Marvel’s Wolverine from Insomniac Games lands September 15, 2026 — and if the Spider-Man games are any indication, it will be packed with deep cuts, easter eggs, and character moments that hit hardest when you know the source material. Whether you are a longtime comics reader or someone who only knows Logan from the films, this reading list will put you in the right headspace before you pop the disc in.
The Essentials — Start Here
Wolverine by Claremont and Miller (1982)
The one that defined everything. Wolverine goes to Japan, falls in love, fights the Hand, and proves he is more than just claws and berserker rage. Frank Miller’s art is some of the most kinetic work of the era. This is the comic that turned a team player into a lone wolf icon, and it reads like a masterclass fifty years later. Insomniac has confirmed Japan is central to their game. This is required reading.
Old Man Logan (2008)
A broken future where the heroes lost, Logan retired his claws, and the country is carved up by villains. Old Man Logan is a Western disguised as a superhero comic — brutal, emotional, and full of the kind of moments that stay with you for years. The version of Wolverine Insomniac is reportedly depicting shares DNA with this run. McNiven’s art remains jaw-dropping.
Wolverine: Origin (2001)
Before this run, Wolverine’s past was deliberately mysterious. Origin finally answered the question: who was Logan before the adamantium? Set in 19th century Canada, this is a tragedy about a boy born wrong and a man forged by loss. The game is rumoured to explore Logan’s origins. This comic is the only source you need.
Wolverine: Weapon X (2009)
Jason Aaron’s best Wolverine work explores the Weapon X programme with visceral, unflinching horror. Government agents with adamantium bullets. Wolverine at his most animal. This is the brutal, uncompromising version of the character that Insomniac has been hinting at with their M-rating. Garney’s art is extraordinary throughout.
Also Worth Your Time
Enemy of the State (2004)
Brainwashed Wolverine hunting down his fellow heroes. Millar and Romita at their kinetic best. Great if you want action-heavy Wolverine before a game built around combat.
Wolverine: Logan (2008)
A three-issue noir set in World War II Japan. Short, dense, beautifully drawn. If the game leans into the Japan setting from the 1982 mini-series, this is excellent supplementary reading.
Savage Wolverine Vol. 1 (2013)
Wolverine stranded in the Savage Land fighting dinosaurs and Ka-Zar. Pure action fun. No deep mythology, just Logan being the best there is at what he does with excellent Frank Cho art.
Where to Read Them
All of these runs are available on Marvel Unlimited, which at roughly nine dollars a month gives you access to the entire Marvel back catalogue. If you want physical copies, the Claremont and Miller mini-series and Old Man Logan are the easiest to find in collected editions at any comic shop. Start with those two and you will understand every major creative decision Insomniac makes in September.
- Wolverine by Claremont and Miller (1982) — the foundation
- Wolverine: Origin (2001) — the beginning
- Wolverine: Weapon X (2009) — the transformation
- Enemy of the State (2004) — peak action
- Wolverine: Logan (2008) — Japan revisited
- Old Man Logan (2008) — the masterpiece
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