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You are here: Home / consume / comic books / Hulk & She-Hulk Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll

Hulk & She-Hulk Omnibus Mapping | 14th Annual Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll

February 17, 2026 by krisis 8 Comments

Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 2026 - Hulk Omnibus Mapping - Incredible Hulks (2010) #612Once every year, thousands of Marvel collectors from around the world gather together online to watch Near Mint Condition and vote on their most-wanted omnibus titles. That time approaches – time for the Tigereyes Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus 14th Annual Secret Ballot! This post explains every Hulk omnibus map – including She-Hulk and Red Hulks – for material that has not yet been collected comprehensively in omnibus – all of which will appear as options on the 2026 poll.

As one of the organizers of the poll, I work closely with Tigereyes and a team of Mapping Minties to be sure Marvel’s entire publishing history has been mapped, with every issue fitting somewhere into an omnibus volume to fill your oversize Marvel shelf. Then, we’ll kick off the poll on Near Mint Condition on March 22, 2026.

2026 is a quiet year for Hulk in omnibus, which is surprising since we know that Bruce Banner will be making some MCU appearances this year. The only Hulk omni we’re getting is Incredible Hulk: Return of The Monster Omnibus – AKA, Hulk by Bruce Jones.

It seems Hulk’s classic omnis may be on an every-other-year schedule, so hopefully we’ll see at least one more Hulk book in 2027. However, there is still a hunk of modern Hulk material to cover. And, with Red Hulk playing a massive role in Marvel’s 2026 line-wide event Armageddon, next year could be the perfect time for a Red Hulk omni, as well!

Read this post and others in the series for a list of titles and omnibus mappings created by a group of the biggest collected edition enthusiasts on the internet. Every map is informed by Crushing Krisis comic guides and over a decade of polling data as explained by yours truly – keeper of the most-definitive guides to Marvel’s collected editions on the planet. That includes my Guide to Hulk, Guide to She-Hulk, Guide to Red Hulk, and Guide to Red She-Hulk!

Even if you don’t own a single omnibus, you can use this post to learn about Marvel’s history of material and find great comics to read physically or digitally!

This post covers the following speculated omnibus volumes:

  • Bronze Age Hulk
    • Hulk: Incredible Hulk Vol. 4 (1973 – 1976) [MMW 10-12 AKA by Wein, Thomas, Trimpe, & Buscema]
    • Hulk: Rampaging Hulk Magazine & Hulk Comic (UK) (1977 – 1985)
    • Hulk: Incredible Hulk by Bill Mantlo & Sal Buscema Vol. 1 (1979 & on) [AKA Vol. 6, MMW 16 & on]
  • Modern Hulk
    • Hulk by Paul Jenkins (2000 – 2001) [AKA Dogs of War omnibus]
    • Hulk: Incredible Hulks by Greg Pak Vol. 1 (2008 – 2010) [follows World War Hulk; includes Skaar, Fall of the Hulks, and World War Hulks]
    • Hulk by Aaron, Waid & Duggan Vol. 1 (2011 – 2015) [begins to collect between Pak & Ewing]
    • Hulk: Incredible Hulk by Phillip Kennedy Johnson (2023 & on)
  • She-Hulk
    • She-Hulk: Sensational She-Hulk Vol. 1 (1985 – 1991) [recollects Sensational based on Epic mapping]
    • She-Hulk by Soule & Tamaki (2014 – 2020) [includes A-Force]
  • Red Hulk & Red She-Hulk, Brawn, & Weapon H
    • Hulk: Red Hulk & Red She-Hulk by Jeff Parker (2010 – 2013)
    • Hulk: Amadeus Cho, The Totally Awesome Hulk by Greg Pak (2016 – 2018)
    • X-Men: ResurrXion – Weapon X & Weapon H by Greg Pak (2017 – 2019) [includes Hulkverines]

Remember: These titles and mappings are a suggestion of how Marvel could assemble these books. They are meant to make the books easy to find and to vote for. Your vote on the poll is a vote in favor of Marvel creating a book with that title or covering that period, NOT an endorsement of a specific mapping. Maps are presented as a proof of concept and to help you build your personal reading list.

Want to check out all of the other voting options for the 2026 Tigereyes Poll? Check out my 2026 Tigereyes poll overview page that explains the poll, how to vote, and lists every title that will appear – including links to all of the posts in this series.

In depth posts like this one are made possible via the support of Patrons of Crushing Krisis. For less than the cost of a single comic issue a month you can fuel some of the most thoroughly-researched guides to comics on the internet, plus gain access to dozens of exclusive collecting guides & reading orders – including all of the Crushing Comics Guide to Marvel Comics.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk Omnibus Mapping: Bronze Age Hulk

Hulk’s classic omnibus line had an early start with The Incredible Hulk Vol. 1 in 2008, but then a fifteen year wait for The Incredible Hulk Vol. 2 in 2023! That first omnibus was an incredibly slow seller that hung around in bargain bins for years in the early days of omnibus collecting. Plus, Hulk’s Silver Age material is seen as among the weakest of Marvel’s marquee heroes, which meant Marvel wasn’t in a hurry to continue collecting it.

However, now that Marvel’s major Silver Age runs have been incredibly well-covered in omnibus, Marvel has finally continued the classic line, with a reprint of Vol. 1 in 2022, Vol. 2 in 2023, and The Incredible Hulk Vol. 3 out later this year. See Guide to Hulk – Bruce Banner for more details.

Can we keep up an every-second-year release of classic Incredible Hulk volumes… or even increase the pace? Your votes could be the deciding factor for Marvel!

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk: Incredible Hulk Vol. 4 (1973 – 1976) [MMW 10-12 AKA by Wein, Thomas, Trimpe, & Buscema]

All three Hulk volumes so far have obeyed the “3 Masterworks” rule for collecting the contents of Marvel Masterworks into omnibus. With the Masterworks line mostly lining up with creator changes on Incredible Hulk (1968), it’s very likely it will continue to obey the rule.

A vote for this book is a vote to collect the mid-70s of Incredible Hulk (1968) into an omnibus, featuring writing by Len Wein and Roy Thomas, art by Herb Trimpe and Sal Buscema, and the debut of certain well-known Canadian mutant!

This would collect Incredible Hulk (1968) #171-209 & Annual 5 and material from Marvel Treasury Edition (1974) #5 (and maybe material from FOOM (1973) #1-2).

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Rampaging Hulk (1976) #3Hulk: Rampaging Hulk Magazine & Hulk Comic (UK) (1977 – 1985)

Rampaging Hulk (1976) was a 27-issue US magazine, later renamed to simply “The Hulk!” to coincide with the incredibly popular The Incredible Hulk TV series staring Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno. It was mainly written by Doug Moench, but not all of the content was Hulk stories – it also included other one-shot tales and magazine content.

That might not sound like much, but it took two Essentials collections over 1100 pages to collect all of this material! And, I think that was just the Hulk material – although I’m not entirely sure.

But, wait – I can complicate things even more! The US stories from Rampaging Hulk & Hulk! magazine were reprinted in the UK from 1978 in a magazine called Rampage Monthly starring the Hulk which did not contain original material, but Hulk also had an ongoing series called Hulk Comic (1979) that did contain original material. That comic also featured other original stories from Black Knight (collected in the Captain Britain omnibus), Nick Fury, Night Raven (collected in trade), and Ant-Man. The Hulk stories were reprinted in a 2013 paperback, Hulk From The Marvel UK Vaults, which was 360 pages.

Since none of this material is eligible for Masterworks volumes and hasn’t appeared in the Epic line, this might be our one chance to collect it in hardcover!

So… what are you voting for? Since this is not wildly popular material, you’re voting for either or both of those options – Marvel can sort it out once this hits the Top 60 and they consider printing the book!

A vote for this book could be a vote for intact, full magazine issues (in the style of the Deadly Hands of Kung Fu omnibus), which would stretch for multiple volumes or just a vote for the Hulk content – which would fit into one book. If you vote for the latter, you could also imagine this would include the UK material – which would just fit into one hulking omnibus of over 1400 pages.

This would collect material from Rampaging Hulk [Magazine] (1976) #1-9, The Hulk! [Magazine] (1978) #10-27, and Incredible Hulk (1968) #269. That might be exclusively Hulk material (about 1100 pages) or full magazines (which would take multiple omnibus volumes to cover).

Optionally, you might also believe this should include 360 pages of UK comics material from Smash! (1966) #38, Marvel Storybook Annual 1968, Hulk Comic (1979) #1-6, 9-20, 26-28, Incredible Hulk Annual [UK]: Authorised Edition 1980, Hulk Annual [UK] 1981-1985, and The Super Heroes Annual 1991.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Incredible Hulk (1968) #274Hulk: Incredible Hulk by Bill Mantlo & Sal Buscema Vol. 1 (1979 & on) [AKA Vol. 6, MMW 16 & on]

We don’t usually “map ahead” to additional classic volumes in a comic run for this poll.

However, in this case we have a very obvious, very desirable book to map – and we have ample evidence that Marvel will jump ahead in a line, especially into the Bronze Age.

Bill Mantlo had a lengthy and very well-regarded run on Hulk from Incredible Hulk (1968) #245-313 & Annual 10-13. For many comic fans – both classic and current – this is the first essential run of Hulk comic books.

Marvel released this run in a series of trade paperbacks referred to as “proto Epics Collections” by fans, because they had the size, scope, and titling conventions of Epics released less than a year before Epic Collection was formally launched. For that reason, the Epic line has been slow to return to this material, just beginning to tackle it starting in 2022 and still missing two volumes.

Clearly at 60+ issues Mantlo’s run is too large for just one omnibus. It looks like it might wind up as exactly six Masterworks volumes, which would equal two omnibuses. Since, it is clearly defined and lines up with an existing break in Masterworks volumes, Marvel could easily jump ahead to this point just as they did with Daredevil by Nocenti & Romita Jr. Vol. 1.

A vote for this book is a vote for Bill Mantlo’s Hulk material to jump in line for omnibus treatment, getting started on it now without waiting for two more classic Incredible Hulk omnibus volumes to connect to it.

This would begin to collect Incredible Hulk (1968) #245-313 & Annual 10-13, Marvel Treasury Edition (1974) #25, Marvel Super Hero Contest of Champions (1982) #1-3, The Incredible Hulk vs. Quasimodo (1983) #1, Alpha Flight (1983) #29, and material from Marvel Fanfare (1982) #7.

It would need to omit issue #296, which co-stars ROM – it is collected in his omnibus line.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

After Bill Mantlo’s run concludes, we’d need to cover just 500 more pages of comics to reach the beginning of the Peter David omnibus line. Since that would require us to map five volumes into the future to a book that has not yet been covered by Masterworks, and because it is a brief amount of material that equals just one Epic Collection, it is outside of the scope of our poll options. It’s possible that the Mantlo volumes would break later and stretch farther to collect that material.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Then, we have Incredible Hulk by Peter David Vol. 1 – Vol. 4, collecting from Incredible Hulk (1968) #331-467 (along with all of the contemporaneous Annuals et al), followed by Incredible Hulk by Byrne & Casey to complete Incredible Hulk (1968) and collect the first year of Hulk (1999). See Guide to Hulk – Bruce Banner for details!

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk Omnibus Mapping: Modern Hulk

We don’t just have “gaps” in our collection of modern Hulk – it’s pretty much a giant hole from 1999 to the beginning of Immortal Hulk (2018), with just one little island of material collected in the middle!

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Incredible Hulk by Byrne & Casey collects the first year of Hulk (1999) before the title changes to Incredible Hulk (1999). See Guide to Hulk – Bruce Banner for details. Then, we have the existing Hulk: The Dogs of War… which requires some explanation, below.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk by Paul Jenkins (2000 – 2001) [AKA Dogs of War omnibus]

For some reason, our Hulk poll options are full of us making odd choices and breaking rules… because this is already an omnibus! 

Except… it’s not. Hulk: The Dogs of War is a MASSIVE 800+ page oversize hardcover, a size we almost never see for non-Omnibus hardcovers outside of the X-Men line. Also, its contents are perfect – it collects all of the Paul Jenkins Hulk material we could possibly ask for in a single book.

We don’t typically put any “straight reprint” conversions from oversize hardcover (AKA OHC) to omnibus on the poll, because then it very quickly turns from a Most-Wanted poll to a “this book seems big enough to reprint as an omnibus” poll. However, in this case – which is unique across the entire poll – it makes perfect sense.

A vote for this book is a vote for Marvel to reprint Hulk: The Dogs of War as an omnibus.

This would collect Incredible Hulk (2000) #1/2, 12-33, & Annual 2000-2001; Sentry/Hulk (2001) #1; Hulk Smash (2001) #1-2; and Startling Stories: Banner (2001) #1-4.

Note that Hulk: Raging Thunder (2008) #1 by Jeff Parker is set retroactively between #33-34.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Next, we have Incredible Hulk: Return Of The Monster Omnibus – AKA Hulk by Bruce Jones. After Bruce Jones’s run we have our island of existing omnibuses Hulk: Planet Hulk, Hulk: World War Hulk, and Hulk by Loeb and McGuinness. See Guide to Hulk – Bruce Banner for more details

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Incredible Hulks (2010) #624Hulk: Incredible Hulks by Greg Pak Vol. 1 (2008 – 2010) [follows World War Hulk; includes Skaar, Fall of the Hulks, and World War Hulks]

Let’s start out by clarifying something: two thirds of the remainder of Greg Pak’s fan-favorite run on Hulk has already been collected in oversize hardcovers – in Hulk: Planet Hulk and Hulk: World War Hulk.

After the material in Planet Hulk and World War Hulk, the Incredible Hulk title transitions to being a Hercules book with issue #112. Pak then wrote Skaar: Son of Hulk (2008) #1-12 while Jeph Loeb penned Hulk (2008), but Pak returned to ongoing Hulk comics with The Incredible Hulk (1968) #601 in October 2009.

This book focuses on collecting the three portions of Pak’s remaining run plus a fourth category of content. Those three portions are “Fall of the Hulks” (512 pages) ,”World War Hulks” (448 pages), and issues #612-635 (576 pages – none of which has been collected in oversize hardcover).

Marvel could absolutely collect that all into a single 1400+ page book – it wouldn’t even be their biggest Hulk omnibus, thanks to Immortal Hulk by Al Ewing. However, some of the page counts of the first two sections are misleading – much of that is non-Pak event mini-series. Of course, we’d love to see them all in this book – and, they would fit. However, they’re not all critical to understanding Pak’s run.

The fourth category of content is Skaar: Son of Hulk material. Skaar’s plot is somewhat woven into this run, and Skaar is not a significant character or seller on his own. Of the 40+ issues of content, 38 issues are unique and do not overlap any of the Pak material listed above.

That means all four of these pieces of content would actually require two omnibuses to collect. Since we have no way of anticipating how Marvel would divide that material – as a set of two continuous books or a Pak book and a Skaar book – we’re simply presenting them as a single option on the poll this year.

A vote for this book is a vote to collect the remainder of Greg Pak’s Hulk material and all of Skaar’s material, along with many supporting tie-ins.

The main Greg Pak material (or, Pak-adjacent material) this would collect is The Incredible Hulk (1968) #600-635, plus some or all of main tie-ins including Dark Reign: M.O.D.O.K. (2009) #1-4, Dark Reign: The List – Hulk (2009) #1, Fall of the Hulks: Alpha (2010) #1, Fall of the Hulks: Gamma (2010) #1, Fall of The Hulks: M.O.D.O.K. (2010) #1, Fall of the Hulks: Red Hulk (2010) #1-4, Hulked-Out Heroes (2010) #1-2, Savage She-Hulks (2010) #1-3, World War Hulks (2010) #1, World War Hulks: Spider-Man vs. Thor (2010) #1-2, World War Hulks: Wolverine vs. Captain America (2010) #1-2, and material from She-Hulk Sensational (2010) #1.

To that it could add some or all of Skaar’s material, including World War Hulk (2007) #5, Skaar: Son of Hulk (2008) #1-12, Skaar: Son of Hulk Presents: Savage World of Sakaar (2008) #1, Hulk Family: Green Genes (2009) #1, Planet Skaar: Prologue (2009) #1, War of Kings: Savage World of Skaar (2009) #1, Son of Hulk (2009) #13-17 (featuring Hiro-Kala), Realm of Kings: Son of Hulk (2010) #1-4 (featuring Hiro-Kala), Wolverine: Origins (2006) #41-45, Fall of the Hulks: Gamma (2010) #1, Incredible Hulks (2010) #612-617, and Skaar: King of the Savage Land (2011) #1-5.

The Skaar material could also incorporate some other contemporaneous material from The Incredible Hulk (1968) #601-611, Dark Reign: The List – Hulk (2009) #1, Hercules: Fall of an Avenger (2010) #1-2, She-Hulk Sensational (2010) #1, and Origins of Marvel Comics (2010) #1. (Skaar also appears in Fall of the Hulks: Gamma (2010) #1 and Incredible Hulks #612-625, included in the first section of material, above).

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Incredible Hulk (2011) #7Hulk by Aaron, Waid & Duggan Vol. 1 (2011 – 2015) [begins to collect between Pak & Ewing]

Why are there three massive authors listed on this one volume?

To understand, we have to take a look at Bruce Banner’s publishing history after the conclusion of Greg Pak and Jeph Loeb’s runs on he character.

First, Jason Aaron took over the character with Incredible Hulk (2011). By that point, Aaron was already a big name – he had been writing Wolverine for a couple of years, among other titles. However, the comic market seemed slightly exhausted by Hulk after the lengthy Planet & War sagas plus the proliferation of multiple Hulks. Also, this run had an expiration date with the quickly approaching game of writer musical chairs of Marvel Now, where Aaron would take over Thor.

Could Aaron have kept writing Hulk into Now if it was a hit? It worked for Waid on Daredevil and DeConnick on Captain Marvel, so it’s not out of the realm of possibility. Meanwhile, during this run Victor Gischler continued his death grip on all things vampires with Fear Itself tie-in Hulk vs. Dracula (2011).

Hulk began Marvel Now with a curious status quo written by Mark Waid – he was drafted into being an agent of SHIELD. I always enjoyed this run, but fans never really latched onto it. There were a number of mini-series alongside it in 2013 and 2014, and then in 2014 Waid relaunched the title before it was later taken over by Gerry Duggan.

When we return from Secret Wars (2015), Banner is done with being Hulk and the title – and Gamma Powers – are taken on by Amadeus Cho. That’s covered below. The next Hulk run is Immortal Hulk (2018), which is already in omnibus.

Aaron’s run just isn’t omnibus-sized on its own, even with the addition of the mini-series. And, the Waid/Duggan run is a perfect omnibus size, but could abandon all of that supporting work. But, altogether, it’s 70+ issues – too big for one book!

Since there’s no clear omnibus to map here, we’re treating it as a new “Modern Years” line of Hulk that could take one or more volumes to complete.

A vote for this book is a vote to any solution to collecting Hulk from 2011 to 2015 in whatever way is the most logical. It could simply collect all of this material sequentially, or could be an Aaron book, a Waid/Duggan book, and a Companion book.

This would begin to collect Incredible Hulk (2011) #1-15 & 7.1 by Jason Aaron, Hulk vs. Dracula (2011) #1-3, Indestructible Hulk (2013) #1-20 & Annual 1 by Mark Waid (and Special #1 – part of Arms of the Octopus one-shots), Marvel Knights: Hulk (2013) #1-4 by Joe Keatinge, Original Sin: Hulk vs. Iron Man (2014) #1-4 by Mark Waid, Savage Hulk (2014) #1-6 anthology series, and Hulk (2014) #1-16 by Waid & Gerry Duggan.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

The next Bruce Banner material after this book is collected in The Immortal Hulk omnibus, followed by Hulk by Cates & Ottley. See Guide to Hulk – Bruce Banner for more information.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk: Incredible Hulk by Phillip Kennedy Johnson (2023 & on)

After a brief, silly detour from the body horror of Al Ewing’s Immortal Hulk (2018) in Cate & Ottley’s Hulk (2021), Hulk swung back to being a scarier comic under the pen of Phillip Kennedy Johnson.

Johnson leaned into a truly monstrous eldritch horror angle for Hulk that wasn’t as connected to his origins, and added a helping of themes of abuse (which, to be fair, have long been part of Hulk’s story).

Johnson concluded the first portion of his run with Incredible Hulk (2023) #30, but suggested there are two more chapters still to come. The 10-issue middle chapter is in the process of wrapping up in Infernal Hulk (2025) #1-10, and we don’t know how long the final chapter will be. If it is 25 issues or less, then I think Marvel holds out on releasing this book until it one big single omnibus. However, if Johnson’s story bible calls for more than 15 additional issues, I suspect Marvel might release this as two smaller books, similar to their approach on Jed MacKay’s run on Moon Knight.

A vote for this book is a vote for Marvel to break ground on collecting Phillip Kennedy Johnson’s run on Hulk… perhaps all of it, depending on where things stand by the start of 2027.

This would collect Incredible Hulk (2023) #1-30, Annual 1/2023, Giant-Size Hulk (2024) #1, & Hulk: Blood Hunt (2024) #1. We don’t yet know if it should push forward to Infernal Hulk (2025) #1-10, as we need to see what will come next (and how long that will be).

It could optionally include Hellhunters (2024) #1-5 as supporting material, as it is also by PKJ and expands on a character from this run.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk Omnibus Mapping: She-Hulk

She-Hulk’s comics are so well-collected that we only need two omnibuses to have a complete run of her comics in oversize hardcover! Or… is it three omnibuses? Hmm… let’s take a look.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

She-Hulk’s debut series is collected in The Savage She-Hulk Omnibus, which is followed by The Sensational She-Hulk by John Byrne – see Guide to She-Hulk.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Sensational She-Hulk (1989) #14She-Hulk: Sensational She-Hulk Vol. 1 (1985 – 1991) [recollects Sensational based on Epic mapping]

Are you doing a double-take? Didn’t I just say that The Sensational She-Hulk by John Byrne has already been collected?

The problem with that omnibus is that Byrne popped on and off Sensational She-Hulk (1989) three times to write less than half its issues.

That’s fine for a Byrne-focused collection, but it makes trying to map around it with a Companion omnibus a fool’s errand. Not only would we have to collect disparate non-Byrne material with several gaps, but some of the supporting material won’t make any sense – since it would fit between issues of the Byrne run that wouldn’t be collected.

This is a rare instance of me firmly putting my thumb on the scales of the voting options and labeling that Byrne book as a “creator-centric” anthology omnibus, which we will NOT map around for the purposes of this poll. It’s nice that it exists, but it’s too piecemeal for Marvel to reasonably collect around it.

Instead, we’re talking about the first two volumes that would follow the Epic Collection maps to completely collect She-Hulks material from the end of her original The Savage She-Hulk (1980), which ends in 1982, through the beginning of She-Hulk by Dan Slott, which starts in 2004.

A vote for this book is a vote to use Epic Collection mapping to collect the She-Hulk material leading to her 1989 ongoing series, and then about half of that series – including just 10 issues overlapping the Byrne omnibus.

This would collect Marvel Graphic Novel (1982) #18 – The Sensational She-Hulk OGN, Marvel Team-Up (1972) #107, Dazzler (1981) #14, Solo Avengers (1987) #14 (B-story), Marvel Comics Presents (1988) #18 (Byrne prologue), Sensational She-Hulk (1989) #1-25, The Sensational She-Hulk in Ceremony (1989) #1-2, Marvel Fanfare (1982) #48 (1st story), and Marvel Super-Heroes (1990) #5 (5th story).

It might also include Marvel Graphic Novel (1982) #16 – The Aladdin Effect.

Then, a second volume of Sensational She-Hulk would collect the remainder of her 1989 series, plus subsequent appearances to have this meet up with She-Hulk by Dan Slott on the other side. That would be Sensational She-Hulk (1989) #26-60, material from Marvel Comics Presents (1988) #123-126, Incredible Hulk (1968) #412 & Annual 16 (4th story), Doc Sampson (1996) #1-4, Incredible Hulk (1968) #441-442, Thing & She-Hulk: The Long Night (2002) #1, and material from Marvel Double-Shot (2003) #2.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

After we reach 2003, we then have all of She-Hulk’s solo material from 2004-2010 collected in She-Hulk by Dan Slott Omnibus and She-Hulk by Peter David Omnibus – see Guide to She-Hulk.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

She-Hulk (2014) #6She-Hulk by Soule & Tamaki (2014 – 2020) [includes A-Force]

She-Hulk wasn’t especially present in Marvel Now from 2012-2014, anchoring just the twelve issues of Charles Soule’s She-Hulk (2014), and appearing in the ensemble cast of Al Ewing’s Mighty Avengers.

That material isn’t quite long enough for an omnibus.

Then, she returned from Secret Wars (2015) as one of the members of A-Force (2016), the weirdly named all-female team of Avenging women. Since A-Force hasn’t been collected elsewhere and both Captain Marvel and Ms. Marvel’s books have moved past it, it could make the most sense to include it here – especially because it explains the change of She-Hulk’s status quo in Civil War II.

Then, we reach Mariko Tamaki’s run on Hulk (2016) and She-Hulk (2017) – again, too short for its own omnibus at just 230 pages.

It’s almost as if we could get all three of these roughly 12-issue runs together into a single omnibus…

A vote for this book is a vote to comprehensively collect She-Hulk’s solo and team material from Marvel Now through the start of Rainbow Rowell’s run in 2022.

This would collect She-Hulk (2014) #1-12 by Charles Soule (along with Wolverines (2015) #13 and material from Gwenpool Special (2016) #1); Avengers (2015) #0 (A-Force story); A-Force (2016) #1-10; Civil War II (2016) #0 and material Civil War II Free Comic Book Day 2016 #1; Hulk (2017) #1-11 & She-Hulk (2018) #159-163 by Mariko Tamki; Avengers (2018) #46-49; She-Hulk Annual (2019) #1; Immortal She-Hulk (2020) #1.

If you want this to start earlier to pick up various She-Hulks’ participation in the “Incredible Hulks” period of the main Hulk title, you would want this to begin with Hulk: Raging Thunder (2008) #1, All New She-Hulk (2009) #1-4, material from Incredible Hulk (2009) #600 & back-ups from #600-605, Fall of the Hulks: The Savage She-Hulks (2010) #1-3, She-Hulk Sensational (2010) #1 (an uncollected story), and She-Hulks (2011) #1-4.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

 She-Hulk by Rainbow Rowell – a just-concluded run I absolutely adore and cherish – has been announced for release later this year – see Guide to She-Hulk.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk Omnibus Mapping: Red Hulk & Red She-Hulk, Brawn, & Weapon H

Hulk has spun off a number of supporting gamma-irradiated characters over the past 20 years, four of whom have accumulated enough material for their own omnibuses!

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk: Red Hulk & Red She-Hulk by Jeff Parker (2010 – 2013)

Jeff Parker took over writing Hulk (2008) with issue #25 and shifted it to focus exclusively on Red Hulk. He continued writing the title into Marvel Now, with the focus shifting to Red She-Hulk. See Guide to Red Hulk and Guide to Red She-Hulk for more information.

A vote for this book is a vote to collect all of Jeff Parker’s Red Hulk and Red She-Hulk run into a single omnibus, which will be the first time much of it is collected into oversize hardcover.

This would collect Hulk (2008) #25-57 & 31.1, Hulk: Raging Thunder (2008) #1, “Venom: Circle of Four” from Venom (2011) #13.1 – 13.4, and Red-She Hulk (2013) #58-67.

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

Hulk: Amadeus Cho, The Totally Awesome Hulk by Greg Pak (2016 – 2018)

In All-New All-Different Marvel, Greg Pak returned to Hulk and to one of his favorite creations, Amadeus Cho, by merging the two into a single new Hulk character!

A vote for this volume is a vote just for that Cho-Hulk material (later renamed to “Brawn”), and not any earlier Cho material which would be collected entirely along with Pak’s work on Hercules.

Pak also continued writing Cho into the New Agents of Atlas. Could this push on to include that material? A vote for this book is a vote for that possibility! But, primarily, it’s a vote for the material listed below.

This would collect Totally Awesome Hulk (2016) #1-22 & 1.MU, Weapon X (2017) #5-6, Weapons of Mutant Destruction (2016) Alpha, Incredible Hulk (1968 / 2017) #709-717, and Amadeus Cho 20th Anniversary Special (2025) #1

An black-and-white icon of the clenched fist of Marvel's Incredible Hulk!

X-Men: ResurrXion – Weapon X & Weapon H by Greg Pak (2017 – 2019) [includes Hulkverines]

A vote for this book is a vote to collect Greg Pak’s entire run on the X-Force-esque Weapon X (2017) and its spinoff focusing on a Hulk/Wolverine hybrid in Weapon H.

This would collect Weapon X (2017) #1-27, Weapons of Mutant Destruction (2017) Alpha #1, Totally Awesome Hulk (2016) #19-22, and material from from X-Men Prime (2017). It would continue to Weapon H (2018) #1-12 and Hulkverines (2019) #1-3.

It could add Domino (2018) #1-10 & Annual 1 and Domino: Hotshots (2019) #1-5, but that would might better with X-Force (2018).

Filed Under: comic books Tagged With: Collected Edition Mapping, Hulk, Most Wanted Marvel Omnibus, Red Hulk, Red She-Hulk, She-Hulk, Skaar, Tigereyes, Tigereyes Most-Wanted Marvel Omnibus Poll 2026

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Shunter1612 says

    March 24, 2026 at 8:21 pm

    Hi Krisis. Would it be possible to add the second story of She-Hulk Sensational (2010) #1 at 33 pages (including the cover) into the She-Hulk by Soule and Tamaki omnibus since it isn’t in the She-Hulk by Peter David Omnibus (I saw you put it as an possible add-on to a Ms. Marvel by Brian Reed omnibus last year, but I would also like it in a She-Hulk omnibus line). If there is any more room in the She-Hulk by Soule and Tamaki omnibus, I think including Lyra’s story would be nice since she is also a She-Hulk and her story would otherwise be abandoned in omnibus format. Her story would include Hulk: Raging Thunder (2008) #1 at 25 pages (including the cover) that has no Jen in the issue, All New She-Hulk (2009) #1-4 at 96 pages (including covers) where Jen appears throughout, excerpted material from Incredible Hulk (2009) 600 to show what’s happening with Jen at 8 or more pages (no cover), the backup stories of Incredible Hulk (2009) 600-605 at 69 pages (not including covers) that does not have Jen but is about finding her, Fall of the Hulks: The Savage She-Hulks (2010) #1-3 at 69 pages (including covers) that prominently features Jen, and She-Hulks (2011) #1-4 at 98 pages. Thanks.

    Reply
  2. krisis says

    March 24, 2026 at 8:25 pm

    It feels like Lyra’s story would be more at home in Incredible Hulks, since that’s a catch-all of all the various Gamma characters in the period. We’ve previously tried to cobble together another Jen/She-Hulks book from that scant material, and there’s just not enough sales/voting motivation there – same as with Skaar (though obviously more popular).

    Reply
    • Shunter1612 says

      March 24, 2026 at 9:13 pm

      That makes sense. Even with me recommending all this material, I still would’t vote for it.

      Reply
      • krisis says

        March 24, 2026 at 10:39 pm

        I made a note on both books, just to be thorough.

        Reply
        • Shunter1612 says

          March 25, 2026 at 12:39 am

          Thanks again.

          Reply
          • krisis says

            March 25, 2026 at 1:15 am

            Thank YOU for the eagle eyes! This got through over half a dozen Mapping Minties. It gives me some sympathy for Marvel trying and failing to get all of this stuff right all on their own.

  3. Shunter1612 says

    March 25, 2026 at 3:14 pm

    One more thing. The second story from She-Hulk Sensational ((2010) #1 does not have Lyra in it. It is simply a She-Hulk story not yet in omnibus format, and I was hoping it would get added to the She-Hulk omnibus line (You already included it in a Ms. Marvel by Brian Reed omnibus map, but I also want it in a She-Hulk omnibus). Sorry for the confusion.

    Reply
  4. Shunter1612 says

    March 28, 2026 at 2:10 am

    Hi Krisis. I would promise that this would be the last thing that I would add, but I don’t want to lie again.

    Is it a good idea to add Fallen (2016) #1 at to a Totally Awesome Hulk omnibus. My reasoning is that this issue, written by Greg Pak, is a funeral for Bruce after he died in Civil War II. And since there was no ongoing series for Bruce, this would go with Totally Awesome Hulk.

    For the She-Hulk omnibus, could you add material from Hulk Family: Green Genes (2008) 1. Specifically, add the first story that stars Jen Walters She-Hulk at 16 pages, and the third story that stars Lyra at 8 pages. Both stories would go before All-New She-Hulk (2009) 1-4.

    Thanks..

    Reply

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