On the other hand, comiXology and the DC app were the place to get single -
issue comics until last November, when DC started putting them on the Kindle, Nook, and iBooks.
Not exact matches
Deadpool cropped up in the early
issues of the
comic, however, he wasn't a fully - fledged member of the team
until Uncanny X-Force was released in 2010.
(Update: Iconology's CEO tells me that the company plans to add new
issues to its series at the rate of one per week
until they catch up with the
comics» current run.)
This service was a bit clunky
until they came out with an iOS app this year, which makes for a much more pleasant reading experience than flipping through the
comics in a web browser and allows the user to download up to six
issues at a time.
You won't be able to read the current releases (
issues don't appear on Marvel Unlimited
until several months after they've been in
comic stores and on Comixology.)
Until now,
comics from major distributors and publishers have been made available for iPads and iPhones, but they tended to be more midlist back
issues, not current new releases.
They launched the DC2 line of digital - first
comics almost immediately with the first
issue of Batman» 66, but we haven't heard much about the DC2 Multiverse
comics until now.
If you want to see what Marvel Puzzle Quest is all about (yeah, I know it doesn't cost money unless you want to make in - game purchases, but phone storage space is an
issue for a lot of people, myself included — I'm not going to download any app if it means I have to delete my collection of»80s and»90s one - hit wonders), there will be a Marvel Puzzle Quest booth (# 347) at next weekend's New York
Comic Con, where the game will available to try out on tablets and PCs (though without Lady Thor, I'd imagine, as she's not being added
until the Friday after).
To do this, I had to browse through a multitude of titles called Wolverine, then scroll past dozens of
comics until I reached the 90th
issue.