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The Marvel Comics rating system is a system for rating the content of
comic books A comic book, also called comicbook, comic magazine or (in the United Kingdom and Ireland) simply comic, is a publication that consists of comics art in the form of sequential juxtaposed panels that represent individual scenes. Panels are of ...
, with regard to appropriateness for different age groups. In 2001, Marvel Comics withdrew from the Comics Code Authority and established its own rating system for its publications. This was precipitated by the CCA refusing approval of the seal due to the strong depiction of violence in ''X-Force'' #116, a comic written by Peter Milligan and drawn by Mike Allred. As well, by withdrawing from the CCA, this is seen as a move by editor-in-chief Joe Quesada to lure more high-profile creators to Marvel Comics.X-Force #116 To Be Non-Code
– ICv2 – 27 April 2001 Today's ratings are usually found on the comic's UPC box.


System

The Marvel Rating System assigns each comic book one of the following ratings: *ALL AGES – Appropriate for all ages. *T – Appropriate for most readers, but parents are advised that they might want to read before or with younger children. *T+ TEENS AND UP – Appropriate for teens 13 and above. *PARENTAL ADVISORY – Appropriate for 15 and up. Similar to T+, but featuring more mature themes and/or more graphic imagery. Recommended for teen and adult readers. *EXPLICIT CONTENT – 18+ years old. Most Mature Readers books will fall under the MAX imprint (created specifically for mature content titles). MAX and Mature-themed titles will continue to be designed to appear distinct from mainline Marvel titles, with the "MAX: Explicit Content" label very prominently displayed on the cover. MAX titles will ''not'' be sold on the newsstand, and they will ''not'' be sold to younger readers. It says anything from explicit to non-explicit.


History

The first Marvel rating system was implemented in 2001, following their publishing of an issue of X-Force without the approval of self-regulatory system the Comics Code Authority (CCA). The CCA deemed the issue too violent, and following this, Marvel removed its entire line from the scrutiny of the Comics Code. Their age rating system used the following categories: *ALL AGES *PG (Parental Guidance) *PG+ *PARENTAL ADVISORY/EXPLICIT CONTENT However, the Motion Picture Association of America complained, as it holds a trademark on such classifications as PG and PG-13 (see MPAA film rating system). Marvel thus switched to the following system (by changing the PG ratings): *ALL AGES *PSR (Parental Supervision Recommended) *PSR+ *PARENTAL ADVISORY/EXPLICIT CONTENT Beginning in June 2005, Marvel switched to yet another system: *ALL AGES *A Appropriate for age 9 and up. *T+ SUGGESTED FOR TEEN AND UP *PARENTAL ADVISORY *MAX: EXPLICIT CONTENT


See also

* DC Comics rating system


References

Marvel Comics Media content ratings systems 2001 introductions {{Marvel Comics