Summary
- The Boys offers a mature, dark take on corrupt superheroes beyond Marvel and DC comics.
- Comic book fans can explore similar thrilling, gruesome stories featured in The Boys.
- Season 4 introduces dangerous Supes, setting the stage for a gripping final season.
When viewers watch The Boys for the first time, comic book fans might be surprised at the amount of shock factor the series has on top of its riveting storyline. After all, The Boys tells the story of how revered superheroes are slowly revealed to be corrupt to the core, and what a group of individuals is doing to try and stop them. With this in mind, fans of both DC Comics and Marvel might be surprised how these kinds of storylines aren’t always present in the stories of both hit publishers.
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Surprisingly enough, there are a lot of more mature, much darker comic books similar to The Boys that may or may not touch the subject of superheroes. Some of these stories may come from DC Comics and Marvel themselves, while others come from other publishers.
Updated on July 19th, 2024, by Rhenn Taguiam: As Season 4 of The Boys shows a more dangerous world with Homelander and newcomers Sister Sage and Firecracker free to act with no one to stop them, it’s up to Billy Butcher and The Boys to stop these out-of-control Supes - if they somehow find a way to reconcile, anyway. While this season’s progression sees more desperate members across both sides, the reveal that Season 5 is the last season of the series means there’s not going to be a lot of material similar to The Boys after the series ends. Thankfully, the realm of comic books has no shortage of works which have a similar theme to what The Boys offers. Some suggestions among must-read stories include a town where its children have started to go missing, a take on World War 2 with superheroes, a post-apocalyptic story of humans fulfilling their most malicious actions, and the definitive Joker story, all of which have been added to this list in its latest update.
19 Something Is Killing The Children (2019)
A Multi-Genre Piece About Finding Light Amid Hopelessness
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Release Date |
August 2019 to Present |
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Writer/s |
James Tynion IV |
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Artist/s |
Werther Dell’Edera, Giovanna Niro |
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Publisher |
Boom! Studios |
The title of Something Is Killing The Children is as unsettling as its premise: the children of Archer’s Peak go missing, with no one having any clue as to where they went or if they are even alive. It doesn’t help that these incidents coincide with sightings of shadowy creatures responsible for their abduction. For monster hunter Erica Slaughter, the children didn’t go missing - they’re being killed by these very nightmares the people of Archer’s Peak refuse to believe in.
While the mention of Erica Slaughter gives the impression that Something Is Killing The Children is yet another series with the tired trope of the “seasoned monster hunter,” the accompanied badassery of Erica seems a must-have against the sheer visciousness of the monsters she’s facing. Gore and brutality are mainstays in the story, and some visceral scenes involving children paint a bleak picture of the town. Erica slowly unravels the sinister threat to Archer’s Peak through pages of psychological thrills and dark drama, with the grit of the teeth drawn on Erica’s bandana face mask sometimes the only welcome sight amid the tired eyes of hopeless parents and the hungry eyes of those beings lurking in the shadows.
18 Uber (2013)
A Vicious Take On World War 2 With Superhumans
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Release Date |
March 2013 to October 2018 |
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Writer/s |
Kieron Gillen |
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Artist/s |
Canaan White, Gabriel Andrade, Daniel Gete |
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Publisher |
Avatar Press |
While World War 2 being a backdrop to comics isn’t new, Uber sets the bar for being perhaps the most visceral and brutal take for a comic book story set in this historical era. Set during the height of World War 2, Uber depicts a world where the Third Reich used superhumans called Ubers to tip the scales of the global conflict in their favor. While the Allied nations eventually developed their own superhumans, the war escalated to a point where heavy casualties were expected whenever the two sides clashed.
Despite a middling reception regarding its art and story, Uber is recognizable to comic book readers for its graphic depictions of extreme violence. Dismemberment is light in the context of horrors that the Ubers can commit throughout the story’s version of World War 2. Additionally, the story’s take on moral ambiguity at war has painted a rather bleak future for its unfinished story.
17 Crossed (2008)
Human Depravity Realized
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Release Date |
September 2008 to March 2010 |
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Writer/s |
Garth Ennis, Alan Moore, David Lapham, Si Spurrier |
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Artist/s |
Jacen Burrows |
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Publisher |
Avatar Press |
Among the iconic traits of The Boys is its satirical portrayal of superheroes out of control, with many supes using their powers for unsavory activities and no one powerful enough to stand up to them. This concept is hyper-realized in Crossed, a post-apocalyptic story of a human society ravaged by a virus that unleashes humanity’s most evil thoughts. Its main villains are the Crossed, carriers of the virus, recognizable for the cross-like rash on their faces. The story of Crossed happens across different arcs, both standalone and featuring recurring characters, that explore how humanity struggled to adapt to these monstrous killers.
Unlike typical zombie-esque stories, the Crossed are characterized by the retention of all their skills pre-infection, but are now overridden by their transformation into deranged psychopaths. Much of the story’s shock factor is tied into how Crossed will go out of their way to realize these desires, to the point of even inflicting self-mutilation to achieve satisfaction. With a Crossed’s bodily fluids capable of infection, human survivors struggle not just with their interpersonal relationships, but with fighting a threat that can still think the same way humans do - only with no hesitation about killing for fun.
16 Batman: The Killing Joke (1988)
The Definitive Joker Story
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Release Date |
March 1988 |
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Writer/s |
Alan Moore |
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Artist/s |
Brian Bolland |
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Publisher |
DC Comics |
While Batman's and the Joker's relationship has become a popular anchor in the Caped Crusader’s best stories, no other story featuring the two has had the same intensity and divisiveness as Batman: The Killing Joke. Conceptualized as a one-shot interpretation of the Joker’s origin, creators Alan Moore, Brian Bolland, and John Higgins created The Killing Joke to prove that Batman and Joker are “mirror images” who interpret a tragedy in two drastically different ways. It’s The Killing Joke which showed and eventually popularized a version of the Joker’s origin as a failed comedian whose misfortunes simply caused him to snap.
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However, the story's more recognizable and criticized aspect is how the Joker’s origins are juxtaposed with the present. Set to the backdrop of Batman wanting to make amends with the Joker, the discovery of Commissioner Gordon being kidnapped transforms into a race against time that will test Batman’s morals. While fans may already know how the story leads up to the tragic assault on Barbara Gordon, The Killing Joke forces readers to make their interpretations of the deeper relationship between The Dark Knight and the Clown Prince of Crime.
15 Brat Pack (1990)
A Twisted Take On Superheroes And Sidekicks
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Release Date |
1990 to 1991 |
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Creators |
Rick Veitch |
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Publisher |
King Hell Press |
Fans of The Boys interested in reading a more gruesome take on superhero satire may want to give Brat Pack a shot. However, whereas The Boys uses a lot of shock value and gore to cement its appeal, Brat Pack emphasizes exploring various issues tied to the superhero genre, including violence, commercialism, fascist tendencies, and even sexuality. Part and parcel to the creation of Brat Pack was the poll sent to Batman fans that led to the death of Jason Todd, which is what the introduction of Brat Pack alluded to.
The plot begins when the villain Dr. Blasphemy calls a vote from the public for the public execution of the sidekicks of the Black October, a quartet of superheroes defending Slumburg, Pennsylvania. When the sidekicks are inevitably killed off, four (4) children take their place, with their respective mentors systematically breaking down each sidekick to completely do their bidding. Perhaps more interesting is that the five-issue miniseries has a different ending exclusive both to the trade paperback and Brat Pack 5, making both worth the read for interested fans.
14 Hellblazer (1988)
Magically Pessimistic Social Commentary
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Release Date |
1988 to 2013, 2019 to 2020 |
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Creators |
Alan Moore, Stephen Bissette, John Ridgway |
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Publisher |
DC Comics, Vertigo, Titan Books, DC Black Label |
While John Constantine first appeared as a supernatural investigator in Swamp Thing, fanfare allowed him to gain his own series in 1988. Aptly named Hellblazer, John Constantine was introduced as a supernatural detective who did morally-questionable things for the greater good, often leaving a blaze of hell in his wake. While he did take measures to protect his friends and family from being targeted by his enemies, anyone who knows Constantine is almost inevitably put in harm’s way.
Fans of DC Universe works who want to remain grounded in the setting while exploring a darker setting may appreciate Hellblazer. While still set in the same universe, barely any superheroes appear except for fringe characters dealing with the supernatural. In turn, John Constantine frequently encountered magician Zatanna, the supernatural Phantom Stranger, Dream of the Endless, and even Swamp Thing.
13 Preacher (1995)
A Gritty Take On The War Between Heaven And Hell
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Release Date |
1995 to 2000 |
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Writer/s |
Garth Ennis |
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Artist/s |
Steve Dillon, Glenn Fabry, Carlos Ezquerra |
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Publisher |
Vertigo |
It’s often known that Vertigo is the DC Comics imprint where the darker stories lie, and such is the case of Preacher. This 1995 story narrates the life of the preacher Jesse Custer, based in the small town of Annville in Texas. After an incident that forces him to be possessed by the supernatural creature Genesis, his church is flattened and his entire congregation is killed in the process. However, it’s soon discovered that Genesis is an offspring of an angel and a demon, potentially making it - and Jesse - perhaps the most powerful entity in the universe.
After learning that God abandoned Heaven after the birth of Genesis, Jesse left Annville to search for the entity literally. In turn, Jesse eventually encounters various organizations and entities with a vested interest in his capabilities, including the Grail which aims to protect the bloodline of Jesus, and even the literal Angel of Death.
12 Transmetropolitan (1997)
A Cyberpunk Social Commentary
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Release Date |
1997 to 2002 |
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Writer/s |
Warren Ellis |
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Artist/s |
Darick Robertson |
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Publisher |
Helix, Vertigo |
Not all gritty comics involve superheroes or extremely powerful beings in all-out battles, as Transmetropolitan gives people a taste of how Vertigo may handle a cyberpunk story. In it, retired gonzo journalist Spider Jerusalem is forced to once more descend into the City to write his two overdue books and do coverages on various subjects, elaborating on the impact of two presidencies in the region, the so-called preceding “the Beast” and the current leader “the Smiler.”
What’s perhaps interesting about Transmetropolitan is how it tackles commentary on various subjects from the perspective of an equally-questionable protagonist. Spider himself is as sarcastic and broken as he is brilliant, and his wild approach to his subjects makes him unpredictably entertaining for readers.
11 Injustice: Gods Among Us (2013)
When Superman Goes Haywire
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Release Date |
2013 to 2016 |
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Writer/s |
Tom Taylor |
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Artist/s |
Various |
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Publisher |
DC Comics |
Perhaps the most known example of a “dark” take on superheroics, Injustice: Gods Among Us is definitely a worthy read for superhero fans interested in a different take on the most popular heroes of DC Comics. With Gods Among Us created specifically to tie into the NetherRealm game series, the comics begin with the Joker devising a plan to drive Superman to madness. He does so using fear toxin and stolen Kryptonite, tricking Superman into thinking he’s fighting Doomsday when in fact he was fighting an unconscious Lois. With Lois’s death triggering a bomb that destroyed Metropolis, the Joker succeeded in his mission. However, Superman retaliates by killing the Clown Prince of Crime.
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In his grief, Superman demands “all violence” worldwide to stop or he will personally do so. This resulted in a more draconian Justice League, eventually leading to a world government practically controlled by the League. This encounter resulted in Batman and Superman growing increasingly at odds, eventually leading to Batman creating the Insurgency composed of some powerful DC heroes to stop the Man of Steel.
10 Watchmen (1987)
A Deconstruction Of The Superhero Genre
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Release Date |
1986 to 1987 |
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Writer/s |
Alan Moore |
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Artist/s |
Dave Gibbons, John Higgins |
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Publisher |
DC Comics |
Perhaps the reward for the most iconic comic to ever start the “subversive, gritty, and real” trend in comic book stories would be given to Alan Moore’s Watchmen. Home to memorable symbols such as the iconic smiley pin and the bluer-than-blue Doctor Manhattan, Watchmen is an alternate take to superheroics when principles go completely off the rails.
In the alternate history of Watchmen, the creation of Doctor Manhattan in the Manhattan Project created a divergence point in 1938, when the United States won the Vietnam War and President Nixon is still the President. However, things go awry when vigilantism outlawed the popular superheroes at the time, and the murder of the popular superhero The Comedian plunged the remainder of his retired comrades into a deep conspiracy that may change the world.