|
Home
Site Search
Comic Book Articles
Compare Comic Book Prices
Anime Porn Back Issue Comics Silver Age Captain Marvel Comics Comic Art Supplies Comic Art Tips Comic Book Artist Magazine Comic Book Artist Pencil Comic Book Artist Comic Book Clothing Comic Book Effect Comic Book Industry Comic Book Pricing Comic Book Reader Cbr Comic Book Review Dc Comics Encyclopedia Digimon Comic Books Famous Comic Books Characters Futurama John Dimaggio Comic Con How To Write A Comic Book Original Comic Art For Sale Original Comic Book Art For Sale Read Comic Books Online Superman Comic Book Covers When Is The Next Comic Con X Men Comic Book Resources
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service
Sitemap
|
Dc Comics Online
Webcomics, also known as online comics and internet comics, are comics that are available to read on the Internet. ShadowCulture. Retrieved on 2007-07-01.
^ Bordahl, Hans. Where the Buffalo Roam which was published on the web in September of 1996. A year later, in 1997, Goats appeared (in April), followed by Sluggy Freelance (in August), Roomies! (in September), Newshounds and User Friendly (both in November). Penny Arcade, PvP, Jerkcity, and Pokey the Penguin began a year later.
In March 2000, Chris Crosby, Crosby's mother Teri, and Darren Bleuel founded the webcomics portal Keenspot.[23][24] Crosby and Bleuel also started a free webcomic hosting service in July 2000, originally called KeenSpace but renamed Comic Genesis in July 2005.
In July 2000, Austin Osueke launched eigoMANGA a web portal that published original online manga "webmanga". Within this year, eigoMANGA brought comic book industry attention to webcomics after being featured in many comic book web magazine articles and later appearing in the March 2001 issue of Wizard Magazine.
In August 2000, Scott McCloud's Reinventing Comics, half of which consisted of a treatise on webcomics, was published. Though sometimes controversial, McCloud was one of the first advocates of webcomics, has pioneered the idea of the infinite canvas, [3] where, rather than being confined to normal print dimensions, artists are free to spread out in any direction indefinitely with their comics, as demian5 has done with his scrolling When I Am King.[4] Other comic artists, such as Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics, have taken copy-pasting of art to an extreme, with every daily strip having identical art, with only the text changing.[13] Pixel art, such as that created by Richard Stevens of Diesel Sweeties, is similar to that of sprite comics but instead uses original low-resolution work created by the artist.[14] There has also been a source of debate.[25][26]
In 2001, the subscription webcomics site Cool Beans World was launched after a high profile publicity campaign including extensive print advertising. It won Internet Magazine's "Site of the Month" award in October 2001.[27] Contributors included, amongst others, UK-based comic book creators Pat Mills, Simon Bisley, John Bolton and Kevin O'Neill, and the author Clive Barker.[28] Serialised content included Scarlet Traces and Marshal Law.
In March 2001, Shannon Denton and Patrick Coyle launched Komikwerks.com serving free strips from comics and animation professionals. The site launched with 9 titles including Astounding Space Thrills by Steve Conley, Buzzboy by John Gallagher, and Johnny Smackpants by Coyle.
On March 2, 2002, Joey Manley founded Modern Tales, offering subscription-based webcomics.[29] The Modern Tales spin-off serializer followed in October of 2002, then came girlamatic and Graphic Smash in March and September of 2003 respectively.
By 2005, webcomics hosting had become a business in its own right with
Dc Comics Online News
|
2 Dec 2008 at 11:32pm  Idaho Mountain Express and Guide |
Re-examining pulp comics Idaho Mountain Express and Guide, ID - 47 minutes ago For DC Comics he wrote "JSA: All-Stars #7" featuring his favorite character, Mr. Terrific. He also wrote a draft of "Spider-Man 2. ... | Read more...
2 Dec 2008 at 7:06pm  MTV.com |
DC Universe Online Swooping In Around 'Early 2010' Shacknews - 5 hours ago by Nick Breckon Dec 02, 2008 7:00pm CST tags: DC Universe Online Sony Online Entertainment's upcoming superhero MMO based on the DC comics franchise, ... DC Universe Online: Late Next Year, Maybe Cinema Blend DC Universe Online expected to see light in early 2010 Ars Technica Comic Book Writer Geoff Johns On Becoming A Superhero In ?DC ... MTV.com gamesdog.co.uk - Play.tm all 11 news articles | Read more...
2 Dec 2008 at 5:30pm In the first installment of CBR?s WEEK OF TOP COW, we spoke with Top Cow founder Marc Silvestri about the early days of the company, the launch of Image Comics, its enormous success in the 1990s, the challenges it faces in today?s much more ... Read more...
2 Dec 2008 at 5:05pm  MTV.com |
Geoff Johns ?Would Love A Crack At? Writing Live-Action Superman ... MTV.com - 7 hours ago ?I love the DC universe,? he professed ? which is no surprise to comics fans, of course. Johns has either written himself or had a hand in the scripting of ... | Read more...
2 Dec 2008 at 1:14pm
'DC Universe Online' (PS3/PC) Coming Late 2009, Early 2010 WorthPlaying.com, CA - 11 hours ago DCUO offers a dramatic online setting where players can enter the DC Universe and battle alongside or against their favorite DC Comics heroes and villains ... | Read more...
2 Dec 2008 at 9:09am Sony Online Entertainment's upcoming super hero MMORPG DC Universe Online needs a lot more gamma radiation or injections with Chemical X before it's ready. The game will launch late next year at the earliest. "It launches I think in early 2010, it ... Read more...
1 Dec 2008 at 2:11pm Being a nerd or geek no longer carries the stigma it once did. No longer are we forced to eat alone in the lunchroom and hide the fact that we own the entire run of Grant Morrison's 'Animal Man'. 'Geek pride' is now fashionable. With that in mind I ... Read more...
|
Dc Comics Online Links
|