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In December 2012, Bitstrips launched a version for Facebook; [3] by July 2013, Bitstrips had 10 million unique users on Facebook, having created over 50 million comics. [7] In October 2013, Bitstrips launched a mobile app; in two months, Bitstrips became a top-downloaded app in 40 countries, and over 30 million avatars had been created with it ...
Creator Run Style Ref. Ctrl+Alt+Del: Tim Buckley: 2002– "Gamer on a couch" comic [1] [4] GU Comics: Woody Hearn: 2000– [4] Megatokyo: Fred Gallagher and Rodney Caston: 2000– Follows the adventures of a manga and video game fan in Tokyo, Japan. [6] Penny Arcade: Jerry Holkins and Mike Krahulik: 1998– "Gamer on a couch" comic [1] [4 ...
The 1998 webcomic Neglected Mario Characters was the first sprite comic to appear on the internet, [1] though Bob and George was the first sprite comic to gain widespread popularity. Starting its run in 2000, Bob and George utilizes sprites from the Mega Man series of games, with most of the characters being taken directly from the games.
Aaron Williams is most famous for his comics Nodwick, PS238 and Full Frontal Nerdity. He also is the creator of Backwards Compatible, a comic on the gaming news website Crispy Gamer. Hero Games published PS238: The Roleplaying Game (2008), a standalone Hero System game based on the world of Williams' comic of the same name. [1]
Joe Madureira (/ ˈ m æ d ə ˌ r ɛr ə /; [1] born December 1974), often called Joe Mad, [2] [3] is an American comic book artist and game developer, best known for his work on Darksiders, Marvel Comics' Uncanny X-Men and his creator-owned comic book Battle Chasers. He is the founder of video game development companies Vigil Games and ...
Matrix Games was founded by David Heath and Shaun Wallace in 1999 in Staten Island, New York City.As of January 2010, Matrix Games has published over 75 titles. Matrix has in-house artists, programmers, and producers which all take active roles in projects of smaller wargame developers who lack the resources to hire full-time staff otherwise.
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Kelly Sue DeConnick was first introduced to the comics industry by writing copy for photos in adult magazines. She eventually moved on to posting her own stories on a message board for fellow comic book author Warren Ellis. He invited her to work on his new website at the time, artbomb.net, where she wrote catalog entries for comic-book issues. [3]