BOOM! Studios and Penguin Random House are releasing The Power Rangers Art of Dan Mora, a 176‑page hardcover collection of the artist’s work, in August 2026; the book will hit comic stores on August 25, 2026 and retail for $29.99. Dan Mora — the artist credited with reshaping the modern look of Power Rangers comics — is the subject and primary creator represented in the volume.
The book compiles full‑page illustrations, character design process pages and bonus materials drawn from Mora’s run on the franchise. The official description frames the collection as gathering Mora’s most striking visuals from the series’ earliest conception, and says his contributions to the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers comic series have redefined the visual identity of the franchise for a new generation.
Numbers underline the scale: 176 pages of art, a late‑August street date and a $29.99 cover price aimed at comic shops and collectors. The collection pulls from Mora’s work across multiple Power Rangers titles — including Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Saban’s Go Go Power Rangers, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Power Rangers Prime — and showcases designs that appeared in those series.
Mora’s designs assembled here include Zordon’s Eltarian armor, the Omega Rangers, the new Green Ranger, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle Rangers, Ranger Slayer and the Death Ranger. He served as penciler and inker on Saban’s Go Go Power Rangers and collaborated with writer Ryan Parrott on multiple related projects, contributions that helped cement his reputation as one of the franchise’s most acclaimed comic artists since the 2017 launch of Saban’s Go Go Power Rangers.
Context puts the book in a longer comics history. The Power Rangers franchise began with the 1993 premiere of Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, followed by a first comic run from Hamilton Comics in 1994, then a transfer of rights to Marvel in 1995 before BOOM! Studios acquired the license in 2015. Mora’s prominence traces to that later era; his work has been part of a decade‑long resurgence of the property in print.
The tidy narrative on the book’s jacket — that Mora’s art redefined the franchise for a new generation — runs into a practical friction: the visuals in these pages were produced across multiple titles, teams and collaborations. Mora did create many of the now‑familiar designs, but those designs were deployed and developed in serial comics releases and in partnership with writers and editors, not in isolation.
Still, the artbook is explicit about its audience. The publisher’s copy pitches the volume to both lifelong Power Rangers fans and devoted Mora followers, promising a single collection of work that first appeared across a string of series and creative teams. Whether readers come for the character designs, the full‑page illustrations or the process pages, the book collects the elements most frequently cited as Mora’s defining contributions.
So what happens next: on August 25, 2026 the hardcover will be available in comic stores priced at $29.99, and it will serve as a durable record of Mora’s role in the franchise. If the publisher’s framing holds, this artbook will do what the jacket claims — consolidate the visual language Mora helped create and make it accessible in one place for fans and collectors alike.





