If you like Marvel’s Midnight Suns, you’ll like these Marvel comics

Any one of these will give you at least +2 to friendship.

Any one of these will give you at least +2 to friendship.

The comics version of the Midnight Sons debuted in a 1990s crossover, but though they fought Lilith and characters like Blade and Doctor Strange were involved, it doesn’t resemble Firaxis’s Marvel’s Midnight Suns that much. The comic-book cross-branding promotion version of events has a completely different Ghost Rider, who is named Danny Ketch and a bit of a tool, a version of Caretaker who is an old man, and also Morbius the Living Vampire is there. 

It’s all extremely 1990s, with Johnny Blaze wearing a trenchcoat and sunglasses at night while toting a shotgun that shoots hellfire. Honestly, it’s not that great.

The Midnight Sons and Lilith, as they were in 1992. (Image credit: Marvel)

Marvel brought the Midnight Sons back over the years, most recently in a new series that switches the name to Midnight Suns and has a lineup a bit closer to the videogame, though it doesn’t follow the game’s story. But if you’re enjoying the characters in videogame form, the best way to find out more about them is by reading some stories about whoever you’re having fun hanging out with.

Spending time with superheroes between missions in Midnight Suns is like the downtime in BioWare RPGs where you do the rounds talking to everyone, only here their backstories are all drawn from years of comics lore. While the characters have been tweaked from their print incarnations, Midnight Suns pulls the same trick as the Arkham games by implying that years of adventures have gone before with references to events from the comics. Reading some of them will make Midnight Suns even more enjoyable—and maybe help you figure out which gifts and hangouts each hero will like. I’ve left out characters you don’t recruit until later in the game, so don’t worry about spoilers if you’ve only just started playing.

Nico

Recommendation: Runaways Vol. 1, $13.90

Nico was introduced in Runaways, a 2005 series that’s worth reading from the start. Like a lot of Marvel comics it’s about teens discovering they have powers and struggling through a metaphorical exaggeration of growing up, but Runaways dealt with that familiar idea in a unique way. For starters, its teen heroes found out they were special on the same day they discovered their parents were secretly supervillains. 

Nico and pals rebel against their evil folks in a more dramatic fashion than getting a haircut the olds don’t like, but they also do a lot of relatable teenage things, like kissing somebody they shouldn’t, or trying to convince their friends to call them by a cool nickname they just thought up. Which is why Nico is just called Nico these days instead of her superhero alter ego, which was “Sister Grimm” for like a week.

There was also a Hulu show based on Runaways that ran for three seasons, in which Nico was played by Lyrica Okano, who also voices her in Midnight Suns.

Doctor Strange

(Image credit: Marvel)

Recommendation: Doctor Strange – The Oath, $28.15

Before he was Sorcerer Supreme, Doctor Strange was a real doctor and five-issue miniseries The Oath never forgets that. (The title’s a reference to the Hippocratic Oath rather than Strange’s constant declaiming about the Hoary Hosts of Hoggoth or whatever.) It teams him up with Night Nurse, the official medic of New York’s cape-wearing community—sorry, cloak-wearing community—for a story about Big Pharma and the intersection of magical and medical ethics that Writer Brian K. Vaughan, who also wrote Saga, Paper Girls, and Y: The Last Man, fills with an unreasonable number of twists and surprises.

Blade

Recommendation: Just watch the first movie

It’s tough to recommend a good Blade comic. For starters, the definitive interpretation of the character comes from the Wesley Snipes movies rather than the comics. There, Blade started out as a minor character in Tomb of Dracula, and has often been part of teams—even in the first Midnight Sons crossover he joined as one-third of a squad of occult heroes called the Nightstalkers—with only brief stints as a solo character. 

Of those team-ups, one of the most memorable was the time he became part of MI13 and helped defend Britain from an invasion of vampires who came from the moon. 

No, really. It’s in Captain Britain and MI13: Vampire State.

(Image credit: Marvel)

Ghost Rider

Recommendation: Ghost Rider – The Last Stand, $44.99

Robbie Reyes was introduced as Ghost Rider, the superhero who most resembles a tattoo you’d probably regret, in All-New Ghost Rider. To get to the bottom of why there have been a bunch of different skull-faced spirits of vengeance over the years though, read the pre-Robbie storyline that runs from Hell Bent & Heaven Bound, through The Last Stand, and then Trials and Tribulations

That saga begins with the best-known Ghost Rider, motorbike stuntman Johnny Blaze, having finally defeated every demon who counts and decided the angels are next. He rampages across the South in a tribute to the Vertigo series Preacher before meeting up with Caretaker (introducing Sara as the modern version of the character), and learning there have been other fire-headed spirits of vengeance around the world and throughout time. 

(Image credit: Marvel)

A whole troop of them is briefly introduced and they’re all wonderful, like the biplane-piloting Ghost Rider of World War I and a Russian spirit of vengeance who wears a burning fur hat and rides a bear. There’s a whole legion of fiery badasses and they all look cool as hell. Maybe I should get a tattoo of the one who looks like a skeleton riding a shark after all?

Magik

Recommendation: New Mutants Vol. 1, $13.75

Like Blade, Magik has spent a lot of time as a member of teams rather than a solo hero. Introduced as the younger sister of Colossus in the X-Men, she’s been part of several different line-ups of the New Mutants as well. Sometimes the New Mutants are an even younger and more chaotic version of the X-Men and sometimes they’re a squad of mentors for the next generation of mutants. For a fun arc of the youthful and chaotic variety, try the time the New Mutants went to space, hitching a ride with the pirates called the Starjammers.

(Image credit: Marvel)

Captain Marvel

Recommendation: Captain Marvel – Earth’s Mightiest Hero, $13.76

The contemporary interpretation of Captain Marvel, with a redesigned costume and a renewed focus on her backstory as an Air Force pilot, debuted in Earth’s Mightiest Hero. That relaunch inspired the movie version of Carol Danvers, but you’ll find her adventures here are much more comic-booky: she travels back in time to fight alongside Banshee Squad in World War II, takes on a giant robot from the bottom of the ocean, and punches a dinosaur. 

Also, she never misses an opportunity to remind Captain America that, since she rose to the rank of colonel before retiring from service, she technically outranks him. It’s good stuff. 

(Image credit: Marvel)

Iron Man

Recommendation: The Invincible Iron Man – Extremis

Iron Man is one member of the team whose videogame portrayal feels like it’s taken from the movies as well as the comics, though the Robert Downey Jr. version of Tony Stark does have his roots in the comics as well. Extremis is the first time he was written as the regretful arms dealer the movies would portray him as, and is where Tony crafts a suit like his first MCU one (both were designed by comics artist Adi Granov).

No matter whether he’s on page or screen, Iron Man is constantly making new suits of armor. It’s like he’s playing the game with the Change Outfits Daily option turned on. After Extremis, jump a few years on to Believe, which finds him wearing yet another new suit and already thinking about the one after it, but still dealing with the fallout from his past.

(Image credit: Marvel)

Bob, Agent of Hydra

Recommendation: Cable & Deadpool Vol. 7: Separation Anxiety, $21.94

Oh, you thought Hydra Bob was just a throwaway gag? Nope, he’s a comic book character with a long and distinguished history going all the way back to his first appearance, which is collected in Cable & Deadpool: Separation Anxiety. OK, maybe “distinguished” is the wrong word to use.

(Image credit: Marvel)

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