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Print vs. Digital: What Will The Future Of The Comics Market Look Like?

A recent interview with DC execs shed some light on the current comics market and got us thinking about what the future might look like.

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The issue of digital comics and "digital first" books is something that is still considered a rather contentious subject for many. Are digital comics considered supplemental to the weekly releases available in print, or are they considered competition for comic shop owners? This is definitely a subject that was present on the minds of DC's VP of Sales Bob Wayne and the SVP of Marketing John Cunningham when they, along with other DC execs, made the decision to make DC comics available digitally the same day as the print releases. So what does this mean for comic shops now and in the future?

Since DC's announcement that many of their comics would be made available for the Kindle as well as other digital platforms, the time in which many titles are made available for download has been pushed back -- meaning that sometimes the digital comics are made available for download on Wednesdays before many comic shops on the East Coast are even open for business. In a recent interview DC's SVP John Cunningham discussed that the digital numbers are being "closely monitored" by DC and that the company always viewed their digital sales as an "additive" and not a replacement to the sale of print comics.

Obviously, we're monitoring on a daily basis, weekly basis and a monthly basis what our digital sales are in concurrence with print sales. That's been the method of operation since we went day-and-date digital. And a lot of our attitude to that was grounded by the fact that we only saw digital as an additive business in terms of our overall sales. I might even go so far to say that it's an additive element that helps support and keep print going because you're marketing these properties in a more holistic way.

As far as the timing issue, I think the question is still very much out there. We're not of the opinion that it's going to provide that much of a statistical advantage because there's still no consistency as to when, where and how these titles go up digitally. And we're watching things on a very close, day-to-day basis to see if we have to make any adjustments, but I think we went into this fairly comfortable in the notion that this would prove to be additive just as well as day-and-date was.

This begs the question, what will the future of digital and print look like, and will the two markets become more competitive? If the times that comics are being made available for digital purchase continues to be pushed back earlier and earlier, then what will the incentive be for the average buyer to go to the comic shop each week and spend money on a print issue? Why leave the house when you can just download your favorite comics before your local shop even opens, from the comfort of your couch?

One particular excerpt from the interview with DC's SVP John Cunningham struck us as particularly interesting when he goes so far as saying that the sale of digital comics supports the print market:

…And a lot of our attitude to that was grounded by the fact that we only saw digital as an additive business in terms of our overall sales. I might even go so far to say that it's an additive element that helps support and keep print going because you're marketing these properties in a more holistic way…

While the digital market may have been viewed as an additive initially, is it possible that the digital market could have grown (and may eventually grow) to be a larger, competing market to the sale of print? After all, digital comics cost virtually nothing to make. By selling the comics digitally and charging the same price as the print copy, the publisher gets to take a bigger cut since the cost of publishing and shipping the comics is virtually removed. Since the digital comics cost less to make and distribute than print comics, the notion that the sale of digital comics supports the print market can easily be viewed as a threat to the print market in general.

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Although we can't make a perfect and direct comparison between the comics market and the movie rental market, we can take compare the two on a surface level. We can get a closer look at the digital versus physical argument by looking at a company like Blockbuster Video which, according to a report by Fast Company, in 1994 was valued at $8.4 billion and was the largest movie rental chain in the country. Since then, however, the company has experienced a steady decline with stores closing all throughout the country, going so far as to file for Chapter 11 back in 2010, dropping in value exponentially from $8.4 billion in 1994, to a mere $24 million in 2010. Much of Blockbuster's losses can be attributed to the launch and rise of streaming company Netflix, forcing Blockbuster to also look for a "digital strategy." However, local comic shops aren't Blockbuster Video stores and aside from comics, they give us plenty of things a Blockbuster can't. Many comic shops aren't part of a huge company, they are local "mom and pop" stores that are owned and operated by members of the community. So while a company like Blockbuster has experienced a steady decline, some local, family video rentals continue to thrive across the country perhaps due to the fact that they continue to deliver a more personal experience, much like the experience many of us get when we visit and buy from local comic stores. Take, for example, First Run Video in Battleboro, Vermont which has continued to thrive in spite of the move by many to digital and streaming. According to First Run Video's general manager, his shop provides elements you just can't get from Netflix streaming:

We find a lot of people have become disenfranchised with Netflix... streaming isn't what it used to be…We're here to satisfy the customer the best we can, whereas with the Redbox, you can't go to the machine and say ‘this disc doesn't work.' You're not going to get an answer. The machine's not going to talk back to you…While the Internet and streaming can hurt us, it can also help us by opening the doors to a larger audience of consumers to purchase our product.

The same can be said for the comics market. One of the interesting points in the interview with SVP of Marketing John Cunningham was that the sale of digital first comics like Smallville Season 11 did relatively well in both digitally and in print, ranking in both lists, and in that sense, the digital books may have aided the sale of the print volume.

So what does the future of the comics market look like? Will competition between digital and print markets grow exponentially and how long will that take? There is no real way to determine how the market will change and no way to guess how consumers will want to buy products. And while buying digital may seem more convenient for some, it takes away from the collectibility and the experience of holding a comic in your hand and being able to physically turn the pages. What do you think the market will look like in the future? How do you purchase your comics?

Source: CBR, Fast Company and Reformer

77 Comments

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andyepeters

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Edited By andyepeters

@kid Apollo: sniffing one right now. also, my iPad only smelled great coming out of the package.

i for one got back into buying print comics because of digital, but now i prefer print for reasons basically already covered already. i like digital for comics which i don't care to hold on to and look at or read often. these reasons may be because i am trying out a comic, or rediscovering a character to see if it'll stick, or a small mini-series to read and only eventually buy a trade.

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KnightofSteel

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Edited By KnightofSteel

I switched to digital a couple of months back and have to say I really like it. The main reason I switched is because I just don't have the space to store anymore physical comics. Sure I do my best to organize my comics, but it just gets crazy with piles here and there, I just don't have time to keep on top of it. I guess if I had a huge house and a ton of free time I'd stick with print -- but I don't. There's really no collectibility to new comics anymore, I get them to read ...maybe more than once but rarely. So it really made sense for me to go digital. Saying all this though I do find it different reading experience reading on my tablet...hard to explain I suppose it feels not as "immersive" as compared to reading a physical copy. And lately I do find myself making the 15 min. walk down to my shop every week and get something whether it's a trade or a $3.99 issue that I don't feel like shelling out the dough for digitally. So here I am liking both digital and print equally and I'm fine with it.

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dreamfall31

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Edited By dreamfall31

Don't have a tablet or smart phone and don't plan on buying one anytime soon. As with books, I'm still going to keep reading print comics until they cease to exist completley. From what it seems like, no one digital comic storefront is all that well organized and working. If I could have the specific files on my computer and be able to back them up, I might be more inclined. But since most if the outlets has the comics linked to an account, whose to say that I could lose access to the account and lose access to the comics. I still enjoy going to my comic shop every week and talking with the owners and patrons who show up every wednesday as well. From the smell of the comics, to being able to the feeling of holding them, I'll keep print comics going as long as I can.

But as I mentioned, I'll probably give in one day. I said the same with CD's for a long time. Even when I got my MP3 players, I still always bought CD's and ripped the music to my computer. I slowly gave that up as I was able to play my iPod in my new car well enough thanks to adapters and MP3 albums are almost always cheaper. So I've gone all digital for music, but I know if my iPod dies or my computer does, I have an external drive with my 6000+ songs!

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geoff2005

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Edited By geoff2005

ill never buy digital but i prefer to read digital

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greenenvy

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Edited By greenenvy

I support print only because print has many experiences that digital will not have such as the the experience of going into the comic store like an adventure especially for a kid. Holding print comics makes the reader and collector feel good that he or she owns the copy after tracking it down which is also an experience in itself too. Its fun to sort out and re organize the way the collector wants it by hand and I wanted to add more to the comic store experience which collectors socialize with the retailer and meet great people that go to that comic store. Digital just means download it, read it and move on! I don't want to download a comic and the end because it defeats the tradition of comic reading and collecting as a hobby.

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Sharkbite

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Edited By Sharkbite

When I take my copy of Incredible Hulk #180, Uncanny X-Men #244, Uncanny X-Men #266, Superboy #68, Superman #75 still sealed in the bag, etc, and show my son all the milestones I've collected over the years, I can have some pride that what I was buying when I was his age is now something that can be passed on for generations.

Digital Comics are great for reading, but they are lousy for collecting.

If they would market the Digital Comics for $.25 a peice, I'd buy tons of them just to read once and be done with, all those crossover points that I normally would have skipped because they weren't worth $3.99, or all the old back issues for some of the comics I enjoy nowadays. Heck, I would buy a digital copy of anything that comes polybagged so I don't have to buy 2 and open 1.

The Kindle or iPad is great; it's easy to bring to work and read a comic or two on my break, in a way that I just can't sport the newest issue of Crossed on my desk. But anyone buying more than 5 issues per month is rarely just a Comic-Reader; they are a collector, with a box somewhere full of the comics they have acquired over the years. I just can't see myself ever giving up on collecting comics while retaining the interest in reading them.

Joe Q published a statement about the time of Civil War stating that internet piracy had almost zero effect on comic sales. Because, music fans just want to hear the music, movie fans just want to watch the film, but the people reading comic books are rarely just "fans" who are content with simply reading the comic; they are "collectors" who want to own it.

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captainadamant

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Edited By captainadamant

I think it's pretty cool that you can have all your comics in one place. I have a pretty small apartment, so comics aren't convenient to keep in boxes.

I also like the bright color you get from digital. Sometimes guided view is hit or miss. It can sometimes be cinematic feeling, but if there are double page spreads like Batwoman for example, you lose what makes that beautiful.

I don't like that you don't have ownership of your content. It makes me nervous that you can't backup comixology files.

I would like to see a subscription service like Marvel Digital Unlimited with a better reader. Preferably an app. DC made a step in the right direction with reducing the price after a month. It could still be better.

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celestial_man

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Edited By celestial_man

well i am going to say this... digital comics are the future. a digital comic will never fade or get crinkled. digital comics will finally kill off the ridiculous trade in over priced single back issues no more hundreds of dollars for a comic. 10 years ago a small percentage of people had mobiles now most people have a phone i think a similar trend for tablets will occur herelding the age of digital comics. apps like perfectviewer on android or cdisplay on pc are popular because they are acsessable and easy to use. digital comics mean that 100's of comics can be stored on a micro sd card that fits into your hand.

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moywar700

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Edited By moywar700

With digital, a person with buys it gets more content.Smallville gets 11 pages a week and that's 44 pages a month with a price of 4 dollars..Avengers only has 20 pages and it doesn't come out weekly .Digital has twice the context.Scandalous!

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wowylied

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Edited By wowylied

So now we are in 2012. Maybe the Mayans were planning the end of the comics industry i don't know but one thing is sure, they were not planning a success for digital comics. I will take Comixology here. I agree this is a really good idea but they did a really bad job with this in real. A way of reading digital comics and even have them the same day with the new 52 ? Nice. I can understand that the LCS lobbying is strong but they must understand that this market must evolve and like everything they will disappear if they worked against the progress. So i find it nice you are telling me, but why are they doing it wrong here too ? For different reasons.

How can you hope that someone will buy a DIGITAL comic if they are priced like a REAL copy ? You can't sell them, trade them, you are renting a right to read them. If they really want this kind of thing to works then they should put the price to 0.99$ and with a decreasing price every month. But it is not all. You are reading them online ! You can't even download them and put them on your pc or portable device, you don't own the file. This is really dumb, if you are reading them online then that mean that you are actually downloading file in order to read them, why can't we use this download option ? And finally right now this service is like a deezer or spotify for comics. If you bought something yesterday then you could lose it today for no reason if the owner of the licence don't want it anymore on Comixology. Would you be okay if some lawyers where at your house stealing what you have bought because because some 70 years old who understand nothing to this world but who own the licence choose to make this ? I don't think. And this is really bad, because i deeply think that digital comics are the future.

And another thing. It seems comics compagny are thinking "USA and nothing else". Why can't they propose a translation of their comics in French, Spanish, German...? It is like they don't want to open their market to the world.

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Shark_Repellent_Bat_Spray

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You can't beat having a real copy in your hand. Opening those beautiful smelling pages and reading through just like how it should be. It's good to get a break from computers as well. I only have digital comics for the Silver Age comics I can't afford to add to my collection yet.

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Lvenger

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Edited By Lvenger

I Much prefer print to digital. I can see the attractions of digital comics but reading on a screen is so different to reading a print comic. Plus I prefer holding a copy of the issue in my hand as well. Digital is great but it has its limits.

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impossibilly

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Edited By impossibilly

Two Wednesdays ago was my last Wednesday rushing to the store to buy print comics. Last week, I made the switch to buying 99% of my comics digitally.

The main reason I made the switch was space. I live in NYC, where apartments are small and expensive. Space is a premium. And comics take up so much space.

I love Comixology's iPad app. The colors pop on the iPad screen so much nicer than they do in print. And I love that I don't have to worry about a particular comic selling out if I don't buy it immediately on Wednesday. With digital, there are no sell outs. If there's a comic you want to read, it's there for you any time.

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derf_jenkins

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Edited By derf_jenkins

I read print. It's probably because that's what I grew up with in the 80s. I also support the digital market. It sounds like it helps DC and Marvel to keep their profit margin high enough to continue forward and be successful as a business. I will most likely never buy digital and things would change drastically if print becomes obsolete. Wednesday morning therapy session would be cancelled. I would probably spend even more money looking for back issues. Ultimately, an all digital comics world is not a world I hope to see.

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wolfmangideon

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Edited By wolfmangideon

I could support a Netflix-style model where I could pay a flat fee and read all I want, but only if print had a 90-day exclusive window and there were no such things as digital exclusives. The current model is a cancer that needs to go. Comic books are printed, not a string of 0s and 1s stored on an iPad.

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BurningBlaze

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Edited By BurningBlaze

I prefer print, but I can't reliably get to a comic store every week, so digital is pretty much the only way for me to get popular comics such as Batman or Spider-Man that sell out quickly.

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BritishMonkey

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Edited By BritishMonkey

Print will always be better. I honestly hate digital, doesn't have the same feel to print.

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jesusdisciple001

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Edited By jesusdisciple001

Digital should be marketed as available in areas where there are no access to American print comics on time like Europe & Africa etc.

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djotaku

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Edited By djotaku

I've mostly made the move to digital as it's more convenient and I don't need to buy bags and boards and longboxes. However, to me the biggest question is how digital changes the comics themselves. Because while reading on a tablet is mostly the same as reading print (as opposed to computer where it's not the same), a tablet sucks for two-page spreads. So will the rise of digital mean the decline of the 2 page spread?

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Moccles

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Edited By Moccles

I always buy digital now.

The comic book shops in my city are ridiculously expensive and they'd rather charge me £4.99 than the $4.99 on the issue. At least when I buy digital I get it at the price I should be paying and without the adverts.

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impossibilly

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Edited By impossibilly

I really like that with DC's digital comics, they will include all the variant covers for an issue. I wish the other publishers would do that as well.

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Swagger462

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Edited By Swagger462

I like that digital saves on the use of resources because it doesn't physically exist. But I really do enjoy owning a physical copy and more importantly digital is cheaper for the companies. If enough people are buying them then of course they're going to let them take the wheel if they get the chance to do so. Considering that small comic book shops all over the world are the reason why comic book companies have made the money they have today it doesn't sit well with me that if digital became popular enough these companies would remove the product that they peddle entirely. I know it's business but still, people should always remember where they came from.

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akbogert

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Edited By akbogert

It's been a month... hopefully this doesn't constitute egregious gravedigging, but I wanted to know what had been said about print vs. digital and this was quite relevant.

Without an LCS that's truly local, digital makes the most sense for me, but I've been struggling quite a bit with the pricing model. As I'm new to comics, I'm already a little shocked by the idea of paying $4 for so few pages, I guess because I don't have that collector's mentality. Not yet, anyway. But I do have an iPad mini, and that's proven to be a wonderful way to read. Not only are there the obvious advantages -- space saving, having all my books in one place, being able to read in the dark -- but there are others I hadn't originally considered. Like screenshots.

I originally started capturing the couple frames that I thought might make good wallpaper (or part of some random photoshop project). But then it occurred to me: one of the biggest drawbacks of using a service like Comixology is the fact that I could theoretically lose all my comics, or cease to have a device that can open them. But I'll always be able to look at images. So I bought a flash drive for one specific purpose: to hold the screenshots I take of every single page (1024 x 768, and that's proving fine for archival purposes). At 1MB a page, I'll be able to hold thousands of pages -- so hundreds of books -- on a single USB drive. Forever (relatively speaking).

No, it doesn't have the luster of the physical stacks and boxes. But it does have the longevity -- perhaps even exceeds it. And at the end of the day, if there's an issue or arc or run I really like, I can pick up the trades at reasonable prices and then have them on the shelf as well. So I guess...I guess I've come to terms with the digital (though I still think the pricing for something that's technically not designed to be kept forever is extortionate). But there's a romance to having a pull list and a physical copy that I think, as a former English major who loves his library, I'll always hold onto. I'll probably find excuses to buy a few print copies a month on principle.

For common, mass reading, though? My future is plugged in.

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Freefa11

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Edited By Freefa11

I stopped buying single issues years and years ago, probably around 2000 or 2001. After moving a couple of times, I realized how much space they take up, and how heavy they can be. I also read comics primarily for the stories, not for the sake of just owning a comic, and once you start parsing through them to figure out which ones I'd rather get rid of than take with me, I began to realize that a good number of single issues are not anything special, and frankly, I felt a lot of them were hardly worth the cover price back then (probably about $2-3), let alone now.

I do like trade paperbacks. The binding makes them a bit more resilient than a typical single issue, and they are far, far easier to store and organize on a regular bookshelf. It's also just convenient to have a complete story arc collected into one place. The only real downside I feel these have is that the binding often interferes with two-page spreads.

The iPad coming around was great for me though. It can store huge numbers of comics in a single space, and it is easy to keep them relatively organized (although Comixology/DC/Marvel need some better options for sorting). The images are crisp and clear, and back-issues are easy to find and acquire immediately. Marvel has 99cent sales every monday and pretty often on fridays as well, and I have been prompted to pick up dozens of comics in this way, as well as DC's (sadly less frequent) sales. I have easily spent more money on "single issues" during these sales in the last year than I have on actual print single-issues in the last ten.

And at 99cents, if an issue sucks, I just shrug and tell myself, "well, now I'm glad I didn't buy the trade."

As far as portability goes, digital can't be beat. Any extended commutes or planetrips, I can easily stuff my pleather-covered iPad into a backpack or briefcase with virtually zero worries of any scuffs or scratches occurring and have easy access to hundreds of my comics whenever I want, where a single TPB of perhaps 10 issues would take up more space and be far more likely to end up with frayed edges or bent corners or creases.

There's also the new Beta version of the Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited reader, which works natively with the ipad (finally!), so for a flat monthly or yearly (I actually opted for the yearly; it came with an exclusive Dr. Doom w/ Infinity Gauntlet action figure) fee, I can read as many comics from there as I want. It is streaming, so I can only read it around a wifi spot, which is an obvious limitation, but if you assume each comic is worth it's cover price, then it becomes real easy to get your money's worth in just a couple of days if you have some free time. I actually used this service to finally read Civil War and Secret Invasion recently, two stories that were a pretty big deal in recent Marvel history, but I never quite felt like spending money on them. And now that I've read them, I am pretty glad that I didn't spend money on them.

Like I said, I generally read comics for the stories. I am not a "Collector," with a capital C, in the sense that I generally just don't have the mentality that demands I possess a physical copy just for the sake of having it. In this respect, I think digital comics work fantastically. If I really like a story (or suspect I will), then I will consider getting the trade, but single-issues have been dead to me for a long, long time now.

BTW, I actually can understand people simply enjoying the tactile sensation of real paper. I still get that with books, to some extent, but with comics it is just generally not something I need, or at least not enough to spend the time and money to acquire the issue and deal with storing it away.

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comicbookreaderguy

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Crom-Cruach

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Edited By Crom-Cruach

I consider digital comics a form of heresy. There I said it.

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Decoy Elite

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Edited By Decoy Elite

@Crom-Cruach said:

I consider digital comics a form of heresy. There I said it.

While I prefer print comics overall, webcomics are still great for the indie market and are also great.

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