G.I. Joe (comic)

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This article is about the Marvel comic series. For its titular stars, see G.I. Joe (team).
G.I. Joe
"Fly, my ugly, fly!"

G.I. Joe was a comic series from Marvel Comics that crossed over with Marvel's Generation 2 series. Earlier, a Marvel G.I. Joe / Generation 1 crossover miniseries had drawn from events in the G.I. Joe comic as though it were in continuity with it, but the G.I. Joe comic had ignored the miniseries at the time. During the Generation 2 crossover, G.I. Joe characters showed familiarity with the Transformers, perhaps indicating that the miniseries had been retconned into the G.I. Joe history.

In Great Britain, Marvel UK reprinted G.I. Joe issues as Action Force, adding new material of their own and even crossing over with the Marvel UK Generation 1 book. There was no effort to maintain continuity between the G.I. Joe stories and the new Action Force comics, and this wiki considers the unique Action Force material to be its own universe. The Action Force comic was eventually merged with the UK Generation 1 comic, but by that point Action Force was nothing but G.I. Joe reprints.


G.I. Joe issues with Transformers content:
#138 | #139 | #140 | #141 | #142

Overview

At the time that G.I. Joe and the Transformers was published, a storyline in G.I. Joe had Cobra Commander and Destro appear to perish in an assault on the G.I. Joe base. G.I. Joe and the Transformers stayed true to this, featuring Cobra Commander in the first issue but noting his apparent death in the second (even with a footnote encouraging the reader to read G.I. Joe #55 to learn if the Commander had truly died). Destro also disappeared from the story as soon as Cobra Commander's death was mentioned. However, the G.I. Joe book had no reciprocal ties to the miniseries, and in fact its use of characters like Dr. Mindbender and the Baroness was incompatible with their whereabouts in the mini. Then shortly after the mini concluded, the G.I. Joe companion series, G.I. Joe: Special Missions, featured Slip-Stream giving another character a toy of a Transformer that he claimed to be Jetfire, though it looked like Megatron. This may have been a sign from the author about how he viewed Transformers in relation to his G.I. Joe universe, although a Bumblebee toy was also shown prominently in the crossover miniseries, so no interpretation is clear.

Years later, as the G.I. Joe comic's fortunes sagged, Marvel tried rebranding it as "G.I. Joe featuring Snake-Eyes and Ninja Force". Four issues later, two shadowy Transformers appeared in the story, intrigued by Destro's transforming castle. The next issue, its title changed to "G.I. Joe featuring Snake-Eyes and Transformers: Generation 2", opened with Megatron in full view, his body ravaged from the events at the end of the Generation 1 comic. He was assaulting the castle in disappointment that it was not, in fact, another Transformer. But in the course of the battle, he was impressed by a railgun that Cobra shot him with, and he made a deal to give Cobra Cybertronian technology in exchange for rebuilding his body with the addition of the railgun. When G.I. Joe learned of this partnership, they sent a message to the Autobots on Cybertron, who sent a small team to Earth. The storyline came to a climax with G.I. Joe and the Autobots battling Cobra and Megatron in the American town of Millville. Megatron ended up destroying most of the Autobot squad and escaping in the Ark with the American double-agent railgun inventor, apparently without giving Cobra Commander his promised technology.

The G.I. Joe and Generation 2 comics went in separate directions from that point. Generation 2 added one more issue's worth of material to the story, wherein Cobra was revealed to actually have a semi trailer full of Cybertronian tech that Hot Spot gave his life to destroy. Also, Dr. Biggles-Jones was rescued from Megatron's captivity and returned to the Joes. Meanwhile, the G.I. Joe comic made reference to neither of these events, and while it did show the Joes being airlifted out of Millville, the fact that alien robots had been involved was never brought up again. Moreover, the Generation 2 comic featured planetwide devastation more than once, even showing G.I. Joe dealing with the aftermath, but the world of the G.I. Joe comic was much less apocalyptic. Not once did it acknowledge anything related to Transformers in the year that it lasted before cancellation.

Items of note

  • In 1982, Hasbro had commissioned Marvel to create a story treatment for their G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero toyline, which Marvel then used as a basis for their comic series while Hasbro took it to Sunbow Productions to be made into a cartoon. This formula proved extremely successful, and Hasbro used it again for the launch of Transformers two years later.

Creative team

Almost every issue of G.I. Joe (and certainly every issue that crossed over with Generation 2) was written by Larry Hama. The series also shared several artists, most notably Herb Trimpe and the pencil/ink team of Andrew Wildman and Stephen Baskerville. Wildman and Baskerville even worked on the first crossover issue of G.I. Joe.