This is an update to a previous post here, thanks for the cumulative suggestions on that thread. JUST so we're clear – this is open-sourced to everyone research for a possible article to appear next month at ComixTalk. I don't endorse the list or the order at all; at this point I've tried to include all of the suggestions I've gotten and I also went through all of the comics ComixTalk has ever reviewed and pulled quite a few titles.
We're at the point where it'll be most helpful if you tell me comics you think should go on the list, where (what number approximately) and which comic should get bumped. If you just want to change the order you can do that to but there'll be another post before the month's through asking for help with that.
And it's always helpful to explain why. Make a pitch for why any of these or any other comic is one of the 100 best. We've had over 10 years of webcomic publishing — hopefully we can spotlight some truly outstanding work.
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Perry Bible Fellowship by Nicholaus Gurewitch
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Achewood by Chris Onstad
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Narbonic by Shaenon Garrity
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xkcd by Randall Munroe
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PvP by Scott Kurtz
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Penny Arcade
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Nowhere Girl by Justine Shaw
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Apocamon by Patrick Farley.
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Sluggy Freelance by Pete Abrams
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Argon Zark! by Charlie Parker
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American Elf by James Kochalka
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Girl Genius by Phil and Kaja Foglio
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Freak Angels by Warren Ellis and Paul Duffield
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Copper
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MegaTokyo by Fred Gallagher
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Leisure Town by Tristan
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Sinfest
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Scary Go Round by John Allison
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Something Positive
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The Journal Comic by Drew Weing
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Dresden Codak by Aaron Diaz
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Immortal by Dean Haspiel
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Order of the Stick by Rich Burlew
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Templar, Arizona by Spike
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The Adventures of Dr McNinja by Chris Hastings
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Minus
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Checkerboard Nightmare by Kris Straub
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SugarShock! by Josh Whedon and Fabio Moon
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Diesel Sweeties by R. Stevens
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When I Was King by Damian 5
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Cat and Girl by Dorothy Gambrell
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Space Moose
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Octopus Pie by Meredith Gran
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Three Panel Soul
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Irregular Webcomic!
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Bite Me by Dylan Meconis
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Dinosaur Comics by Ryan North
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Understanding The Process by Joe Infurnari
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The Abominable Charles Christopher by Karl Kerschl
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PX! by Manny Trembly and Eric Anderson
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Dicebox by Jenn Manley Lee
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Demonology 101 by Faith Erin Hicks
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Fans! by T. Campbell
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8-Bit Theater
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Roomies!
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Little Dee
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Same Difference by Derek Kirk Kim
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User Friendly
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Kate Beaton
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Fanboys by Scott DeWitt
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Sin Titulo
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Dreamland Chronicles by Scott Sava
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Bayou
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High Moon
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Gunnerkrigg Court
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Piled Higher and Deeper
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Bee Power/Droop
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Girls With Slingshots by Danielle Corsetto
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Night Owls by the Timony Twins
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Motro
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Back Stage
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IN HIS LIKENESS
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STREET CODE
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FISHTOWN
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Bob the Squirrel
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Breakfast of the Gods
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Fear My Dear
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Street Code
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Dear Pirate
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Lackidaisy
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Zortic by Mark Mekkes
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The Wandering Ones by Clint Hollingsworth
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Skinny Panda by Phil Cho
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Pokey the Penguin
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Ornery Boy by Michael Lalonde
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Eversummer Eve by Denise Jones
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Boy Meets Boy by K. Sandra
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Sabrina Online by Eric W. Schwartz
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Avalon by Josh Phillips
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Boy On A Stick and Slither by Steven Cloud
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Get Your War On by David Rees
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The New Adventures of Death by Dorothy Gambrell
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Chopping Block by Lee Adam Herold
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Piled Higher and Deeper by Jorge Cham
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Girly by Josh Lesnick
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Kid Radd by Dan Miller
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Alpha Shade
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Lizard by Dave Kelly
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Joy of Tech
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A Softer World
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The Last Kiss
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Errant Story
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Questionable Content
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Count Your Sheep
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The Devils Panties
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Inverloch by Sarah Ellerton
I do not get some of your top choices, the art isn’t that great, the story is not outstanding and the humour isn’t distinguished from anything else. What makes narbonic, achewood, xkcd or most of those top comics so good. I just don’t get it. Whereas a funny comic with amazing art, decent character development and an actual plot like Supertron is way down the list.
Apart from "Irregular Webcomic!" and "A Softer World" I could not find any other photocomics on your list. (Well, at last any more I could recognise by title…). Yes, I know they are a niche product, there are only very few really good ones out there and photocomics with real actors seem to be even more rare.
But here are three you should take into consideration! They are the best ones I have found so far – one for each genre:
Fantasy: Dark Red
Horror: Night Zero
and Superheroes: Union of Heroes
Even if you do not like photocomics in general – you’ll have to admit that these three all have really high values concerning how they are produced. By my point of view they are ground-breaking for future generations of photocomics.
Please take a second to explain your reasons for any comic you’re suggesting. If you just list a bunch of comics that actually isn’t all that helpful. I mean it’s not completely worthless – I don’t want to overlook anything and naming comics does help with that, but if no one is explaining what is "great" about the webcomics they propose then there’s not much to go on to actually write up this research into an article.
So thanks for comments so far but please — more comments that explain the greatness of the webcomics you’re listing.
I did do explain why, sorry I didn not do at first.
I say Melonpool deserves a spot in the top twenty. It’s one of the trailblazers, having started in 1996. Troop’s a master of both the daily and longer Sunday newspaper styles. Artwork’s consistently pleasant, humor’s generally amusing. All in all, it’s a body of work any cartoonist would be proud to have produced. Plus, he drew the Walky characters better than Willis did during their first crossover.
I’d recommend dropping SugarShock! from the list. Yes, it’s by Joss Whedon, and as we all know the man can do little wrong. But the fancy navigation bugs me (click the next button at the bottom of the page, the new page slides into view–but I’ve then got to scroll back up to see the first part of the page, thereby ruining any surprise they may have had). Also, the whole MySpace/Dark Horse site strikes me less as comics for the web as it does advertising the print editions.
Dilbert should be on the list. Adams was one of–if not the very–first cartoonists to adopt the web as a home.
I can’t believe Makeshift Miracle hasn’t been mentioned yet. Sure, it’s been five years since it ended, but I’ve never seen anyone work with color to set the mood quite like Zubkavitch did.
Oooh, nice list.
I’m kind of ashamed of myself, there are a ton of strips on hear that either never heard of, or haven’t gotten around to reading yet. BAd comics fan, bad!
Still, there is one comic that jumped right to my mind that I think deserves a spot among the top one hundred is Rice Boy by Evan Dahm. It’s really a very under appreciated work. It has very simple art, but it’s very well done. Each creature in his world, from main heroes to one panel throw away characters is full of imagination. The story is a classic hero tale that could be used to teach literature students about arcetypes.
Also it’s a completed work with a really strong ending, something you dont’ see too much of on the webs.
Hey – just wanted to say thanks for considering me one of your 100. To be on a list with that much friggin talent, not to mention quite a few friends.. I was honored to say the least.
Good luck on the further compiling and thanks again.
James Hatton – inhislikeness.com
Oh! And how stupid of me not to recommend someone:
Out of nowhere, I do believe Rosscott’s THE SYSTEM (http://www.rosscottinc.com/) is not only new and innovative, but is a nice and natural evolution of the ‘minimalist’ genre of webcomics.
It is a bit on the young side as far as this list goes, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t deserve a looksie and a consideration.
Also Dead of Summer is pretty fantastic as far zombie strips go.
Finally, I must also agree with someone who listed Paradigm Shift by Dirk Tiede. Not only is he amazingly artistically talented – his comic is an intense action adventure.
Hmmm – I’m not sure what the criteria for this list is supposed to be but, at the moment, I can see a number of titles on that list which seem to be there solely by virtue of their longevity. I won’t name names (people in glass houses and all that!) but there are several comics there which I’d say have become very stale and uninteresting. Is it right we should still consider them among the "greatest" just because they once happened to be better than the rest of the (then) fairly limited competition?
It’s a subjective thing, obviously, but for my money, there are many webcomics better than almost all of those currently on the list but which for some reason are seldom mentioned anywhere. For example:
The Dreamer. Excellent artwork and an intriguing adventure story set (mostly) during the American War of Independence. As a sign of its quality, it has recently been picked up for publication by one of the larger print companies.
Simply Sarah. One of the very few lesbian themed webcomics which is not angrily feminist, or childishly slapstick. A very sensitive little romance with consistently high production values and genuinely accessible to all genders and orientations.
Shades. If there’s a rule against suggesting your own comics, I didn’t notice it and I apologise for this one immediately! As the writer, I’m obviously biased as far as the story and dialogue are concerned, so I shan’t cite those as reasons (even if I do think they’re a notch above some of the other super hero fare out there!) Hey – I admitted I was biased! The artwork is not by me, however, and I can honestly say that – even if it were not in my own comic – I’d consider it among the best on the web, traditional enough to suit the genre but consciously avoiding the slick high-gloss look of current mainstream output.
Digger. A fantasy tale of a wombat and her assorted companions. Considering none of the characters in this are human, it’s a testament to the writing that we can so readily empathise with them.
Purgatory. SciFi story using 3D poser graphics which is superby rendered, with a story that encompasses political intrigue, ground-based warfare and epic space battles. Periodic releases of supplemental background info reveal a backstory with the kind of depth associated with genre classics such as Dune.
Brat-halla. The adventures of the Norse Gods during their kindergarten years. Not just funny – often very witty too. And the artwork is always pro-quality.
The Surreal Adventures of Edgar Allen Poo. Some of the most highly individual and yet eerily evocative artwork on the web, with a story of Edgar Allen Poe’s alter ego (the Poo of the title) as he journeys through his own nightmarish Wonderland.
I’m not convinced about Dilbert – Scott Adams DID put his email address on the comic very early on but I don’t recall any big web push until much later. I don’t think in terms of the web Dilbert is much different than any other newspaper comic in terms of historical significance. In fact – I recall Doonesbury hitting the web with a unique site quite a bit earlier.
Without commenting on specific titles (we all have our own tastes!), that’s where I was coming from, too. If very average strips keep making it to the top of the lists of "the best" or "the greatest" then this gives a very poor picture of what webcomics can do.
I appreciate that some of these titles have been around for years and were perhaps innovative in their day but, if you look at a list of the greatest 100 movies, you’d no longer expect to see, for example, Intolerance or Battleship Potemkin up there at the top. They may well be in the list somewhere, lurking near the bottom, but with improvements in technology, increasingly sophisticated audience tastes and the industry’s ability to attract better talent than it could in its early years, so many films have since surpassed them.
The same is true of webcomics. Many of those in the draft list just aren’t "great" by the standards of the best comics being produced today. Acknowledge the early pioneers for having led the way, by all means, but newcomers to webcomics are not going to be impressed if they believe they’re the best we’re capable of offering. There are so many better comics out there and we are doing a disservice to all webcomics if we simply keep trotting out the names of the comics that were considered "great" back when the internet was in its infancy.
good point.
Battleship Potemkin (heck even Birth of a Nation) do still wind up on such lists though. Also please remember this was a working draft, not in a particular order (amazed how many people fail to read the article(s) and just scan the list). While I’m not sure this effort is going anywhere at this point, still I’m curious — which better comics out there do you have in mind? I have no pride in this current listing — I would truly want any list to include comics that represent the best of the webcomics medium…
Hey, Mr X – I did spot that this was a draft list and I did make some suggestions accordingly (in my ealier post!) You can read my reasons for each of these above, but the names again (with links this time!) are:
The Dreamer
Simply Sarah
Shades
Digger
Purgatory
Brat-halla
The Surreal Adventures of Edgar Allen Poo
And, yes, I did acknowledge that some of those golden oldies would still make it into the top 100 … just that you’d expect them to be lurking near the bottom of the list these days, rather than still monopolising the top slots!
Anyway … each to his own!