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Stormwatch Reading Order for People Who Want The Authority but Feel Guilty Skipping Ahead

Stormwatch

Stormwatch is one of those teams people know about without always having read.
They’ve heard the name. They know it leads to The Authority. They vaguely remember wild ’90s energy, weird costumes, and Warren Ellis doing something Important™.

But when you actually try to read Stormwatch?
You hit the wall. Issue renumberings. Relaunches. Crossovers. Trades that don’t clearly say what they include. And about five different internet opinions yelling, “JUST READ ELLIS.”

This Stormwatch reading order exists for two kinds of people:

Readers who want a clean, enjoyable path through the material

Collectors who want to know which issues, trades, and runs are actually worth hunting

We’ve read it. We’ve graded it. We’ve seen what people bring in and what they don’t.
Let’s make this easy (and honest).

Why Stormwatch Matters and How This Reading Order Works

Stormwatch matters for one huge reason:
It’s the bridge between classic ’90s WildStorm superhero teams and the modern, morally complicated comics that followed.

Before Stormwatch, WildStorm was flashy, loud, and sometimes shallow.
After Stormwatch (specifically the Warren Ellis era), everything changes—tone, stakes, politics, consequences.

How this reading order is structured

This isn’t just a publication list. It’s a practical reading map:

  • You’ll see where to start, depending on your taste
  • You’ll get publication order, clearly broken down
  • You’ll know which trades match which issues
  • You’ll see where Stormwatch connects to bigger WildStorm events
  • You’ll know when you can stop and jump into The Authority

No spoilers. No lore essays. Just clean guidance.

Best Place to Begin With Stormwatch

Let’s get the most common question out of the way.

If you only want the “important” Stormwatch

Start here:

Stormwatch Vol. 1 #37–50 (Warren Ellis run)
Collected as:

  • Stormwatch Vol. 1: Force of Nature
  • Stormwatch Vol. 2: Lightning Strikes
  • Stormwatch Vol. 3: Change or Die

This is the material that:

  • Redefines the team
  • Introduces characters that matter long-term
  • Leads directly into The Authority #1

If you’ve heard “Stormwatch is basically a prologue to The Authority,” this is why.

If you want the full picture

Start earlier, but understand what you’re getting.

The early Stormwatch issues are very ’90s. That’s not an insult, just a warning label. They’re fun, messy, occasionally clunky, and historically interesting.

Think of it like early X-Force before it knew what it wanted to be.

Stormwatch in Publication Order

Below is the publication order, with notes for readers and collectors.

Stormwatch Vol. 1 (1993–1999)

Stormwatch Vol. 1 #0

  • Often overlooked
  • Mostly for completionists
  • Not essential for story

Early Era: Team-Building and Growing Pains

Stormwatch Vol. 1 #1–9

  • Introduces the team concept
  • Leans hard into early WildStorm style
  • Worth reading if you like ’90s superhero teams

Collected in:

  • Stormwatch Vol. 1: Lightning Storm (older trade)

Collector note: low-to-mid demand, but clean copies are getting scarcer.

Mid Era: Finding Its Feet

Stormwatch Vol. 1 #10–36

  • Expands the cast
  • Starts experimenting with scale and consequences
  • Quality varies issue to issue

Collected across multiple older trades, often harder to track down cleanly.

Collector note: This stretch matters more for context than keys.

The Warren Ellis Era (This Is the Good Stuff)

Stormwatch Vol. 1 #37–50

This is the run everyone talks about, and for good reason.

Ellis:

  • Strips away excess characters
  • Raises global and cosmic stakes
  • Treats superheroes like geopolitical weapons
  • Introduces concepts that will define The Authority

Collected Editions (Recommended)

  • Stormwatch Vol. 1: Force of Nature (#37–42)
  • Stormwatch Vol. 2: Lightning Strikes (#43–47)
  • Stormwatch Vol. 3: Change or Die (#48–50)

If you only buy one chunk of Stormwatch, buy these.

Stormwatch Special & Crossover Notes

  • Stormwatch Preview / Specials – Optional, mostly for completion
  • Fire From Heaven – Big WildStorm crossover
    • Stormwatch plays a role
    • You don’t need to read the entire event to enjoy Stormwatch
    • Read if you want the wider WildStorm context

Recommended Stormwatch Reading Paths for Different Readers

Not everyone reads comics the same way. Here’s the honest breakdown.

Path 1: “I Just Want the Good Stuff”

Best for: New readers, Authority fans, modern comics readers

  1. Stormwatch Vol. 1: Force of Nature
  2. Stormwatch Vol. 2: Lightning Strikes
  3. Stormwatch Vol. 3: Change or Die
  4. Jump directly into The Authority Vol. 1

This path gives you:

  • Maximum payoff
  • Minimum friction
  • Zero filler

Path 2: “I Want Context, Not Pain”

Best for: Readers who enjoy ’90s comics but don’t need everything

  1. Stormwatch #1–9 (optional)
  2. Skip ahead to #37–50
  3. Move on to The Authority

You’ll understand how the team evolved without slogging through uneven stretches.

Path 3: “I’m a Completionist and I Accept My Fate”

Best for: Collectors, WildStorm historians

  1. Stormwatch #0–50
  2. Specials and crossovers
  3. Fire From Heaven (optional but recommended)
  4. The Authority

This is the path for people who enjoy watching a book figure itself out in real time.

Path 4: “Trade-Only / Digital Reader”

Best for: Readers using trades, compendiums, or digital apps

  • Focus on the Ellis trades
  • Supplement with earlier volumes only if curiosity strikes
  • Digital services often organize these volumes cleanly, use that to your advantage

How Stormwatch Fits Into the Bigger WildStorm and DC Picture

Stormwatch doesn’t exist in a vacuum, but you don’t need a spreadsheet to enjoy it.

Inside WildStorm

Stormwatch overlaps loosely with:

  • WildC.A.T.s
  • Gen¹³
  • Deathblow

These connections are mostly thematic, not required reading.

Major Events

  • Fire From Heaven – The biggest crossover touching Stormwatch
  • Reads fine as a side story
  • Enhances scale, not required comprehension

Inside DC Continuity

Stormwatch was later folded into DC continuity years after the original run.
That material is interesting—but not required for understanding classic Stormwatch.

This guide focuses on WildStorm-era Stormwatch, where the book actually shines.

Collector Notes: What’s Worth Owning

From a grading and collecting perspective:

  • Stormwatch #37–50 are the most requested
  • First Authority-adjacent appearances matter more than early team issues
  • Trades are easier to find, but clean singles are aging fast
  • Demand spikes whenever The Authority gets media buzz

If you’re buying with intent, prioritize:

  • Ellis run singles
  • First print trades
  • High-grade copies with sharp spines (these books were read)

Read Smart, Collect Smarter

Stormwatch doesn’t always have to be about reading everything.
It can also be about reading the right things in the right order.

You can absolutely enjoy Stormwatch without drowning in ’90s excess.
You can jump straight to the material that reshaped WildStorm, and still feel like you “get it.”

That’s the sweet spot we aim for at Hovig:
knowledgeable reading, intentional collecting, and zero wasted effort.

Now go crack open Force of Nature
and enjoy watching a team realize the world is way bigger, messier, and more dangerous than anyone planned.