Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Conan The Barbarian #28 - Titan Comics

CONAN THE BARBARIAN No. 28, February 2026
For those long-term readers of the father of the sword and sorcery subgenre, Jeffrey Shanks’ claim at the rear of this comic book that Jim Zub is merely “finishing one of Howard’s unfinished yarns” may well ring rather hollow. Indeed, the notion that the Animex Honorary Award-winner's bizarre plot concerning Aquilonia’s King committing bloody acts of ritual human sacrifice in order to elevate himself as a master of the Dark Arts was actually developed from “Howard’s own words” is ambiguous at best – especially when the regular contributor to this publication’s back pages also admits that “Robert E. Howard never wrote about the event directly.”

Instead Issue Twenty Eight of “Conan The Barbarian” should probably be more accurately seen as just being an attempt by its Canadian author to weave his own long-running narrative concerning “Black Stone Magic” into one of the most beloved episodes of the Cimmerian’s career, irrespective of any conflicts it may cause with accepted canon. Unfortunately though, even this notion of simply being ‘fan fiction’ debatably doesn’t help make this storyline particularly convincing or even entertaining, as much of it consists of the narrator making broad, sweeping statements as to how the kingdom-sized war progressed, rather than telling a specific detail about its numerous military actions.

By far this comic’s biggest disappointment though has to be the way in which the Flower of the West’s mad monarch is portrayed as a guileless sorcerer who having mass-murdered many of his courtiers to attain the blessing of some unspeakable deity, simply allows Conan to approach his dais and strangle him. So undemanding a death for so powerful a ruler is truly underwhelming, and may well cause many a reader to wonder just why Numedides didn’t stab at his barbaric killer with his raised dagger, or at least put up some sort of physical struggle considering that the mercenary’s arm with which he is being throttled has just had an arrow go right into it. 

Far more convincing than this book’s script is Fernando Dagnino’s pencilling, which does a great job in depicting some of the various foot-fights and cavalry charges Zub fleetingly mentions. However, even the most ardent fan of the Spanish illustrator must surely have been a bit bemused by his handling of Count Trocero – who rather than being established as the titular character’s future “trusted counsellor” is instead sketched as a rather moody, disagreeable malcontent who fully intends to usurp the crown for himself; “Damn these hidebound fools! When I am crowned King of Aquilonia, I will remember who stepped up to meet destiny and who only fell in line when it was most convenient to do so!”

The regular cover art of "CONAN THE BARBARIAN" #28 by Gerardo Zaffino

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