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  2. Comix Zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comix_Zone

    Comix Zone (コミックスゾーン) is a 1995 beat 'em up video game developed and published by Sega for the Genesis.It is set within the panels of a comic book with dialogue rendered within talk bubbles and sprites, and backgrounds possessing the bright colors and dynamic drawing style of superhero comics.

  3. plasq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasq

    Doozla is a children's drawing program for Mac OS X.It uses large icons and narrations in order to be easily accessible to children. Numerous modes are available which allow the user to draw on a blank canvas, illustrate several background images, or take an image from a webcam.

  4. Microsoft Comic Chat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Comic_Chat

    Microsoft Comic Chat (later Microsoft Chat) is a graphical IRC client created by Microsoft, first released with Internet Explorer 3.0 in 1996. Comic Chat was developed by Microsoft Researcher David Kurlander, with Microsoft Research's Virtual Worlds Group and later a group he managed in Microsoft's Internet Division.

  5. ComiXology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ComiXology

    Comics by ComiXology (launched July 2009), a digital comic book reader and store for mobile devices, including iOS (launched April 2010), Android, Windows 8 (via the Windows Store), and the Internet (web reader launched June 2010), that allows users to access their digital comic collection across multiple devices.

  6. How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Draw_Comics_the...

    The book created a generation of cartoonists who learned there was a "Marvel way to draw and a wrong way to draw". [2] [page needed] It is considered "one of the best instruction books on creating comics ever produced". [3] [page needed] Scott McCloud has cited the book as a good reference for teaching the process of making comic books. [4 ...

  7. Comic book archive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comic_book_archive

    A comic book archive or comic book reader file (also called sequential image file) is a type of archive file for the purpose of sequential viewing of images, commonly for comic books. The idea was made popular by the CDisplay sequential image viewer; [ 1 ] since then, many viewers for different platforms have been created.

  8. Comic strip formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comic_strip_formats

    One page of a full-color comics section can be divided horizontally into two, three or four parts. Comic strip collectors call strips that occupy one-third of a full page "thirds". From the mid-1940s until at least the 1980s, "thirds" were the most common comic strip format, and "thirds" are still common today.

  9. The Kubert School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Kubert_School

    The Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art was founded in September 1976 by cartoonist Joe Kubert and his wife Muriel in the old Baker mansion on 45 Lehigh Street in Dover; then, from 1984 onwards, Dover's former high school, whose tall windows offered optimal lighting. [4]