Saturday, 20 December 2025

Conan The Barbarian #26 - Titan Comics

CONAN THE BARBARIAN No. 26, December 2025
For those fans of Robert E. Howard’s sword and sorcery hero who were unaware of this ongoing series by “Titan Comics”, Jim Zub’s script for Issue Twenty-Six of “Conan The Barbarian” may well have proved the “perfect jumping on point”. In fact, such is the Canadian writer’s uncanny ability to mimic the late author’s storytelling style, that many within this book’s audience could easily have believed that “The Implausible General” was an actual adaption of one of the tales printed within the covers of “Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror” almost a hundred years ago.

Much of this marvellous mimicry seems to stem from the plot managing to mix sweeping political intrigues and betrayal, with the day-to-day exploits of the Cimmerian, and as such provides an enthralling insight into Aquilonian’s desperate days under the rule of its deranged king. Sure, sometimes it appears to be a pity that the spotlight doesn’t remain upon poor Count Trocero’s plight a little longer – such as when the soldier first leads a charge against the Zingaran blockade of his capital alongside the Westermarck Wolves. But it soon becomes clear that the Eisner Award-nominee needs this twenty-two page periodical to maintain a pulse-pounding pace, if it is to conclude on just the right note for his cliff-hanger; “Let us meet this strange Barbarian-General and see what kind of man he is!”

Furthermore, this “all new Conan story arc” fits rather snugly into Howard’s own prose canon, and promises a fascinating ‘take’ on just how the titular character might have toppled King Numedides to claim the mad tyrant’s crown. Indeed, Zub appears to have put a great deal of thought into just why an 'advanced' civilisation might have abruptly backed a primitive foreigner to become their undisputed leader, and the mercenary’s hard-fought victory at the Great Battle of Poitain goes a sizeable way to explaining the population's rationale – at least as far as Count Trocero and Captain Prospero are concerned.

Lastly, “ferocious” Fernando Dagnino does a first-rate job of depicting all the adrenalin-fuelled action, and ‘splash pages’ required for some of the yarn’s more broader brushstrokes. Of particular note though has to be the artist’s ability to imbue the Barbarian’s swordplay with all the heavily-muscled violence an onlooker would expect from a man whose living is solely carved out with a bloody blade.

The regular cover art of "CONAN THE BARBARIAN" #26 by Gerardo Zaffino

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