Dissolving Comics’ Boundaries by Neil Cohn

Let's face it: business has not been good in the comics industry during the last decade or so. However, despite this, there has been a swelling of diversification amongst genres, creators, and publishers, and maybe even a little upswing in the public's perception of comics. And, there is plenty of talent around too – arguably more than there has ever been. This summer, Scott McCloud quipped, "I'd be willing to debate that there is more talent now concentrated in people named 'Jason' than there were talented people in the entire industry when I entered it twenty years ago." So, if the industry now has a great deal of talent, diversity, and freedom of expression, why are things still only so-so for its status and prosperity? Continue Reading

Juxtapose This: Gaming, Blah Blah, Gaming

It’s gaming month and that means that blah blah blah disappointing lack of female characters in comics about gaming blah blah blah my D&D experiences blah blah blah; too many people doing gaming comics about two college roommates blah blah blah women like shamelessly slaughtering orcs too occasionally blah blah game reviewer for Computer Gaming World named "Scorpia" who was really cool blah blah blah and once in awhile you found a woman who games with other women rather than a small cabal of smart-mouthed male characters against whom she is set as the "sane/reasonable" character who tries to be one of the boys but ultimately adores shopping blah blah blah PvP blah blah only computer game I’ve ever enjoyed was The Longest Journey and blah blah blah Final Fantasy blah blah why aren’t there more chicks doing this stuff already.

Okay, I really needed to get that first paragraph off my chest. I feel much better now.

Continue Reading

ROMB’s Ju-Lian Interviewed by Leah Fitzgerald

A "Sadistic Shoujo" manga with an Angelic Layer theme, Rules of Make-Believe is another one of those webcomics that surprised everyone last year – starting out of nowhere, and gaining notice faster than a speeding broadband connection, Ju-Lian and co.’s work is a quality-rendered webcomic that’s about a very specific game, without being a gaming comic. Leah Fitzgerald had a quickie chat to pick Ju-Lian’s brain about the whole thing, as well as gloss on gaming and sprite comics, too. Continue Reading

Webcomics Are From Uranus: Stop Drawing 80s Fashions!

I skipped the 80s growing up. This was surprisingly easy, as I was born in 1980 and didn’t get much of a pop culture knowledge base until I was 13 or so. That, a lack of anything but cartoons and reruns on my TV diet, an abuse of my parents’ music and choice in movies, and an obsessive streak that had me trying to read every book in the library, kept me from experiencing much outside of things done before I was born.

So it is without any nostalgia or bias against this decade that I beg you, comics artists, to stop drawing 80s fashions! Continue Reading

Comixpedia WANGED, retreats to new server

Actually I don’t know the full story yet – but it’s possible the Penny Arcade link-driven traffic today was too much for little old PHPWEBHOSTING.com webhost and our site got shut down by our hostestwiththenotmostest. So we’re up and running at comixpedia.net on a different server account while we do the DNS thing for comixpedia.com this week. Be sure you’re posting all of those witty comments at comixpedia.net this week (we’ll let you know when we’re out of the woods server-wise. Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Ko Fight Club by Russ Williams, reviewed by Xaviar Xerexes

Russ Williams’ Ko Fight Club is a constantly evolving webcomic that samples a wide and extremely diverse set of topics for its subject matter. Williams describes Ko Fight Club as "eclectic comics about Go, board games, the Bench, Watchmen, Fight Club, Shakespeare, Esperanto, and Toki Pona." ‘Eclectic’ does not do justice to the range of topics and styles found in this webcomic. Continue Reading