Some X-Men comics now feature a QR code in the back of the book that hides a ābonus page.ā These new hidden pages have set off a large debate online among comic readers and fans over what counts as bonus content and comic preservation.
If you look online right now, youāll find people suggesting that Marvel is going to be locking the last page of all future comics behind a QR code. Thatās a pretty wild claim! As such, some of these tweets have gone semi-viral among comic book fans, leading to a lot of people assuming that this is the case. However, thatās not quite the full story here, even if the truth is still a controversial mess thatās led to a lot of online debate.
Earlier this month, Marvel started doing something different with some of its new X-Men-related comics. At the very end of July 10’s X-Men #1 by Jed MacKay and Ryan Stegman, readers encountered a large QR code printed on one of the last pages. If you were to scan this code youād unlock a bonus comic page teasing future events or villains. (In the case of X-Men #1 it revealed more information about a new group of baddies introduced in the comic.) This QR code bonus page popped up in some other recent X-Men comics.
Why Marvel is doing QR-hidden bonus pages in X-Men
According to Marvel Comics VP Executive Editor Tom Brevoort, this isnāt the comic company cutting content from books, but instead adding a bit of extra content while avoiding spoilers, as he explained on his personal Substack.
[The QR code page] was a bonus page to begin with, an extra pageāwe didnāt scale back the contents of X-Men #1 in order to do it,ā said Brevoort. āAnd it gave us a page whose contents we could conceal until the day of release, thus avoiding any early spoilers.ā
The editor also confirmed that Marvel was going to be doing similar QR bonus pages in future X-Men comic launches as a sort of a āmodern-day equivalent of that āThings To Comeā page that ran in the first issue of the Claremont/Lee X-Men #1.ā
So this isnāt a case of Marvel cutting the last page from a book and hiding it behind a QR codeāas comic book writers have confirmedāinstead, itās a bonus page, something extra.
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However, some fans donāt agree. They see these bonus pages as important to the overall story and as such these āextrasā are indeed the last pages of a comic book. It doesnāt help that one of these QR pages wasnāt available when the comic was first sold. I also understand folks not wanting to read comic pages on their tiny phone screens when they have spent money on an actual physical comic book to add to their collection. Itās weird and not ideal.
There is some good news. According to Brevoort, when these issues are collated together for a later releaseāas Marvel always does with comicsāthe bonus pages will be included and not hidden behind a QR code.
This means that decades from now, people wonāt have to hope a URL is still working to see one more page in a physical comic book. The Marvel editor even suggested that if they do a second printing of a comic with a QR code page, they might include that bonus page in the comic instead, as at that point spoilers wonāt matter.
Thatās all nice to hear and should mean that comic preservationists wonāt have to print off a digital page from a website to preserve history.
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