 18 2004Oct 2004
35Loki (2004) ⚡#4Oct 6 2004Nov 2004
36Marvel 1602: New World (2005)#1Aug 3 2005Oct 2005
37Marvel 1602: New World (2005)#2Aug 31 2005Oct 2005
38What If: Thor (2005) ⚡#6Dec 28 2005Feb 2005
39Last Planet Standing (2006)#1May 10 2006May 2006
40Last Planet Standing (2006)#2May 24 2006May 2006
41Avengers Next (2007)#2Nov 29 2006Jan 2007
42Avengers Next (2007)#3Dec 13 2006Feb 2007
43Avengers Next (2007)#5Jan 24 2007Mar 2007
44Triple-A Baseball Heroes (2007)#12008Research tells me this is meant to be 616, but that feels weird to me, so it's here.
45Avengers Fairy Tales (2008)1#1Mar 12 2008May 2008
46Thor (Taco Bell) (2009)1#1Apr 2009Thor, KorgLook, idek. This is some weird thing Marvel did by partnering with other unrelated brands, and I can't find this thing anywhere so I'm just going to assume the info on the wiki is correct on this one.
47Super Hero Squad: Hero Up! (2009)#1Mar 2009Mar 2009No release date available
48Marvel Super Hero Squad (2009)#1Sep 10 2009Nov 2009
49Spider-Man 1602 (2009)1#1Oct 7 2009Dec 2009
50Marvel Super Hero Squad (2009)#2Oct 14 2009Dec 2009
51Marvel Super Hero Squad (2009)#3Nov 11 2009Jan 2010
52Marvel Super Hero Squad (2009)#4Dec 16 2009Feb 2010
53Thor and the Warriors Four (2010) ⚡#1Apr 7 2010Jun 2010
54Super Hero Squad (2010)#4Apr 14 2010Jun 2010
55Thor and the Warriors Four (2010) ⚡#2May 5 2010Jul 2010
56Super Hero Squad (2010)#5May 12 2010Jul 2010
57Marvel Zombies 5 (2010)#3May 26 2010Jul 2010
58Thor and the Warriors Four (2010) ⚡#3Jun 3 2010Aug 2010
59X-Men Forever Giant-Size (2010)1#1Jun 3 2010Jul 2010
60X-Men Forever 2 (2010)1#1Jun 9 2010Aug 2010
61X-Men Forever 2 (2010)1#2Jun 30 2010Aug 2010
62Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#1Jul 8 2010Sep 2010
63Thor and the Warriors Four (2010) ⚡#4Jul 8 2010Sep 2010
64X-Men Forever 2 (2010)1#3Jul 14 2010Sep 2010
65Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#2Jul 28 2010Sep 2010
66Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#3Aug 11 2010Oct 2010
67Thor: For Asgard (2010) ⚡#1Sep 1 2010Nov 2010
68Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#4Sep 9 2010Nov 2010
69Thor: For Asgard (2010) ⚡#2Sep 15 2010Nov 2010
70Thor: For Asgard (2010) ⚡#3Oct 6 2010Dec 2010
71Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#5Oct 13 2010Dec 2010
72Thor: For Asgard (2010) ⚡#4Nov 10 2010Jan 2011
73Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#6Nov 24 2010Jan 2011
74Thor: For Asgard (2010) ⚡#5Dec 1 2010Feb 2011
75Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#7Dec 8 2010Feb 2011
76X-Men Forever 2 (2010)1#14Dec 29 2010Feb 2011
77Thor: the Mighty Avenger (2010) ⚡#8Jan 12 2011Mar 2011
78X-Men Forever 2 (2010)1#15Jan 12 2011Mar 2011
79X-Men Forever 2 (2010)1#16Jan 26 2011Mar 2011
80Thor: For Asgard (2010) ⚡#6Feb 2 2011Apr 2011
81Captain America & Thor! (2011)1#1Jul 6 2011Sep 2011
82Shame Itself (2012)#1Nov 2 2011Jan 2012
83Marvel: The Avengers: The Avengers Initiative (2012)1#1May 2 2012Jul 2012
84Marvel Zombies Destroy! (2012)#3Jun 13 2012Aug 2012This series seems to cross over with 616
85Marvel Zombies Destroy! (2012)#4Jun 27 2012Aug 2012
86Marvel Universe vs The Avengers (2012)#1Oct 10 2012Dec 2012
87Secret Avengers (2010)1#33Oct 24 2012Dec 2012
88Marvel Universe vs The Avengers (2012)#2Nov 14 2012Jan 2012
89Secret Avengers (2010)1#34Nov 28 2012Jan 2013
90Secret Avengers (2010)1#35Dec 19 2012Feb 2013
91Secret Avengers (2010)1#36Jan 2 2013Mar 2013
92Thor / Road Force (2013)1#1Nov 2013ThorAnother weird "in partnership with" comic that I cannot find anywhere.
93Marvel: Now What? (2013)#1Oct 23 2013Dec 2013
94Thor / Road Force (2013)1#2Apr 2014Thor, LokiWiki info only
95What If? Age of UItron (2014)#3Apr 16 2014Jun 2014
96Scarlet Spiders (2015)1#3Jan 21 2015Mar 2015
971602 Witch Hunter Angela (2015) ⚡#1Jun 10 2015Aug 2015
98Thors (2015) ⚡#1Jun 17 2015Aug 2015This series is a crossover blending multiple universes
99Avengers Vs (2015)#3Jun 18 2015Conflicting date info; needs more research
100Avengers Vs (2015)#4Jun 24 2015
101Marvel Future Fight (2015)#1Jun 24 2015Jun 2015
102Thors (2015) ⚡#2Jul 29 2015Sep 2015
1031602 Witch Hunter Angela (2015) ⚡#2Jul 29 2015Sep 2015
104Thors (2015) ⚡#3Sep 2 2015Nov 2015
1051602 Witch Hunter Angela (2015) ⚡#3Sep 9 2015Nov 2015
1061602 Witch Hunter Angela (2015) ⚡#4Oct 7 2015Dec 2015
107Thors (2015) ⚡#4Nov 11 2015Jan 2016
108Secret Wars Too (2015)1#1Nov 18 2015Jan 2016
109Zombies Assemble (2017)#2Jun 7 2017Aug 2017
110Zombies Assemble 2 (2017)#1Aug 9 2017Oct 2017
111Not Brand Echh (1967)#14Nov 15 2017Jan 2018
112What If? Thor (2018) ⚡#1Oct 24 2018Dec 2018
113Infinity Wars: Sleepwalker (2018)1#3Nov 21 2018Jan 2019
114Avengers of the Wastelands (2020)#1Jan 29 2020Mar 2020
115Avengers of the Wastelands (2020)#2Feb 26 2020Apr 2020
116Avengers of the Wastelands (2020)#3Mar 11 2020May 2020
117Marvel Action: Avengers (2020)#1Mar 25 2020May 2020This series was published by IDW and was cancelled after three issues, leaving several un-released
118Avengers of the Wastelands (2020)#4May 13 2020Jul 2020
119Avengers of the Wastelands (2020)#5Jun 3 2020Aug 2020
120Thor & Loki: Double Trouble (2021) ⚡1#1Mar 10 2021May 2021
121Thor & Loki: Double Trouble (2021) ⚡1#2Apr 14 2021Jun 2021
122Thor & Loki: Double Trouble (2021) ⚡1#3May 5 2021Jul 2021
123Thor & Loki: Double Trouble (2021) ⚡1#4Jul 7 2021Sep 2021
124Avengers: Tech-On (2021)1#1Aug 11 2021ThorThis is a bizarre series that acts like it isn't sure whether it wants to be main continuity or not. I've put it under Wierd Things because, well. It's weird as hell.
125Avengers: Tech-On (2021)1#2Sep 08 2021Mecha LokiLoki appears in the final spread only
126Avengers: Tech-On (2021)1#3Oct 6 2021Dec 2021Mecha Loki
127How to Read Comics the Marvel Way (2022)1#2Dec 1 2021Feb 2022
128Avengers: Tech-On (2021)1#6Feb 2 2022Mecha Loki
129Marvel Fairy Tales Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#2Feb 20 2022Feb 2022
130Spider-Bot Infinity Comic (2021)1#11Feb 25 2022Feb 2022LokiThis series is exclusive to Marvel Unlmited; Digital issues have a cover date matching their release date
131What If...? Miles Morales (2022)1#1Mar 2 2022May 2022
132Marvel Fairy Tales Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#3Mar 4 2022Mar 2022
133Spider-Gwen: Gwenverse (2022)1#1Mar 9 2022May 2022
134Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#1Mar 11 2022Mar 2022Thor, Loki, Alligator LokiThis series is exclusive to Marvel Unlimited
135Marvel Fairy Tales Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#4Mar 11 2022Mar 2022
136Avengers Forever Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#1Mar 23 2022Mar 2022
137Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#2Mar 25 2022Mar 2022Thor, Alligator Loki, Jane Foster
138Avengers Forever Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#2Mar 30 2022Mar 2022
139Avengers Forever Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#3Apr 6 2022Apr 2022
140Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#3Apr 8 2022Apr 2022Alligator Loki
141Avengers Forever Infinity Comic (2022) 📱1#4Apr 13 2022Apr 2022
142Spider-Gwen: Gwenverse (2022)1#2Apr 20 2022Jun 2022
143Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#4Apr 22 2022Apr 2022Alligator Loki, Thor, Jane Foster
144Avengers Forever (2022)2#5May 4 2022Jun 2022
145Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#5May 6 2022May 2022Alligator Loki
146Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#6May 20 2022May 2022Alligator Loki, Thor
147Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#7Jun 03 2022Jun 2022Thor, Alligator Loki
148Fortnite X Marvel: Zero War (2022)1#1 📵Jun 8 2022Aug 2022
149Spider-Gwen: Gwenverse (2022)1#3 📵Jun 15 2022Aug 2022
150Spider-Man 2099: Exodus (2022)1#2 📵Jun 15 2022Aug 2022
151What If...? Miles Morales (2022)1#4Jun 15 2022Aug 2022Thor, Huginn, Muninn, Sif, Volstagg, Hogun, Loki, Odin, Freyja, Laufey, Brunnhilde, HrimhariCharacters from Miles Morales appear as Thor characters in this crossover What If...?
152Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#8Jun 17 2022Jun 2022Alligator Loki, Hela, Amora, Loki
153Mech Strike: Monster Hunters (2022)1#1 📵Jun 29 2022Aug 2022
154Spider-Man 2099: Exodus (2022)1#3 📵Jun 29 2022Aug 2022
155Alligator Loki Infinity Comic (2022) 📱⚡1#9Jul 1 2022Jul 2022Alligator Loki, Loki
156What If...? Miles Morales (2022)1#5 📵Jul 6 2022Sep 2022Loki, ThorCharacters from Miles Morales appear as Thor characters in this crossover What If...?
« || »

tododorky’s Reading List

I included kind of a lot, because I’m not sure what you’ll actually be able to find without Marvel Unlimited.  For the most part, this is Loki out messing around with other people, but it has a little bit of Asgard sprinkled in.  I reference Siege in this list, but that’s a huge event that I plan on assembling on its own dedicated list in the near future, because none of the official reading lists actually include everything relevant to it.  TL;DR, that’s the one where Loki dies to give way to Kid Loki.

Main continuity

  • Balder the Brave (1985; 4 issues) – Doesn’t really have anything to do with anything, but if you want to start reading for Angela, this one sets up the precedent for the other kids out running around doing their own weird thing
  • Amazing Spider-Man (1999; #503-504) – Loki and Peter team up to save one of Loki’s many children from a witch.  A rare, softer Loki from this era.
  • Thor (2007; 35 issues; Loki first appears in #5) – The Lady Loki arc.  Be prepared, because fandom wholly misrepresents just how vile and reprehensible this is.  A+ arc. 
  • Thor Giant-Sized Finale (2009; oneshot) – Finale to the previous arc.  Leads into Siege, which is a whole other can of worms
  • Thor: Season One (2013; oneshot) – The current “starting point” for the Thor comics.  It corrects Marvel’s sliding timeline by taking the original Journey into Mystery (1952) run, and modernising it.  Everything that happened in 616 previously is still canon, but it exists nebulously until it’s explicitly brought back into the narrative.  If you’ve seen panels where Loki got a bloodied nose, and his blood is blue, this is where that came from.
  • All-New Marvel Now! Point One Vol 1 #1.NOW (2014; oneshot) – Like, fuck that title first of all.  This was a failed attempt by Marvel to establish hard starting points within 616 to make it easier for new readers to jump in.  Unfortunately, the titles sucked and made it more confusing.  This bridges the gap between Young Avengers and Agent of Asgard, by having Loki go on a hunt for missing keys.
  • Ms Marvel (2014; #12 & #17) – Loki hanging out with a bunch of weird high school kids.  And by hanging out, I mean irritating the hell out of them.
  • Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015; #7-8) – Loki hanging out with irritating a bunch of weird college kids. 
  • Ms Marvel (2015; #6) – More high school shenanigans
  • Dr Strange (2015; #1, #381-385) – Honestly, this entire run is great.  #1 sets up the fuck up that has led to basically everything since.  Strange did not pay his bill in terms of the magic he uses, and in doing so gets half of the multiverse killed, and kills the Dragon Lines.  381-385 is where Loki comes in to fix Strange’s fuck up so Midgard has a fighting chance against Malekith.
  • The Amazing Spider-Man (2015; #795) – Another wary team-up between Loki and Peter, this time involving hell wasps.
  • What If? Thor (2018; oneshot) – What if Thor were raised by frost giants.  Absolute adorable, but also tragic
  • Infinity Countdown Prime (2018; oneshot) – idk why they do this
  • Infinity Wars Prime (2018; oneshot) – Prelude to Infinity Wars
  • Infinity Wars (2018; 6 issues) – The obligatory “gotta do what the MCU is doing” arc, but better than what the MCU were doing.  Gamora folds the multiverse up, and Loki winds up having to pick a side.  In the process, he learns that someone is erasing him from history.
  • Infinity Wars: Infinity (2019; oneshot) – I don’t know why this had to be a separate title.  It’s part of the above.
  • Avengers (2018; #1-6) – Loki performs his “greatest hits,” aka manipulates the Avengers into re-forming, so Midgard has a fighting chance against Malekith.
  • Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019; 5 issues) – Loki and Wolverine team up to keep the chitauri from getting their hands on the Time Stone, which is now inhabiting a random human.  Mild TVA shenanigans occur.
  • Avengers: Loki Unleashed (2019; oneshot) – A throwback to the classic timeline.  Loki fucks around and finds out, so Sigyn goes to the Avengers to get them to rescue his dumb ass.

Variant timelines

  • Loki (2004; 4 issues) – Loki wins and becomes King of Asgard.  Sometimes also titled Blood Brothers.  You want the one with Rodi and Ribic in the credits.
  • Thor The Mighty Avenger (2010; 8 issues; Loki appears in #3 & #6) – After Siege, Marvel started looking at rebooting Loki as a character, and began playing around with him in different contexts.  This was the first one, which uses Thor’s banishment to Midgard as a backdrop, where Loki is just an irritating little imp instead of the villain.
  • Trials of Loki (2010; 4 issues) – This one recently got a reprint with Ikol on the cover, but don’t be lied to.  This was another one where they were trying to find a more mischievous Loki, rather one that had become outright cruel and psychotic.  Retells a lot of myths in a Marvel context.
« || »

Midnott’s Reading List

Add the individual issues to your library to read them in release order.  Otherwise, reading by series in this order should not be horrifically confusing.  A lot of these titles happen at the same time as one another, and thus provide context to something else.

Random bullshit

  • Original Sin (2014; #5.1 – 5.5) – Leads to Unworthy Thor
  • Thor (2014-2015; 8 issues) – Might be what you read
  • Angela: Asgard’s Assassin (2014; 6 issues) – Expands on Original Sin
  • Angela: Queen of Hel (2015-2016; 7 issues) – More on Heven, etc
  • Mighty Thor (2015-2018; 30 issues) – Lots of good stuff on the other realms
  • Doctor Strange (2015-2018; #381 – 389) – Dr Strange is a walking dumpster fire
  • Doctor Strange (2018-2019; #12) – Event buildup

Infinity Stones

  • Infinity Countdown Prime (2018; 1 issue) – This arc is largely a tie-in to Infinity War/Endgame, but there’s a lot of hidden backstory that becomes relevant elsewhere
  • Infinity Wars Prime (2018; 1 issue)
  • Infinity Wars (2018; 6 issues)
  • Infinity Wars: Infinity (2019; 1 issue)
  • Wolverine: Infinity Watch (2019; 5 issues)

War of the Realms

  • War of the Realms: Journey into Mystery (2019; 5 issues) – Concerns Balder and events from Asgard’s Assassin
  • War of the Realms: War Scrolls (2019; 3 issues)
  • War of the Realms (2019; 6 issues)
  • War of the Realms: The Punisher (2019; 3 issues)
  • War of the Realms: Uncanny X-Men (2019; 3 issues)
  • The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015-2019; #26 – 30; #41- 46)
  • War of the Realms Omega (2019; 1 issue)
  • Thor (2018-2019; 16 issues)

Current Bullshit

  • Loki (2019; 5 issues) – Should make more sense now
  • Star (2020; #1) – Ties into the Infinity stuff above
  • Valkyrie: Jane Foster (2019; 10 issues so far) – Kind of slow compared to the rest, but has a focus on a lot of side characters
  • King in Black: Return of the Valkyries (2021; 4 issues)
  • Avengers (2018; #1 – 6; #11; #18) – Starting at #39, Thor gets retconned in a way that still sits strangely.  This series is ongoing and worth reading in its entirety though
  • Beta Ray Bill (2015; 5 issues) – Bill, Pip, and Skurge got on an adventure (the same Pip from the end-credit scene in Eternals)
  • Strange Academy (2020) 15 issues on MU right now.  Ongoing and very worth it.  Two of the main characters are a pair of twins from Asgard.
  • Thor Annual (2021)
  • Thor (2020) – Ongoing; probably the one you’re reading now
  • The Mighty Valkyries (2021; 5 issues)
  • Double Trouble (2021) – Four issues, not main continuity.  I was lukewarm on this one, and did not like it as much as everyone else
« || »

Sitemap

Full list of all active categories and tags.  Find anything you want here.

  • Categories

  • Fic Recs

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    « || »

    Abandoned WIPs

    I currently have two AO3 accounts.

    LokiOfSassgaard is where I post all of my active WIPs or finished fics (with I think one exception).  Sassgaardian is where I’ve moved all of my abandoned WIPs and RP collections.

    Fics posted to Sassgaardian may be moved back to my other account if they are picked back up again.  There are already a few candidates for completion, based on the fics that I like best.  Fics that get a high amount of interest may become a completion candidate as well.  This is not a guarantee that the fic will be finished, so please don’t expect it to happen if you see a fic with a lot of engagement.  Some of them are so old or so far removed from canon that I’m not sure I’d be able to pick them back up again if I were paid to do it.

    The best way to know if a fic is being picked back up is to subscribe to it.  When it’s moved over, a dummy chapter will be posted to throw an alert.  Multi-chapter fics may then go up on a schedule.  You can also follow me on Twitter, where alerts are posted when this site updates, including fic chapters and notes.

    Remixes, Plotbunnies, and Sequels

    If you would like to create anything transformative based on my fics, I give blanket permission to do so.  This includes remixes, finishing off WIPs, writing sequels or prequels, podcasts, art.  Whatever.  This extends to anything original I may post as well.

    My only requirement is that my fic is credited, and I get a link to what you’ve made.  If you post it to AO3, you can do this automatically by ticking the remix box.  Link to the fic on AO3, and I will eventually see it.  If you are not posting to AO3, please send me a message on Tumblr.

    « || »

    Character Creation, or Fitting Your Character into the World You’ve Built

    Back in the day, there used to exist these forms you could fill out on the internet that would help you build a character. They would have fields like, your character’s favourite colour, their favourite breakfast, their perfect Sunday. These are, frankly, terrible traits to build a character off of, because they’re plastic and changeable. They’re based on opinion, and opinions often and frequently change as a person is exposed to new things throughout life. You can’t build a character off of opinions, because then you just get an opinion on legs. Which, yeah. Some people are that, but they’re never people you want to hang out with.

    Another thing people commonly do when they’re getting started is they build the character based on what sounds “cool” or trendy. Yeah, all the KVIIIlyns and Abcdes in the world are victims of this irl, but again, it’s the sort of thing that rings false and forced to a reader.

    If you’re building an OC, the goal is probably to build a person who reads like a person. You typically want a person with believable flaws and foibles, with values that reflect their own place in society. Which means when you build a character, you need to know what the world they inhabit is like. If you’re starting out with a brand new character in a high fantasy setting you haven’t even started to contemplate yet, by the time you get to building your society, your character will either feel very out of place, or you’ll wind up bending your society to fit the character. You can avoid this by building the society first, or by building both in tandem.

    What is Known

    Remember that character sheet I talked about up yonder? Here’s a better one:

    • What do strangers know?
    • What do acquaintances know?
    • What do friends know?
    • What does the family know?
    • What does the character know?
    • What does the therapist/you know?

    Each of these questions pertains to the character. If a complete stranger were to look at your character standing on the street, what would they know about them, just from appearances. Then, you ask what acquaintances know. These are co-workers, the girl at the coffee shop, the neighbour, etc. Not close friends, but not total strangers either.

    As you work down the list, the answers should change. They should build off of one another, and often may contradict what came first. The answers builds with intimacy, so each question will know more than the previous one. The last question, the therapist (or you) are the things the character does not even know about themselves. These can be unexplored traumas and repressed memories, or something as mundane as not realising that the thing that makes them a picky eater is having the cilantro gene. These are the things that your character can discover about themselves, or which you can just play with in the background as a quirk.

    Abstracts

    • Character Name
    • Character Age
    • What do they do for a living?
    • What do they wish they did for a living?
    • What did they do before their current job?
    • Where do they live?
    • How much money do they make?
    • How close do they live from work?
    • How do they get around town?
    • What are their parents’ names?

    These are not typical character-building questions at all, in the end. But they tell a much better story about who that character is in the end. To start off, the name is probably the most incidental part of the entire process. One thing a lot of people forget is that the writer did not name the character; the parents did. Obviously there are some exceptions, but the vast majority of people use the name their parents give them, or deviate slightly from it. A character might have Thomas on his birth certificate, but go by Tom. He is still using the name his parents gave him.

    From the rest, you get aspirations, work ethic, socio-economic status, religious background, values, race, and culture. A lot of that comes from the very last question: the parents’ names. Someone whose parents are named Jun-su and Seong-ja will likely be raised with different values and structure than someone whose parents are named Mary and Timothy Miller. Of course, if you’re going with a setting that is completely removed from reality, these rules will change a bit. But even in a high fantasy or hard sci-fi setting, you can still build a society in which different names carry different weights and backgrounds.

    For instance, if I’m taking Old Norse names for the purposes of my own fic, I have established hidden rules the reader will never see. The names I use for OCs are all real, documented Old Norse names, but different races have different naming conventions within that list of names I pick from. The reader doesn’t know that names that end in -i, or which sound like onamonapias are reserved for this one specific race, but by setting this rule for myself, it’s established a bit of culture for that race that doesn’t exist within canon.

    But another thing these questions do is create conflict within the character. A lot of the questions are aspirational. How do they get around town? Do they drive their own car, or do they take the bus and bum rides? What kind of car is it? What condition is it in? In a different setting, do they have their own horse? Do they have a dog cart with a driver? Or are they a pleb who walks everywhere? Does their profession and mode of transport afford them extra leisure time during the day, or is their leisure time eaten up by a two-hour commute each way? What seems like very simple, boring questions on the surface can tell you how satisfied they are with their life, and what they might be working toward. Would a bus pass completely change their life, or would their transmission falling apart be an irritating but ultimately minor inconvenience at the end of the day?

    If you answer these questions and find no conflict anywhere – they’re working their dream job with no aspirations to climb higher, make good money, have a good car, it’s not necessarily the end of the world. These questions are for character conflict. You can build conflict within the plot, but the character should still want something. If you’ve built your plot and worked out your character, and he still wants for nothing, you’re going to wind up with a character who abruptly dies of thirst on page 247. And that’s not what you want, probably.

    But at the end of the day, your character should be a product of their place within society. A feminist-adjacent character from a feudal European society will ultimately have the same end goal as a Suffragette or a 21st century gender studies major, but the way in which these characters work toward that goal will be very different. While the serf is busy trying to not be burned as a witch because she discovered oregano, the gender studies major is busy trying to eliminate the wage gap. Ultimately, they want the same thing, but the nuance of what they want is extremely different.

    « || »

    Worldbuilding, or Creating a World for your Characters to Exist In

    Let’s take a look at worldbuilding. Whether you’re writing an AU, or trying to explore a facet of your canon’s universe that got a bit sidelined, or even trying to branch into original fiction, here are some things to think about when you’re creating the world for your characters to live in.

    Worldbuilding ultimately comes down to a lot of invisible rules that the reader will never notice, but which should be adhered to as strictly as possible. One of the reasons people like to dunk all over JK Rowling is because she set up a world which, in her original books made sense for the most part. When she started adding information after the fact, all those little gaps became enormous holes that nobody would have ever noticed had she not said anything in the first place.

    The first thing to consider is your template. Is your new society earth-adjacent, an alternate history/timeline, or completely from scratch? Depending on where you sit will determine how much work you’ll have to put in. An earth-adjacent society will exist in a recognisable setting, but with little tweaks. These are your Marvels and DCs and Harry Potters. The overculture (more later) is already set, and doesn’t need to be fiddled with too much. What you have to focus on here are your magic/power systems, and how they fit into a society that already exists.

    Alternate histories and timelines are your “what if JFK wasn’t assassinated” kind of societies. Anything from that point forward is subject to change, but parts of society would still be recognisable. You just get to cherry pick which parts.

    And starting from scratch is your Star Wars and Game of Thrones. People are going to be people no matter where you put them, but nothing about where they live is recognisable to a modern audience. Obviously, this is the one that will take the most work.

    How it Started

    Very occasionally, you’ll get lucky on this one, and canon will tell you how it started. I’m not talking about the advent of society, but the very beginning: the Creation Myth. Because the Creation Myth fuels religion, religion fuels values, and values fuel politics. Even if this never once comes up in your story, it’s a good idea to know what your society believes. If you have multiple cultures clashing with one another, knowing what each one believes can help solidify why the cultures are clashing.

    This contrasts with the biological theory. How did your people actually come to be? These two concepts are not mutually exclusive. If you look at mythology from around the world, ancient and present, you’ll notice that a lot of myths run in parallel. And that’s because ancient people were smarter than they tend to get credit for, while myths were used to fill in the gaps for concepts that hadn’t yet been fully realised. These people weren’t necessarily wrong; they just lacked the vocabulary to explain the fragments of truth that were already known to them.

    Knowing how your people understand the universe, or once understood it, will go a long way in knowing how your fundamentalists see the world around them.

    Similarly, knowing your world’s migration history ties into this as well. How did your people get where they are? Did they steal land from natives, systematically wiping them out? Or did they find some barren land, and because it’s how people do, forced it to bend to their whims? Where did your people come from, and were they even what society would presently call people when they arrived?

    Over the course of Earth’s history, there have been over 20 species of human discovered and recorded. What would a world look like if more than one had survived, rather than a single dominant species fucking and fighting the rest into extinction? If you’re starting from scratch, this is something to consider when building clashing societies.

    Ecology, Climate, and Biodiversity

    For the most part, you want to avoid creating Star Wars planets, unless you are writing for Star Wars, in which case carry on. What I mean by this is planets with a single ecosystem from pole to pole. Having an entire planet be nothing but desert, or dominated by 200-foot redwoods is quick and easy, but reduces conflict. In these sorts of worlds, resources would typically be spread out evenly. People on one continent will have the exact same resources as people on another. The western world has found reasons to be at war in the Middle East since the discovery of oil, and that is not a coincidence.

    Instead, spreading out resources can create an unstable geopolitical atmosphere that will serve to drive conflict. If there are only very small temperate regions suitable to growing large crops within your planet, those regions will be most valuable for feeding a population. If there is an energy source that is only available under extreme conditions, simply harvesting it can become a conflict in an of itself.

    On a similar level, animals like to live in very specific areas, and will adapt and evolve to live in that area as comfortably as possible. An animal that lives in the desert will not thrive in a cold climate, and vice versa. Working out your biological diversity, food chains, conservation statuses, etc, can both add flavour and life to your surrounding world, as well as build conflict within it. Is there an animal which naturally produces a source of energy outside of food? What happens when that animal is hunted to near extinction? What happens when the pest species that has been eating all of the farm animals gets hunted to extinction? What happens when the grazing animals get hunted to extinction? But even without exploring this as a source of conflict, what kinds of plants exist? If one goes for a walk in nature, what are the animals they need to be wary of? What animals are good for food, or what plans will poison you? Your biodiversity can exist just to add flavour, and make your world feel more lived in as a result.

    Superstitions, Rites, and Rituals

    As with your creation myth, knowing what parts of religion are deeply engrained within your culture can help guide and colour a character’s ideals, values, and actions. What superstitions exist within the society? Are there things a person must or must not do, for no reason other than luck? Do these superstitions come from belief, or folk wisdom?

    What holidays are celebrated by the majority of your population? Are there fringe holidays celebrated by a minority population? Are holidays mandatory or just an excuse to get off work? And where does worship fit into these holidays? Are they all secular, or religious, or somewhere in between?

    And what rites of passage do the members of society undertake? Not all rites are going to be some big, religiously significant thing. Sneaking into an R-rated movie for the first time is a very common rite of passage for many western teenagers, even though it bears no cultural or religious significance. A rite can be your Confirmation or Bar/Bat/B’nai Mitzvah, but it can also be your first sleepover at a friend’s house. And even though your first sleepover is not culturally significant in and of itself, it is part of the cultural experience. Having a mix of the two, both the religious and secular, can signal values within your society.

    Sociological Barriers

    This is where your worldbuilding starts to narrow down to a societal. You want to look at aspects of your society dealing with racial biases and social ladder. Who is perceived better than whom? Who is undesirable? Who is perceived better at something? Racial biases are not always overtly negative (Asians are good at math; Germans are hard workers, etc), but can still contribute to unfair advantages and disadvantages in those areas.

    Creating these biases and barriers does not necessarily need to be an in-depth takedown of them, but their presence will help inform a character’s values and beliefs. If a bias is built into the social structure itself, as many are, it can present itself as micro-aggressions.

    Similarly, what does sexual and gender acceptance look like? What’s taboo, and what is expected? This doesn’t have to be in your face conflict either. It can exist in the form of certain jobs being only for women, or a division of labour that places emphasis on certain tasks being for men. These gender roles are not necessarily bad, or even a source of conflict, but they can be if you want them to be. You can even play with it. Perhaps women do more hunting for your society, because they are perceived as lighter on their feet, and therefore make less noise. Is this true? Who knows, but your society sure seems to believe it. Sex and gender roles don’t have to be allegorical for society, but there’s a tendency to make them so.

    And last, what rights are legally guaranteed, and for whom? With the more obvious example, who can own land and vote? But also, who’s allowed to wear the colour blue? Who’s allowed to wear a certain style of coat? Who’s allowed to shop in this district? Again, the tendency to draw real parallels is very strong, but the farther you get from reality, the more unique and lived in your world can feel.

    Overculture, Underculture, and Subculture

    To tie all of this together, we start looking at the individual. And first, we need to start zooming in on different levels of society.

    Your overculture broadly encompasses the entire race, country, or continent. There can be some overlap between several different overcultures at once, but they will all vaguely melt into the same thing.

    To bring reality into this discussion, let’s look at America’s overculture. America’s overculture, sometimes broadly defined as part of Western culture usually, is predominantly Christian, and holds Christian-adjacent values. Most of the west celebrates Christian holidays, regardless of which flavour of Jesus they worship. Even amongst non-Christians, the attitudes of sex being taboo, while violence is more acceptable, especially in the media we consume, is pervasive. We’re a culture that places emphasis on the individual, rather than the society, although that does vary a bit from region to region even within the west.

    Your underculture is what defines a more narrow region. Within the American overculture, the underculture is looking at a specific state or metropolitan area. This is why, even though we are all part of the same overculture, states vote differently. People who live in an area where taking the train is more efficient than driving will vote on policies that benefit people who take the train.

    While America’s overculture may be heavily influenced by Christianity, a city’s underculture may still carry some of that baggage without putting any real weight to it. A large city will be more accepting of “Happy Holidays” than a small town where everyone goes to Church on Sunday. They’re both American, but place different weight on how you greet a person in December.

    And then you have your subculture. Within our big city, these are the neighbourhoods. While one neighbourhood within the same city might place emphasis on health food and gyms, another might place emphasis on kooky small business or entertainment. A person who goes to art galleries and has a Coexist bumper sticker on their Subaru may have wildly different values from the HOA soccer mom who lives just a few miles away, because they come from different subcultures. But these two people will still carry that same baggage from their shared over and under cultures.

    And yet, all of these combined will help colour and inform an individual’s values and morality. The HOA soccer mom will likely see society through a much different lens than the person who likes weird art, even though they both live within the same small area.

    Worldbuilding is not necessarily the process of creating a brand new society from scratch, although it can be if that’s what your story calls for. Worldbuilding can simply be the act of establishing values held by your characters. Most stories probably do not need to know the whole biological theory or migration history. But if you plan on making your world a character within your story, they’re good things to have in your back pocket, even if they never make it onto the page. Simply knowing these things may be all you need.

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    About Me

    Hi.  You might remember me as that guy who wrote that one Tasertricks fic that was momentarily popular solely for causing wank.  But that’s not the only thing I’ve done within fandom.  I’ve been active in fandom since the late 90s, cutting my teeth on Geocities, AOL chatrooms, and mailing lists.  I still actually have most of my fic, though I think the earliest one still in my possession dates back to about 2003.  I like to write stories about humanity, and what that means.  There are a lot of heavy emotions and subjects present in my fic, and warnings should not be ignored when present.

    I don’t tend to be very social within fandom, and you won’t find me in many Discord servers or doing many events.  You can contact me via Twitter.  I do have a Tumblr account, but I’m not very active on it.

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