It's a good thing that exactly 100 people voted. That makes the math much easier. The most popular vote was 60,001-70,000 with 27%, followed by 50,001-60,000 at 23%. Actual sales as reported by THE BEAT: 68,306. (I had predicted a start in the 70s, so I wasn't far off.)
Here's how the sales data for the Final Crisis spinoffs were interpreted at our official source for sales data, THE BEAT:
20 - FINAL CRISIS: LEGION OF 3 WORLDS
08/2008: Legion of 3 Worlds #1 of 3 — 68,306
22 - DC UNIVERSE: LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT
08/2008: Last Will and Testament #1 — 67,063
26 - FINAL CRISIS: SUPERMAN BEYOND
08/2008: Superman Beyond #1 of 2 — 63,137
29 - FINAL CRISIS: REVELATIONS
08/2008: Revelations #1 of 5 — 58,434
Following the pattern established by Final Crisis and Final Crisis: Rogues’ Revenge, August’s new set of spin-off titles all come in with underwhelming sales.
They seem to be in the same league as the competition’s Secret Invasion: Thor, Secret Invasion: X-Men and Secret Invasion: The Amazing Spider-Man, granted, but let’s keep in mind that those books provide random and repetitive punch-’em-ups which are cursory at best to Secret Invasion proper. The Final Crisis spin-offs, on the other hand, were promoted as major parts of the storyline and are by the company’s top-flight creative personnel.
That none of them managed to crack 70,000 units certainly supports the notion that the market was tired of Final Crisis long before the first issue shipped. The fact that their debut issues are all cuddling up within 10,000 units of each other also suggests that retailers didn’t quite know what to do with them, mind you, so it’s still possible that we’re going to see some major corrections in the next few months.
Record of gimmicks: All of these comics were supported with 50/50 variant-cover editions. All of them had a $ 3.99 price tag, except for Final Crisis: Superman Beyond #1, which was $ 4.50 and came with a set of cardboard 3D goggles.
Polls are still open for your prediction on the final issue.
There has been a 2nd print of #1 of L3W. Assuming that wasn't included in The Beat's numbers, the Legion book will undoubtedly crest 70K.
ReplyDeleteIts interesting that a book that apparently struggles to get readers sold the most copies for ts Final Crisis story #1.
ReplyDeleteThe Legion doesn't struggle any more than any other mid-range book. If you track the sale charts (I do each month), the Legion stays right in line with a group of other books from both Marvel and DC. They shuffle in position a bit from month to month, but only "events" knock them out, and then the come right back. Birds of Prey, Robin, Star Wars, Moon Knight, etc.
ReplyDeleteBut this does also say that the current series just isn't capturing the imagination and keeping the readers like it should. The Johns/PĂ©rez combo is an interest draw.