Saturday, 9 May 2026

Conan The Barbarian #30 - Titan Comics

CONAN THE BARBARIAN No. 30, April 2026
Arguably dripping in plenty of exasperating plot armour, Jim Zub’s narrative for Issue Thirty of “Conan The Barbarian” will probably quickly frustrate many of its readers by having its central antagonist repeatedly put off his assassination attempt of the titular character because the cold-blooded killer has surprisingly taken an interest in the Cimmerian’s view of life.?! Sure, the Canadian writer attempts to assure his audience at this comic’s end, that the black-maned adventurer supposedly knew all about his would-be murderer’s presence since the oily cloaked outsider first ‘stuck to the shadows’ inside the trade city of Khoraja. But such omnipotence on behalf of Robert E. Howard’s character isn’t particularly convincing – especially when he’s busy either repeatedly fighting for his life on the streets, or making love to a woman throughout the night.

Indeed, this book seems to be rather irritatingly happy just depicting The Son of the Tooth repeatedly passing up a series of ideal opportunities to slay his target and rid the Hyborian Age of “the man who slew Thulsa Doom” just because this “deadly new foe” can’t believe the drunken oaf before him so badly vexes the Cult of the Black Stone. As the author points out himself such behaviour is entirely unprofessional on the part of one who has successfully slaughtered so many in the past. Yet this amateurish conduct is precisely what all bibliophiles are supposed to believe in order for an otherwise rather mundane tale about a local petty thief’s bruised ego populating a twenty-two-page periodical; “So he will take what he has learned and wait a spell longer.”

Far more believable is this publication’s conclusion as it shows Conan confronting his hunter down a dark alleyway sword in hand. This face-to-face conflict is far more plausible than anything else in the comic, even if Zub does fruitlessly attempt to fool any onlookers that the Cimmerian waited so long to tackle his adversary because he was curious if the man meant to “simply walk away.”

What does work well for “Trail Warrior” though are the layouts of Doug Braithwaite. The British artist somehow manages to make even his well-pencilled panels showing the Son of the Tooth’s scratchy searches amongst his prey’s deserted campfires rather intriguing, as well as clearly depicting just how busy the market area in Khoraja is. Furthermore, when the future king of Aquilonia does finally make his stand, his defiance is entirely palpable, and surely caused many a fan to quickly ensure that they had this ongoing title’s next instalment pre-ordered at their neighbourhood bookstore.

The regular cover art of "CONAN THE BARBARIAN" #30 by Ivan Gil

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