The best example is comics that are only Sunday. No such feature in MYC.Ĥ - CT allows me to GROUP comics. I don't see any ZOOM in MYC.ģ - CT allows for downloading archive - provide a start date and it will collect them in one swoop. Seems to me I could bookmark all my comics in Safari and "Open All In Tabs" and a) they would all be ready to read and b) would not cost me $9.Ģ - CT allows each comic to have its own ZOOM - some are best viewed at 100%, some at 150%. Worse it MYC does not scrape the web site and display only the comic - it shows the entire web page. M圜omics - downloads them as I click on them meaning I have to wait 10 seconds or so for each new comic! ugh. I use the discontinued ComicTastic and LOVE IT even though it has not been supported for 4 or 5 years.ġ - CT will download ALL my comics in one swoop - takes a few minutes but when I am ready to look at them they are there for instant display. (Note: this review will be similar to my review of FunnyPages for the same reasons). Drag image files into MYComics from any source: another Web browser, email, or FinderĪ decent start but lots could be improved.Built-in integration with Facebook, Twitter, and OS X Mail makes it easy to share.Make unlimited folders for saving & organizing your favorite comics.You can make unlimited folders to save & organize your comics, use tags and smart folders to help find them, and browse your collection of favorites with the built-in viewer. When you want to save a comic into MYComics' database or share it on Facebook or Twitter or with OS X Mail, it's as simple as drag-and-drop. (And if our database doesn't have your favorite comic, you can easily add it.) With a database of almost 350 comics and a built-in Web browser, MYComics allows you to enjoy all your favorites, from classics like Calvin & Hobbes and Peanuts, to modern favorites like Dilbert, two-time Pulitzer-Prize winning editorial cartoonist Michael Ramirez, and independent cartoons like Indexed and Rockwood. Lots of other cool comics are also available - check out EVERYTHING HERE.MYComics makes it easy and fun to view, save, and share your favorite online comic strips. I’ve also added Coda #1-3 by Frank Panucciand relisted Jordan Crane’s Uptight #1. Full-color interior - colors are spectacular in these. I’m just showing the first page of Jaime’s story in #3 above, but all 3 issues of Silverheels have stories by Scott Hampton and Ken Steacy plus some portfolio work - #3 includes the 6-pager by Jaime Hernandez. Silverheels #1-3 - cool anthology collecting stories by Scott Hampton, Jaime Hernandez (pictured above), and Ken Steacy - 1983 - Pacific Comics I can’t get over these covers - equally intense on the back. Chakan the Forever Man later starred in his own SEGA game. It was originally published by RAK Graphics in Akron, OH, before being picked up by a national distributor. Thunder Mace was created by RAK (Robert Kraus) and Rick Sellers in 1986. A space that belongs entirely to the images, free of even character and plot’s distractions, where the audience can come to see just how much CF’s hands are able to do to their eyes.” - from Matt Seneca’s review for tcj.com Check it out HERE. The most accurate description for it is simply “a book,” one consisting entirely of pictures. This isn’t a comic as such - except for the reprint of a short Bookforum strip that closes things out, the imagery collected here is not sequential - but it also can’t quite be called an art book, given its pocket size and total lack of explanatory text. A multi-media compilation of work done for gallery exhibitions, commercial illustrations, sketchbook pages, and miscellany, it manages to give an impressively well-rounded overview of the various facets of its artist’s creativity, the things that make CF both unique and valuable. “Sediment showcases the pure form of CF’s vision, set free from narrative content. Individually numbered - this is 446 out of an edition of 1,000 - and initialed by the author. It was almost as popular as Mai, the Psychic Girl in the states. The Heavy Metal Warrior! This manga was created by Masaomi Kanzaki, first published in 1986 in Japan and translated into English for the Eclipse Comics release in 1988. Xenon #1-6 - Masaomi Kanzaki - Eclipse Comics, 1988
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