The Walking Dead’s comic book universe spawned plenty of unforgettable heroes and unforgivable villains before its almost 200-issue run concluded, with one of the most terrible characters the series ever introduced — the foul-mouthed bat-wielding character named Negan — being a divisive addition to a sprawling cast that already numbered in the dozens. According to the creator and writer of The Walking Dead, Robert Kirkman knows exactly why Negan is as infamous as he is among readers, and it has nothing to do with the character killing off Glenn!
Immediately becoming a bad guy fans loved to hate, Negan was introduced with a bang in 2012’s The Walking Dead #100, by Robert Kirkman and Charlie Adlard, after he and his loyal Saviors capture Rick and crew and outright murder Glenn using Negan’s signature barbed wire-wrapped bat named Lucille. In the latest issue of The Walking Dead Deluxe, Robert Kirkman reveals that he knows why some longtime fans wish Negan were never introduced, saying he understands that the character was someone who was “kind of pissing all over what was a very serious book for a very long time.”
Robert Kirkman Says He Understands Negan Hate as the Character Made The Walking Dead Comic Feel Less Serious
The Walking Dead Deluxe #114 - 2025 (Robert Kirkman, Charlie Adlard, and Dave McCaig)
Mentioning how Walking Dead had been criticized for being “repetitious” in the sense that Rick was always wandering around, meeting new groups, ruining said group’s settlements, and then moving on again ad nauseam, Kirkman says that with the introduction of Negan he could suddenly end issues on NSFW jokes and cringe one-liners, providing him with “no end of excitement” while writing something new and all but ensuring Negan would get more material as Kirkman went on. Admitting how much he loves Negan next, Kirkman says the Negan character is the detail that makes all the difference, despite his valid criticisms.
The Walking Dead’s Negan Is a Character Fans Love To Hate in Both the Comic and Live-Action Spaces
Some Fans Still Haven’t Forgiven Him for Killing Glenn
"Again, I totally see why some longtime readers hated Negan. I get it."
Acknowledging in the “Cutting Room Floor” that Negan turned a “very serious book” into something more tonally different than what had come before — there’s no denying Negan added some questionable silliness to The Walking Dead’s mostly dour proceedings with his dialogue alone — the fact that Kirkman sympathizes with fans who didn't like the tonal shift Negan caused says something about him as a writer, despite Negan becoming a necessary evil paramount to telling this zombie-themed story. Making Negan’s character as important as he was irritating, Kirkman successfully turned Negan into a villain worthy of The Governor, inappropriate quips and all.
Negan’s Personality and His Infamous Actions in the Walking Dead Comic Make Some Fans Lament His Introduction
Negan Killed off His Fair Share of Walking Dead Characters
Negan Lives! is a one-shot comic that focuses on Negan after The Walking Dead #174.
And while Negan's introduction did help boost The Walking Dead’s comic book sales in overwhelmingly positive ways — The Walking Dead #100 sold over 380,000 copies and became the top-selling independent comic of 2012 and one of Image Comics’ highest-selling non-Spawn-related single issues ever — not everyone, especially longtime fans who hadn’t jumped into the series with Negan’s debut, cared for the character. And despite Robert Kirkman admitting in this Walking Dead Deluxe issue that he understands why people felt this way, that clearly didn’t stop him from using Negan to the fullest in future comic chapters leading up to its finale.
Negan Has Done Some Terrible Things Since His Introduction but Has Changed as a Character
Negan Is Alive in The Walking Dead’s Comic and Television Universes
The Walking Dead concluded over five years ago after Rick bit the big one in a cruel twist of fate brought on by the desperation of Sebastian Milton, the son of the disgraced leader of the Commonwealth, with Negan somehow outliving the book’s longtime protagonist as a secluded loner on the outskirts of town. Now a mournful mess of a man, The Walking Dead left Negan in a totally different place than where he started, with his violent nature, rough-around-the-edges personality, and, of course, shocking sense of humor still rubbing fans the wrong way by the time it all ended.
The Walking Dead Deluxe #114 is available from Image Comics.