Hulkverines #1-3 (2019) Complete English | CBR | 3 Issues | 154.91 MB At last! It's Weapon H versus his predecessors - Wolverine and the Hulk! Once, the Weapon X program sought to recreate the world's two greatest hunters. They ended up with Weapon H, a man of Adamantium claws and gamma-juiced blood. Now, Wolverine and the Hulk are back in action - and coming after the dangerous creation made in their name! ==================== Hulkverines (2019) English | CBR | 126 pages | 226.11 MB Collects Hulkverines (2019) 1-3 & Totally Awesome Hulk #22. Armageddon 2001 #1-2 (1991) Complete English | CBR | 2 Issues | HD | 152.88 MB Armageddon 2001 was DC's event of Summer 1991. A massive cross over tale, the story began in its self titled 1st issue special and spun off into 12 annuals of the most popular comic titles of the day, before concluding in a second special. Written by Archie Goodwin and Denny O' Neil, and drawn by artist Dan Jurgens, Armageddon 2001 chronicled the birth of time-travelling hero Waverider. Hailing from a dystopian possible future in the year 2030, where a super hero had been corrupted and reborn as the dark overlord known as the Monarch. Wow Comics 001 (2016) English | CBR | 68 pages | 239.97 MB Wow Comics #01 is the first colour comic book ever produced in Canada, published in September 1941. It's two feature stories are Dart Daring and Whiz Wallace, both by artist E. T. Legault. An exciting duo of jungle and sci-fi stories that showcase the beginnings of comics history in Canada. Comic Book Implosion: An Oral History of DC Comics Circa 1978 (2018) English | CBR | 141 pages | 114.91 MB Things looked bleak for comic books throughout the 1970s because of plummeting sell-through rates. With each passing year, the newsstand became less and less interested in selling comic books. The industry seemed locked in a death spiral, but the Powers That Be at DC Comics had an idea to reverse their fortunes. In 1978, they implemented a bold initiative: Provide readers with more story pages by increasing the price-point of a regular comic book to make it comparable to other magazines sold on newsstands. Billed as "The DC Explosion," this expansion saw the introduction of numerous creative new titles. But mere weeks after its launch, DC's parent company pulled the plug, demanding a drastic decrease in the number of comic books they published, and leaving stacks of completed comic book stories unpublished. The series of massive cutbacks and cancellations quickly became known as "The DC Implosion." TwoMorrows Publishing marks the 40th Anniversary of one of the most notorious events in comics with an exhaustive oral history from the creators and executives involved (Jenette Kahn, Paul Levitz, Len Wein, Mike Gold, and Al Milgrom, among many others), as well as detailed analysis and commentary by other top professionals, who were "just fans" in 1978 (Mark Waid, Michael T. Gilbert, Tom Brevoort, and more)―examining how it changed the landscape of comics forever! By Keith Dallas and John Wells. |
Navigation MenuNews & ArticlesTop News
Latest NewsFeatured NewsNews ArchivesDaily PostsTag Keywords |