My Chemical Romance have announced a deluxe edition of Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. The reissue arrives July 10 via Reprise/Warner Records, with the original 2010 album remastered and nine bonus tracks added to the Killjoys universe.

Danger Days has always occupied the weirdest corner of the MCR canon: too neon to be goth, too theatrical to be a simple rock record, too comic-book-damaged to play like a standard post-Black Parade cooldown. That is exactly why it has aged into something more interesting than the “final album before hiatus” footnote it can sometimes get reduced to.

According to Consequence, the deluxe edition includes a remastered version of the original record plus nine bonus tracks, all currently unavailable on physical formats, with many pressed on vinyl for the first time. NME adds that those bonus tracks will also reach streaming platforms for the first time.

The bonus material includes Zero Percent, We Don’t Need Another Song About California, F.T.W.W.W, Mastaa of Ravenkroft, Black Dragon Fighting Society, a BBC Radio 1 recording of Common People, iTunes Festival 2011 versions of SING and The Kids From Yesterday, and a BBC Radio 1 recording of Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na). NME reports that the BBC Radio 1 version of Na Na Na is the first bonus track released from the set.

The reissue will be available across multiple physical formats, including 2xLP picture disc, zoetrope and color vinyl variants, 2xCD, and cassette editions. Fans attending select MCR dates between July 10 and October 31 will also be able to buy a special BL/ind tour edition vinyl, according to Consequence and NME.

The timing is not subtle. MCR are already spending 2026 in Black Parade anniversary mode, but this Danger Days edition gives the band’s most divisive era a fresh spotlight of its own. The Black Parade may be the monolith, but Danger Days is the transmission from the desert, messy and bright and still refusing to sit quietly in the backseat.