I picked up What If?: The Original Marvel Series Omnibus Volume 1 because these stories were a big part of my childhood. That classic hypothetical—“What if Spider-Man joined the Fantastic Four?”—was the kind of question I obsessed over as a kid, long before I cared about continuity or canon. It took me nearly a year to finish this 776-page collection, reading an issue or two between other books, whenever I wanted something short and self-contained.
Each story is introduced by the Watcher, who tees up a twist in Marvel history and lets the dominoes fall. The storytelling is pure Bronze Age—heavy on narration, often wild in concept—and it reads like comic book Twilight Zone: a mix of thoughtful, bizarre, and occasionally tragic tales. The highs include Jane Foster wielding Mjolnir, Spider-Man stopping the burglar before Uncle Ben’s death, and Dr. Doom choosing heroism over vengeance. There’s also a fun issue where Conan roams modern New York, one with multiple characters becoming Nova, and even a goofy one where the original Marvel Bullpen becomes the Fantastic Four. Not every story lands, but the creativity is nonstop, and the premise alone keeps things engaging.
The art shifts with each issue—names like John Buscema, Herb Trimpe, Gene Colan, and Gil Kane rotate through—and while not all of it has aged gracefully, it still carries the weight of Marvel's classic style. Some of these ideas were ahead of their time, some are time capsules, but all of them reflect the kind of boundless imagination that made me love comics in the first place.
If you ever spent time wondering how different things could’ve gone in the Marvel Universe, this one’s worth the long haul—even if you read it one random “what if” at a time.