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WWE Superstars Books in Order

Part ofMick Foley Books in Order

Browse the WWE Superstars series by Mick Foley in order, with quick summaries, Titan City background, and help picking the best graphic novel to start with.

Last updated: June 8, 2026

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Publication Order

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5 books

1

WWE Superstars #1

by Mick Foley

2014

The first graphic novel drops WWE stars into the crooked world of Titan City. John Cena has been framed over a missing fortune, Randy Orton wants more power, and CM Punk is ready to tear the whole system down.

2

WWE Superstars #2

by Mick Foley

2014

Monday Night Raw is a wreck, the championship belt is gone, and four superstars cannot remember what happened. CM Punk, Rob Van Dam, Daniel Bryan, and Rey Mysterio have to retrace a wild night before Triple H loses patience.

3

WWE Superstars #3

by Mick Foley

2015

This volume goes big by throwing current WWE names and legends into the same story. The fun is in the clash of eras, with oversized rivalries, team-ups, and comic-book chaos driving the action.

4

WWE Superstars #4

by Mick Foley

2015

This later graphic novel returns to a crooked, hard-hitting comic-book version of WWE. The draw is the mood, the shifting alliances, and the way Foley turns wrestling personas into crime-story players.

5

WWE Superstars #5

by Mick Foley

2015

Roman Reigns, a cop on the rise, is sent to investigate the disappearance of Titan City's crime bosses. When his case collides with Sting's vigilante hunt for answers, the city becomes even more dangerous.

Series background & context

The WWE Superstars books take familiar wrestling names and turn them into comic-book characters in stories that are bigger, stranger, and more pulpy than standard TV tie-ins. Instead of trying to replay WWE storylines exactly as they happened on screen, the series reimagines stars and legends inside alternate-universe adventures built around crime, mystery, and fast-moving action.

The first volume, Money in the Bank, sets that tone right away. It drops readers into Titan City, a crooked metropolis where John Cena has been framed, Randy Orton is chasing more power, and CM Punk wants to blow open a system that looks rotten from top to bottom. The setting matters here. Titan City is not just a backdrop for fights. It gives the whole book a noir feel, with shadowy factions, missing money, double-crosses, and the sense that every alleyway could lead to another brawl.

It is half wrestling book, half hardboiled comic.

The second volume, Haze of Glory, loosens things up without losing momentum. Monday Night Raw is in ruins, the championship belt is missing, and several superstars cannot remember how the night got so out of hand. That setup turns the story into a mystery with a comic edge, as the characters try to piece together what happened before Triple H and the McMahons decide they have heard enough excuses. The fun comes from the contrast between giant wrestling personalities and a plot built around confusion, blame, and retracing a very bad night.

Then Legends goes wide instead of deep. This is the crossover volume, the one that leans into the pleasure of seeing current stars and older icons collide in the same story. If you like wrestling because it always feels like somebody unexpected could show up, this book taps into that feeling. It is less about strict realism and more about the energy that comes from putting big personalities from different eras into the same oversized conflict.

Later books like Last Man Standing and Elimination Chamber circle back to the darker city-story mood. Roman Reigns enters as a cop on the rise, Sting works the shadows like a hard-nosed vigilante, and the city once again feels packed with dangerous factions, missing figures, and shifting loyalties. Those later entries keep the same basic promise the earlier books make, familiar WWE personas, recast as crime-comic players, then let loose in a world where every alliance looks temporary.

So what should you expect from the series as a whole? Quick action, recognizable voices, and stories that understand wrestling characters are already halfway to being comic-book archetypes. You do not need encyclopedic WWE knowledge to follow the plots, but longtime fans will catch more of the jokes, rivalries, and callbacks. These books work best if you read them as playful side adventures rather than strict canon. Once you do that, the whole thing clicks.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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All 5 WWE Superstars Books in Order (Complete List 2026)