Comics
M.A.S.K.-inspired comics have been published by Kenner, DC Comics, Grandreams, Fleetway Publications, Hasbro, and IDW.
The first M.A.S.K. comics were three mini-comics produced by Kenner that were packaged with the vehicles from the first series of toys in 1985. After the success of the franchise, DC Comics picked up the rights and produced a special insert which appeared in several comic books dated September and November 1985 to launch a four-issue miniseries (December 1985 – March 1986). This was soon followed by another insert in comics dated from June to November 1986 and a regular series that lasted nine issues (February–October 1987).
A selection of the DC strips were reprinted in the UK, by Grandreams in Christmas annuals (1986 and 1987), which also featured original text stories. Fleetway's M.A.S.K. comic magazine, initially published fortnightly before moving to a weekly pattern, featured entirely new plots produced by British writers and artists, in the standard mostly black-and-white short strip format of British comics. The stories were in their own continuity, not connected to either the cartoon series or DC/Grandreams comics. There was a notable difference in the comics in that V.E.N.O.M. knew the identities of M.A.S.K. agents, whereas in the first cartoon series they did not. This weekly title lasted 80 issues before merging with the second incarnation of Eagle in 1988.
M.A.S.K. was presented at the 2011 New York Comic Con by Hasbro in a convention-exclusive one-shot comic titled UNIT-E that featured various Hasbro licenses. Written by Andy Schmidt, M.A.S.K. was repackaged therein as a rogue quasi-law enforcement agency battling corruption in Detroit, led by Matt Trakker and four original team members, including a married couple.[4]
In 2016, the franchise was reintroduced as part of IDW's Revolution crossover series, with writing by Brandon M. Easton and artwork by Tony Vargas.[5] Matt Trakker is depicted as African-American in the series; Easton described the character as "an engineering genius and intellectual bad boy who has been in search of stability since the loss of his father at an early age".[6] M.A.S.K. branched out into its own series starting in November but was canceled by IDW after only ten issues, with the final issue released in August 2017.[7] The series garnered two 2017 Glyph Comics Awards: the "Fan Award for Best Comic" and "Best Male Character" for Matt Trakker.[8]
Although the series was canceled, the characters from Brandon Easton's M.A.S.K. comics series returned later in 2017 as part of IDW's First Strike crossover series,[9] featured in both a one-shot issue and a six-issue miniseries.
In 2025, Skybound Entertainment officially introduced M.A.S.K. into the Energon Universe. Matt Tracker (in the IDW version appearance) debuted in the G.I. Joe story of the 2025 Special, while Miles Mayhem debuted in Transformers #25.[10] In February 2026, Skybound's Robert Kirkman officially announced a M.A.S.K. ongoing series written by Dan Watters and drawn by Pye Parr. The first issue is slated for a June 2026 release.[11]
Video games
Beginning in 1987, British software house Gremlin Graphics released a trilogy of computer games based on the franchise for various eight-bit computer formats.
The first game, M.A.S.K. I, was a vertically-viewed 2D game in which the player controls the Thunderhawk vehicle. The premise of the game is that V.E.N.O.M. have propelled Boulder Hill into a time vortex, and the player must rescue the other members of M.A.S.K. by collecting and re-assembling parts of a scan key, which then directs the player to the location of the missing personnel. The game received mostly favorable reviews at the time, although it was noted by some that the tie-in to the franchise was quite tenuous and only the graphics, rather than the storyline and gameplay, connected it to the franchise.[12][13]
The second game, M.A.S.K. II, also released in 1987, was a 2D horizontal scrolling shoot-em-up. The game featured many more of the M.A.S.K. vehicles, and included a selection process in which the player chose which vehicles to use before the game began. Only one vehicle could be controlled at a time but these could be quickly interchanged. Again, the game was received favorably in the press, where it was noted that it was a better tie-in to the franchise than the first, because it featured more of the vehicles.[14]
The final game in the trilogy, M.A.S.K. III – V.E.N.O.M. Strikes Back, another 2D horizontal shoot-em-up, was released in 1988.
Television
In the animated series Transformers: Prime and Transformers: Robots in Disguise, M.A.S.K. is referred as a division of the United States military that developed a special vehicle (which they described as "experimental, all-terrain, expeditionary fighting").[17] Years later, several copies of that vehicle have been apparently mass-produced.[18]
Film
In December 2015, Hasbro and Paramount were joining forces to create a shared cinematic universe combining M.A.S.K. with G.I. Joe, Micronauts, Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light, and Rom.[19] A group of screenwriters that included Michael Chabon, Cheo Hodari Coker, John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein was hired to develop storylines, with Akiva Goldsman overseeing the project.[20] In 2018, Daley and Goldstein told to IGN that M.A.S.K.'s inclusion in the film project was "unlikely to happen" without specifying a reason,[21] but Paramount said at the time that the M.A.S.K. film project would commence, directed by F. Gary Gray and developed as "a contemporary subculture movie with a youth empowerment angle".[22]