![]() ![]() If you’re a fan of the show who has slept on the comics line, there is no better time than now to pick them up. ![]() Ayala, who refers to Xena as their “ number one favorite character of all time,” teamed up with Olivia Sweetman and several other artists to bring us a new, perhaps more definitive take on the Warrior Princess than we’ve seen in comics up to this point. In 2019, we saw another Xena reboot take shape in the form of Vita Ayala’s Xena. Several of the best writers and artists the industry has to offer have worked on her various series, such as Genevieve Valentine, Amanda Conner, Jimmy Palmiotti, and June Brigman, with covers by superstars like Alex Ross, Mike Mignola, Erica Henderson, and Jenny Frisson, but Xena comics have remained mostly under the radar for the last 20-plus years. Initially published through the short-lived line by the trading card company Topps, this was followed by a short stint at Dark Horse, and finally, a move over to Dynamite Entertainment in 2007, the company which comic book Xena currently calls her home. ![]() It was only shortly after the debut of the TV series that we first began to see Xena: Warrior Princess comics on the shelves, and what a wild ride it’s been. ![]()
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