Hyderabad braces itself for the return of the much-anticipated Hyderabad Comic Con 2024, presented by Maruti Suzuki Arena and powered by Crunchyroll, after a 3-year hiatus.
Hyderabad Comic Con 2024 is set to span over two days from Jan 27-28, 2024, and will be held at Hitex Exhibition Centre.
Hyderabad Comic Con will be hosting a Crunchyroll panel which animanga fans can look forward to.
Other than Crunchyroll, the event boasts a list of upcoming publishing houses and Indian artists, including Indusverse, Yali Dreams Creations, Sufi Comics, Prasad Bhat, Raj Comics by Sanjay Gupta, Lilorosh, Acid Toad, Garbage Bin, Corporate comics, Bullseye Press, Bakarmax, Art of Savio, and Abhijeet Kini.
International artists Rico Renzi and Danesh Mohiuddin will also grace the event with their presence.
One of the highlight of the event is “The Arena,” a 40,000 sq ft gaming arena in association with The Esports Club. Attendees can indulge in daily tournaments, esports,...
Hyderabad Comic Con 2024 is set to span over two days from Jan 27-28, 2024, and will be held at Hitex Exhibition Centre.
Hyderabad Comic Con will be hosting a Crunchyroll panel which animanga fans can look forward to.
Other than Crunchyroll, the event boasts a list of upcoming publishing houses and Indian artists, including Indusverse, Yali Dreams Creations, Sufi Comics, Prasad Bhat, Raj Comics by Sanjay Gupta, Lilorosh, Acid Toad, Garbage Bin, Corporate comics, Bullseye Press, Bakarmax, Art of Savio, and Abhijeet Kini.
International artists Rico Renzi and Danesh Mohiuddin will also grace the event with their presence.
One of the highlight of the event is “The Arena,” a 40,000 sq ft gaming arena in association with The Esports Club. Attendees can indulge in daily tournaments, esports,...
- 1/19/2024
- by Ami Nazru
- AnimeHunch
So I have no idea if the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl series ended at #50 for actual economic reasons (slowing sales), for fake economic reasons (Marvel wanted to concentrate only on comics that can have ten different covers), or for real creative reasons. It may have even been a reason I’m not considering – perhaps the combined forces of global squirrels realized this comic was too close to reality for their liking, and they’ve used their squirrely wiles to suppress it.
But, for whatever reason, Unbeatable Squirrel Girl – at that point the longest-running Marvel comic – ended with issue #50, in January of last year.
The very last storyline was collected in this, the last collection: The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 12: To All the Squirrels I’ve Loved Before . As with the previous few books, the creative team was writer Ryan North, artist Derek Charm, and color artist Rico Renzi, with a...
But, for whatever reason, Unbeatable Squirrel Girl – at that point the longest-running Marvel comic – ended with issue #50, in January of last year.
The very last storyline was collected in this, the last collection: The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 12: To All the Squirrels I’ve Loved Before . As with the previous few books, the creative team was writer Ryan North, artist Derek Charm, and color artist Rico Renzi, with a...
- 12/1/2021
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
The ninth volume collecting The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl collects five issues from early 2018 and came out in late 2018, with yet another lightly modified “funny” song lyric for a title: Squirrels Fall Like Dominoes .
As usual, I got to it three years late, after the series ended.
This time out, regular series writer Ryan North and colorist Rico Renzi are joined by a new artist: Derek Charm, replacing Erica Henderson. Henderson had drawn the first thirty-one issues of the series, the short previous series, and an original Graphic Novel, which were probably as many Squirrel Girl pages as all previous artists put together. So this was kind of a big deal, especially since the Sg audience was proverbially heavily pre-teen and female, which as an audience is often not happy with change.
Charm is a cartoonier artist than Henderson, which is a nice change-up. Sg is a bit cartoony story-wise (if...
As usual, I got to it three years late, after the series ended.
This time out, regular series writer Ryan North and colorist Rico Renzi are joined by a new artist: Derek Charm, replacing Erica Henderson. Henderson had drawn the first thirty-one issues of the series, the short previous series, and an original Graphic Novel, which were probably as many Squirrel Girl pages as all previous artists put together. So this was kind of a big deal, especially since the Sg audience was proverbially heavily pre-teen and female, which as an audience is often not happy with change.
Charm is a cartoonier artist than Henderson, which is a nice change-up. Sg is a bit cartoony story-wise (if...
- 7/23/2021
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
I’m trying to figure out how far behind I am on Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, and it is surprisingly difficult, since this is a Marvel comic. The series ended in late 2019 with issue 58, but the trade paperbacks are still dribbling out, since they’re all slim. I believe Marvel has only managed to emit Vol. 12, which probably collects issues 47-51, meaning there’s one or two more books yet to come.
But none of this is simple, and places like Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database and the Marvel Database fail to list those trades at all. But, I am behind, though the series has now ended, so I won’t get any further behind from this point.
Anyway, I’m here to talk about The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 8: My Best Friend’s Squirrel , written by Ryan North, drawn by Erica Henderson, colored by Rico Renzi. It collects...
But none of this is simple, and places like Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database and the Marvel Database fail to list those trades at all. But, I am behind, though the series has now ended, so I won’t get any further behind from this point.
Anyway, I’m here to talk about The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 8: My Best Friend’s Squirrel , written by Ryan North, drawn by Erica Henderson, colored by Rico Renzi. It collects...
- 4/14/2021
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
This is volume seven of something, I’m coming to it about two years later, and I’m typing this on Christmas day between other festivities. [1] So I expect this will be a short and perfunctory post — those of you who care about Squirrel Girl likely read this book a while ago, and I don’t have high hopes of convincing any of the rest of you at this point.
So, first up, this comes after the previous collections of the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl comic: one and two and three and four and five and six . And also the Ogn , which slots in around volume four or so.
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 7: I’ve Been Waiting for a Squirrel Like You is written by Ryan North (except one short story in issue 26), drawn by Erica Henderson and colored by Rico Renzi (who only did part of issue 26). It...
So, first up, this comes after the previous collections of the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl comic: one and two and three and four and five and six . And also the Ogn , which slots in around volume four or so.
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, Vol. 7: I’ve Been Waiting for a Squirrel Like You is written by Ryan North (except one short story in issue 26), drawn by Erica Henderson and colored by Rico Renzi (who only did part of issue 26). It...
- 1/8/2021
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
Announced yesterday at Harmony Gold’s Robotech panel at Sdcc 2019, Titan Comics is thrilled to reveal Robotech Remix #1 – a radical reimagining of the Sci Fi mecha anime classic.
A new Robotech saga starts now! Robotech is reborn from the ashes of Event Horizon! New writer Brenden Fletcher and artist Elmer Damaso boot up Robotech: Remix, an all-new series that will take beloved characters and iconic mecha to places fans have never seen before
First airing in the USA in 1985, Robotech was the gateway to anime for many fans – capturing their imagination with its epic generational storyline involving war, romance, and, of course, the transforming Veritech fighters that defend the Earth against extra-terrestrial attacks. Produced by Harmony Gold USA, the original 85-episode series delved into humanity’s struggle against a series of alien invasions, from the gigantic Zentraedi to the mysterious Invid, battling for control of advanced alien technology that crash-landed on Earth.
A new Robotech saga starts now! Robotech is reborn from the ashes of Event Horizon! New writer Brenden Fletcher and artist Elmer Damaso boot up Robotech: Remix, an all-new series that will take beloved characters and iconic mecha to places fans have never seen before
First airing in the USA in 1985, Robotech was the gateway to anime for many fans – capturing their imagination with its epic generational storyline involving war, romance, and, of course, the transforming Veritech fighters that defend the Earth against extra-terrestrial attacks. Produced by Harmony Gold USA, the original 85-episode series delved into humanity’s struggle against a series of alien invasions, from the gigantic Zentraedi to the mysterious Invid, battling for control of advanced alien technology that crash-landed on Earth.
- 7/19/2019
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
Jim Dandy Apr 22, 2019
Zoe Quinn, Robbi Rodriguez, and Rico Renzi have crafted a fascinating magical tech future in Goddess Mode.
When you imagine a cyberpunk world in your head, the image you conjure is probably full of grime and dinge. Neon street signs whose glow is diffuse through a thick smog that's condensing to rain before it can get to the top of the suffocating skyscrapers that occasionally let the rich folks go higher than the pollution and see natural light. One where technology is the enemy, whether it's biological tech that exacerbates economic inequality to a horrifying degree (like Altered Carbon) or tech that's gone mad because it's got a few valid points (like Blade Runner). But while most of what makes the genre stand out is set dressing, what all of its best examples have in common are their focus on the people of that future: how they shape their world,...
Zoe Quinn, Robbi Rodriguez, and Rico Renzi have crafted a fascinating magical tech future in Goddess Mode.
When you imagine a cyberpunk world in your head, the image you conjure is probably full of grime and dinge. Neon street signs whose glow is diffuse through a thick smog that's condensing to rain before it can get to the top of the suffocating skyscrapers that occasionally let the rich folks go higher than the pollution and see natural light. One where technology is the enemy, whether it's biological tech that exacerbates economic inequality to a horrifying degree (like Altered Carbon) or tech that's gone mad because it's got a few valid points (like Blade Runner). But while most of what makes the genre stand out is set dressing, what all of its best examples have in common are their focus on the people of that future: how they shape their world,...
- 4/22/2019
- Den of Geek
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