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Now, obviously, liking something is subjective, so this isnโt meant to be a list of which ones were my favorites. Rather, today weโre going to be ranking the crossover specials by how well they deliver on the concept they promise, and how good a showcase they give to the special dynamic between their two characters. After all, the main point of crossovers is to see beloved characters interact with brand new people youโd know theyโd either love or hate, right? So with that established, letโs get right into ranking every crossover from Deadpool/Batman.
7) Wolverine/Batman

Coming in last is the three-page fight between Batman and Wolverine, written and drawn by the legendary Frank Miller. Honestly, this one took me two reads to understand, as it throws you right into a clash between the two heroes deep in Gotham. The two simply hit each other and hurl incredibly specific, very-Miller insults at each other. If you enjoy Millerโs modern work, then youโll like this, but frankly, there just isnโt much here, and it hardly delivers on the hype that a fight between two of comicsโ most legendary characters should go. Itโs fine at best, even if itโs really hard to get a read on it the first time.
6) Logo

Unfortunately, our sixth entry is the second Wolverine-inspired crossover, this time the fusion of Wolverine and Lobo, but donโt let the placement fool you into thinking this set of pages is bad. Itโs incredibly fun, mixing the aspects of Wolverine and Lobo seamlessly into a character that genuinely feels like heโs both of them at the same time. And really, how could you hate someone who says heโs a Canucklezian? Logo is a great idea given form, and my only complaint is that we didnโt get to see more of him, given that his adventure was also only three pages. Also, this one had the Thanoseidcopter, which automatically makes it incredible.ย
5) Rocket Racoon/Green Lantern

The story is literally called โRocket Has a Green Lantern Ring Now,โ and it delivers on that. A cultural exchange between the Guardians of the Galaxy and Guardians of the Universe leads Hal and Rocket to join each otherโs teams for a few days, and it goes as well as youโd imagine. Rocket causes chaos in the best ways possible, and the Green Lantern Corps wants him gone by day three. Unfortunately, nobody planned on Hal finding the Infinity Gauntlet and going full Parallax, which is the funniest way possible for this story to end โ even if it’s a jab at Hal. This comic aims to make everyone laugh by abusing its charactersโ personalities and lore, and I think it manages to do both beautifully.












