List of Lion stories
The British weekly boys' comic Lion was published between 1952 and 1974 by the Amalgamated Press, Fleetway Publications and IPC.
The 10,000 Disasters of Dort
When Ratta, dictator of Dort, finds his planet has fifty years before being destroyed by its sun he identifies the Earth of 2000 as the only suitable home for his people. To force Earth into agreeing, he announces he will be unleashing ten thousand disasters on Earth. Sure enough, New York is destroyed when Ratta's technology renders all of the metal in the city unstable; Paris is made uninhabitable due to an aggressive alien weed; Melbourne is overran by enlarged animals; tea is used to most of the population of London are transformed into violent maniacs; incredible weaponry is given to the savage Jamali tribesmen of central Arabia; all electricity on Earth is temporarily removed; a brief ice age freezes the English Channel; Germany is overran by a plague of ants; thousands are blinded by an artificial sun; and 90% of the remaining population reduced to a bestial state by tainted wheat. Opposing Ratta is Britain's top scientist Mike Dauntless, aided by French orphan Gaston.- The story was reprinted in Lion from December 22, 1973, to May 18, 1974; this second run featured a modified conclusion so the story finished before the merger with Valiant. In 2023, Rebellion Developments produced a trade paperback containing the entire serial as part of their Treasury of British Comics series of collected editions.
Adam Eterno
- Inherited from Thunder and continued in Valiant until the latter was merged with ''Battle''
The Amazing Adventures of Mister X
- Originally an illustrated text story, before a switch to comic strip format from August 23, 1958. The character is no relation to the earlier strip "The Amazing Mr. X" from DC Thomson's The Dandy.
The Amazing Jack Wonder
Andy's Army
Wanting to emulate his father, a Colonel in the British Army, 14-year old Andy springs a trio of prisoners from the brig and heads behind German lines to fight a guerrilla war.Big Hank – The Soft-Hearted Heavyweight
Honduran circus strongman Hank tries to launch a career as a heavyweight boxer with the aid of friend and acrobat Tich Wilson. While Hank has the strength for the sport he is held back by his reluctance to actually hit anyone without provocation.Billy the Kid
Lone avenger William Bonney and his steed Satan hunt down wrong-doers in the Old West.- The only strip continued from Sun after the merger. The story was later edited and reprinted as "The Black Avenger" in Hurricane.
Black Max
- Inherited from Thunder. The supporting character of Doktor Gratz would later spin off into "Secrets of the Demon Dwarf".
Boy Kidd
- Modified reprints of "Lucky Luke" from Spirou; continued from the short-lived The Champion revival.
Brett Marlowe
- Only made sporadic appearances. For the majority of the strip, "cases" lasted a single two-page episode, though later some serial stories were created.
Britain AD2170
Bruce Kent Invites You To Spot The Clue
Detective Bruce Kent and feckless sidekick Jim solve crimes, encouraging readers to use the same clues available to them to guess the result of the case first.- From 1962 the strip's title was modified to the more competitive "Bruce Kent Challenges You to Spot the Clue". The interactive "spot the clue" format was later adapted for Zip Nolan.
The Can-Do Kids
Captain Condor
Ace pilot of the year 3000, Condor spearheaded the Space Patrol's victory over the megalomaniac Dictator after being banished to Titan. He was aided by the moon's natives, the unintelligent but amiable Geeks. This achieved, Condor led further Space Patrol missions with his customary derring-do.- Captain Condor was created by Frank S. Pepper as a competitor to Eagle's Dan Dare. The strip was on the front and back covers until being ousted by "Paddy Payne" in 1957. New adventures continued until 1964, when Captain Condor switched to reprinting old adventures until ending entirely in 1966.
Carson's Cubs
- Shortly after the merger with Eagle the strip guest-starred the Circus Wanderers as opposition.
Code Name – Barracuda
- Barracuda and Rollo also appeared in Fleetway's Secret Agent Super Library digest series, alternating with Johnny Nero
Dan Dare
- Inherited from Eagle. Budget cuts had already seen the strip switch to reprints in 1967, and these continued in Lion. The repeats aborted the end of the "Rogue Planet" storyline which had been running in the last Eagle to start the stint in Lion from the beginning of "Reign of the Robots". In contrast to its original colour format, the art was rendered in greyscale. After a reprint of "The Phantom Fleet" with a compressed conclusion, "Dan Dare" disappeared from Lion after October 24, 1970.
Danger Man
- Uniquely among Lion's oeuvre, "Danger Man" was a licensed strip based on the ATV television series of the same name, with the art using the likeness of star Patrick McGoohan. Years later it was crudely modified as "Matt Mason – Secret Agent" for Bumper Story Book for Boys.
The Day the World Drowned
Dr. Mesmer's Revenge
When thieves raid the collection of hypnotist Dr. Mesmer, he uses magical cat statue Bulbul to control 5,000-year-old mummy to punish them. His brutal methods soon see him become a feared villain.- The strip was originally announced to be part of Thunder's line-up but debuted in Lion after the titles were merged. Both Dr. Mesmer and Angor would reappear as villains in Rebellion Developments' The Vigilant.
Drive For Your life