Other may not care but I'm pretty excited to hear this and it seems pretty hot compared to the price of buying print copies.
Taken from Reuters:
Spider-Man may spin a good yarn in comic books, but Marvel Entertainment Inc hopes that he finds the World Wide Web equally comfortable.
The publisher said on Tuesday that it will start a Web site that will feature access to thousands of its comic books and the famous heroes who populate them, from Spider-Man and the X-Men to the Fantastic Four and The Avengers.
Marvel will charge subscriptions -- $4.99 a month if people sign up for a year, or $9.99 a month if they don't.
"This is a major new piece of my overall publishing plan," Dan Buckley, president of Marvel Publishing, said in an interview.
"It's a different entertainment experience, online versus reading a book."
Marvel plans to offer access to 2,500 comics, Buckley said. It will make 250 available for free to entice people to pay up, but for a limited time, a company statement explained.
The Digital Comics Unlimited site then will add 20 additional books a week, including a mix of new and vintage comics.
Among the older titles will be the first 100 issues of "Amazing Spider-Man" and "The Fantastic Four," as well as the initial 66-issue run of "Uncanny X-Men" and the first 50 issues of "The Avengers." It will feature other super heroes like the Incredible Hulk, Wolverine and the Silver Surfer."
Site should be - www.marvel.com/digitalcomics
Taken from Reuters:
Spider-Man may spin a good yarn in comic books, but Marvel Entertainment Inc hopes that he finds the World Wide Web equally comfortable.
The publisher said on Tuesday that it will start a Web site that will feature access to thousands of its comic books and the famous heroes who populate them, from Spider-Man and the X-Men to the Fantastic Four and The Avengers.
Marvel will charge subscriptions -- $4.99 a month if people sign up for a year, or $9.99 a month if they don't.
"This is a major new piece of my overall publishing plan," Dan Buckley, president of Marvel Publishing, said in an interview.
"It's a different entertainment experience, online versus reading a book."
Marvel plans to offer access to 2,500 comics, Buckley said. It will make 250 available for free to entice people to pay up, but for a limited time, a company statement explained.
The Digital Comics Unlimited site then will add 20 additional books a week, including a mix of new and vintage comics.
Among the older titles will be the first 100 issues of "Amazing Spider-Man" and "The Fantastic Four," as well as the initial 66-issue run of "Uncanny X-Men" and the first 50 issues of "The Avengers." It will feature other super heroes like the Incredible Hulk, Wolverine and the Silver Surfer."
Site should be - www.marvel.com/digitalcomics