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However, recent runs on the character have often failed to connect with readers. Deadpool has become a cliche in a lot of ways, and creators have focused more on the jokes and absurdity of Wade Wilson than they do the man under all the jokes and pain. His books have rarely lasted past a year lately, but it looks like Marvel wants to solve that. The publisher put the team of Benjamin Percy and Geoff Shaw on Wade Wilson: Deadpool, a comic that is one of the most anticipated 2026 Marvel books. The first issue has come and gone, and it looks like Percy and Shaw might be able to take the character back to old heights.
Wade Wilson: Deadpool #1 Brings the Complexity of the Character Back to the Fore

We have all a certain idea of what a Deadpool story is โ funny, violent, with wild action scenes and some quieter chaos that is part of what makes the character so beloved. However, over the years, the chaos has been all there is. One of the things I remember liking about the character in the ’90s is the way Wade developed. There was always the violence and the humor, but there was also the pain at the center of the man, the tragedy of the man who kills everything, even the good parts of his life, and yet can never die.
That has been forgotten in the salad years since Duggan and Posehn left the book. The two of them were able to take the tragic seeds planted by writers like Joe Kelly and Fabian Nicieza and tend them to gardens of great story. Sure, we got funny stories from them, but we also got the man under it all, dealing with his broken mind (and another broken mind in his mind), and that made all of the violence and humor better. Sometimes, the best comedy hurts and Deadpool stories should hurt. However, more contemporary writers tried to just use the humor, and the stories have rang hollow for years.









