The return of a heartwarming, feel-good superhero!
Dark Horse Comics and Mark Millar continue the expansion of the Millarworld comics universe through an all-new sequel to Huck with Huck: Big Bad World. Centered around a small town, autistic gas station clerk with powers and an ethos, one good deed a day. Whether it is something large or small, Huck’s goals to make his community a better place have remained constant. Huck: Big Bad World is brought to life by Millar and artist Rafael Albuquerque, colorist Dave McCaig, and letterer Clem Robins. The six-issue series features cover art from Albuquerque for each issue, while the first installment also features a black & white variant of Albuquerque’s cover art and a variant by longtime Millar collaborator Jae Lee.
After being exposed as a super-powered person and hunting down the doctor who gave him—and his mother—their powers, it would seem like Huck could finally get back to the simple life he’d come to love, making folks in his small town feel safe and cared for by doing one good deed a day and being the real change anyone would want to see in the world. But then a mysterious man tells him he and his mother aren’t the ONLY super-people out in the world; many are hiding, just like them.
“Stoked to team up again with Mark on the sequel of our very first collaboration,” exclaimed Albuquerque. “I missed these characters so much, and about 10 years later, returning to them still feels fresh and exciting.”
Return to a heroic story about being a positive force in this world as Huck: Big Bad World arrives in comic shops May 14, 2025. Pre-order now for $4.99. Visit Comic Shop Locator for more details and stores near you.
Praise for Mark Millar’s Huck:
“Huck is wonderfully kind and an absolute counterpoint to the violent antiheroes (or even just more-violent-than-normal superheroes) we regularly witness in comics.”—Keenlinks
“Knowing how dark Millar can get, Huck’s compassion and earnestness make it feel like something went wrong at the writer’s well-oiled comic-book assembly line. So many of his books use violence, revenge, and evil to define heroism. In Huck, Millar takes those factors out of the equation, and instead compares Huck with the humanity around him. He’s better than all of us.”—Vox
“Millar is famous for collaborating with top artistic talent, and Albuquerque is no exception.”—We The Nerdy