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I like reading singles issues as they're published for a lot of the same reasons you do. If it's on older series, I often look on eBay for someone selling the entire series. I don't mind TPB's but always prefer old school comics. Right now I'm reading Snakes Above, Eight Billion Genies, and The Closet. Enjoy!

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Nice! I haven't tried hunting down entire series sets for older series (as I am running low on room as it is) but try to get all the TPBs at once from the library. I remember there used to be a website in the early 2000s that was a DVD exchange. You could buy credits to "borrow" DVDs from other users and then when you contributed your own DVDs to the site's library, you earned credits. I feel like a similar site might work well for full-run sets (although there is the collector angle).

I'm also reading Eight Billion Genies, it's so good! I'm not normally into horror, but I read The Closet when James Tynion released it on his Substack and thought it was really good.

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I've mostly been a trades reader, largely because a lot of stuff I've read I've come to long after initial publishing. Also, my entry point to comics as an adult was Alan Moore's classics, and those DO work extremely well as single collected volumes.

In recent years I have committed to a few series by issue: Saga, WicDiv, now Eternals by KG. WicDiv is a good example actually - I was immensely invested on those characters, reading it over the course of several years. At the same time, though, the publishing schedule meant that by the end I was quite confused about what was actually going on, simply because it was quite difficult to remember the intricacies of the world building and plot. Re-reading it through as collected versions made a lot more sense.

I suspect it depends a lot on the way the story is conceived. I can't imagine reading a lot of Alan Moore's stuff as individual issues, for example. Whereas the Transformers UK comics I read as a kid in the 80s and 90s is 100% issue-by-issue in my mind.

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I'm the same way re coming to comic in the past few years and having to read some seminal X-Men/Marvel runs (House of M, Civil War, Secret Invasion, Avengers v. X-Men, Time Runs Out) as collected editions.

You raise one of the issues that I also constantly deal with: because of the publishing schedule and number of comics I am regularly reading, it's sometimes hard to remember what happened the prior month! Let alone if a series takes a multi-year break. I initially read the Monstress trades and then when I finally started reading the monthly issues two arcs ago, I went back and re-read the entire series from the beginning. It really increased my enjoyment of the series, because I was finally able to piece through all the world-building and story.

And an admission: although I own the Watchmen collected edition, I have never read it nor anything else by Alan Moore!

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I highly recommend giving Watchmen a go! It's proper good. Also From Hell, which is dense and difficult but remarkable.

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