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You've just discovered a new. Maybe a friend told you, maybe you were pointed to it by another site., maybe it was. Like any new reader, you read the strip on the main page. It looks good; the art passes muster, the writing's okay. Sure, you'll read this comic. So you hit the 'First Strip' button.
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And then you see the date. This strip started eleven years ago.
Beads of sweat form on your forehead. You hit the 'Archive' link. Holy Mother of Shakespeare! There are hundreds upon hundreds of comics in here!
Even with the longest of your life, it'll take you forever to read all of these! This is the Archive Panic: when a reader is scared off from reading a comic by the sheer volume of its archives. This is far more common with daily comics, which can easily have lengthy archives by sheer weight of longevity.
Consider: if a strip updates once per day, Monday through Friday, then at the end of five years there will be over 1300 strips Exact count 1304 or 1305, depending on where the leap years fall in its archive. The number increases to over 1800 strips Exact count 1826 or 1827, depending on leap years if the strip updates on weekends as well. Now consider a person who has a lot of free time and a fast connection to the Internet, and who reads five strips a minute. To get through that Monday through Friday comic, he would need almost four and a half hours of continuous reading. Now, while that isn't a lot of time, most people won't want to or won't be able to binge like that. Broken up into short shots, that time can stretch into months; it's easy to imagine someone not having that sort of willpower.
This problem is exacerbated when strip-a-day comics are archived on one day per page, rather than one week per page. Thus the time to click the 'next' button and the time for the page to upload can equal the few seconds needed to read each day's strip. What's worse is that the strip is continuing to update while you're reading through the archive, making it even harder to catch up. Even worse is if the strip doesn't continue to update: there's the risk of it coming to an end. Few things are more disheartening than finally catching up with the current strip and seeing an author's note listing the end of the comic. In two weeks from now.
Strips with less intense update schedules (say, three times a week) rarely suffer Archive Panic, nor do strips that have suffered various incidents. (It's less of a hassle to read five years' worth of strips if there are none from June 2008 to July 2009.) Video Games might be the most subjective medium for this trope, since how long one spends on a game can vary from person to person.
Download Save2pc Pro 3.60 Full. Factors include how challenging one finds the game (and which difficulty they play on), whether or not they are going for, and how long they spend A game that one person breezes through might take hours more of playtime for another, and that's just on one entry in a series. The site lets you subscribe to a webcomic's archive via an RSS feed at a rate you choose, allowing you to attempt to avoid panic.
Another tool to help is which helps you keep track of a few thousand webcomics you might be reading. May be eased if the author has decided to make some to give readers a safe starting-off point. Can lead to thinking '. • Currently holding the record (for those who can read it):, 155 volumes running for nearly 50 years — and that's just the manga. • has been going strong since 1996, with no less than five manga series, seven TV shows, and four movies.
The original manga ran weekly for nearly 15 years with one hiatus between Part 5 and Part 6, before switching to monthly partway through Steel Ball Run. If you add up the number of chapters between all eight parts, that adds up to 910 chapters and counting. • The manga by Akira Toriyama ran for 42 volumes and 519 chapters for 11 years. The anime spans for 663 episodes, counting 153 episodes from Dragon Ball, 291 episodes from, 64 episodes from, and 155 episodes from. And Dragon Ball Super is an ongoing series with over 70 episodes with its own manga adaptation. There's also the 19 theatrical films, 3 specials, 2 short films, an hour-long crossover with and, and a 2-part OVA serving as a strategy guide for one of the video games.
• Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Kouen Mae Hashutsujo, or, has been running for more than 30 years in a weekly magazine and legend says the author/studio never went on hiatus. It was finished at 200 volumes. Add the and, and you'll understand why it can be hard to catch up with the story. Skimming it only makes you miss plot points that come up. New readers are sometimes directed to start as late as Volume 50 to prevent (at least it supplies recaps), although most fans would strongly suggest to start the series from the beginning. • has over fifty of those little yellow books to read.
In total, it has 558 chapters, done over a course of ten years. The anime is scarcely less daunting an undertaking, with 193 episodes including the plot-resolving Final Act. • has managed to do this three times over. Which is no surprise for something adapting seven of video games for over a decade: • The anime has over 970 episodes with 19 movies and counting. And that's not counting the Pikachu shorts, the Weekly Pokemon Broadcasting Station episodes (most of which were dubbed as Pokemon Chronicles) and various other specials. This is counting the banned episodes, however. • has run as long, with 50+ volumes.
• To a somewhat lesser extent is the slapstick Japanese only manga, the first adaptation of the games. It's 26 volumes long and still going strong.
Hundreds and hundreds of chapters.and the damned detective is stuck as a kid! Surpassed the 1000th chapter milestone in 2017, and any semblance to a final arc is nowhere in sight. The anime series is another behemoth with over 830 episodes released, not including dozens of films and specials.
•, at 37 volumes and still going. However, given the amount of Berserk suffers, it would be a little easier to catch up. • has over 6,400 5-minute episodes, making it the longest running animated program and longest running non-soap opera fictional show in the world. And it's still in production. Thankfully (or sadly, depending on your view), it's impossible to archive binge the anime due to the author's no home video releases policy. • is over 1000 chapters.
The anime has a 75-episode series, a 90-minute movie, a 1-hour OVA, AND a 26-episode! And there are quite a few cliffhangers here and there. •, with 700 chapters, 70 volumes and over 600 anime episodes (though there are more than a hundred fillers), plus ten movies with an eleventh one planned, is deep in this territory. • is 110 episodes long, not counting gaiden materials or movies, and each episode is 25 minutes long. Watching all of them consecutively will take over 45 hours. • is 232 chapters long plus an epilogue. Not much compared to the other examples here, but if you want to understand what's going on in the background, you have to read, which is itself 213 chapters, as well as,, and.
Also, Tsubasa was designed to bridge every series CLAMP has made so you might want to look into all their other works as well. • Start watching. Then realize that there are 5 series, adding up to 104 episodes, each of 22 minutes long, adding up to a reasonable value of 38 hours. Then realize on top of that, there are 5 feature length movies and 2 OVA series. All in all, you'll have 44+ hours of shows to watch. And then you realize that are still 20+ light novels released.
• has 355 chapters over 38 volumes, though the original goal of ~400 chapters was due to being. Count the side mangas, the Negima Neo manga, the anime adaptation and various OVA and you will be busy for a while — though even 38 volumes is still not long enough to even make the list of long runners on. And when you think it's finally over, a ( ) begins. • has 2, one with 24 episodes and three 45 minutes OVAs. Add to that the 35+ light novels and you'll be occupied for a long while. • While only 5 minutes long per episode, the anime version of actually surpassed in terms of (non-TV anime) episode count.
That said though, that still amounts to little over 9 hours of footage. • has spawned 332 episodes and 9 movies. The good news is, outside and, each series can be watched independently of the other. And you're going to have to play the to know And once your done with the anime, there's six different manga series and 22 video games (including the above mentioned WonderSwan Series).
• has spawned 675+ episodes and 23 movies among 14 seasons, with the cumulative running time currently being about 300 hours. Ten of those seasons can be watched independently as two sets of two series are sequels.
And good luck watching nine of the movies as they are movies and you're gonna need a scorecard trying to figure out which heroine is which. • The original anime lasted for 200 episodes, three movies, and five shorts.
• is 152 episodes long anime, with an additional 4 animated movies, one live-action movie, 3 OVAs, a 13 episode spin-off, and a parody series. • So, you're interested in that started its journey since 1979 and decide to explore some more? As for 2014, good luck spending your time with 16 TV series title with episode count ranging between 25-50 episodes (alternatively, some of them available in compilation format, with 16 compiling 7 TV series note,,,,,, and 3 compilation OVA for a TV series note ); 8 and 1 ONA note Original Net Animation series; 3 movies (including 1 live action note ); and dozen of manga, novels, and video games. A not without reason. The 1973 anime only lasted 26 episodes of 30 minutes each. That's around a paltry 13 hours of nonstop viewing. Then comes the 1979 anime, which ran all the way to 2005.
How many episodes are there, you ask? 1787 half hour episodes, which a simple calculation will tell you that it will take around around 37 days and 8 hours of nonstop viewing to complete. Wait, it gets better! 2005 wasn't the year it ended, but the year the show was overhauled!
It ran another 622 half hour episodes as of September 10th, 2014, or almost 13 days nonstop. To enjoy all the anime alone, you will need 53 days and 8 hours of nonstop binging. And that's not counting the movies, of which there are roughly 34 of them.
And the kicker is, the episodes are still being made, with new episodes coming out every weekday and new movies annually. Or the manga- even though the collected manga are only 45 volumes long, the rest of the manga that aren't in the collection are also printed across various other magazines since 1969. ( by the way.) • weighed in at nearly 9,000 pages by the end of its six-year run. It has been collected in both 28 volumes of 300+ pages each and 12 omnibus volumes of 700+ pages each. • has been running since 1998 and has 1500+ episodes, 1 movie, and 4 specials. Although every episode is 7 minutes long note 10 minutes long if you count the opening and ending theme., trying to binge-watch at least one series would require hundreds of hours since most of them consists of 90 episodes.
However, it's pretty much impossible to binge-watch the series since. • has 600+ chapters over 68 volumes and is still going. There have been 5 anime series, totaling 328 episodes. • The overall medium of art has more than enough content and people in it to last you a lifetime, and then some.
Let's start with the fact that Wikipedia lists alone, and it escalates even higher when you include artists in other fields, such as sculpturists and architects (The other wiki likewise ), illustrators () graphic designers (), cartoonists (over 900 are listed on wikipedia altogether) and science fiction artists (), all from To make a comprehensive list of them all would be flat out impossible—In fact, a 2001 poll counted over 2,500,000 artists living in the United States! • Print comics 'win' by decades. If you start reading,,, etc.
Where do you start? Origin retellings? After or before (whatever that is)?
Most of them are also still ongoing, and that's not even counting the spin-offs, team-ups, and guest appearances. This is the reason DC has 'Year One' comics and Marvel launched its 'Ultimate' line.
Batman deserves a special mention for just how prolific the franchise is in all media; his comics have been regularly published since 1939, and he has 19 ongoing comic series total, and their stories often intertwine within themselves and other DC comic series. Then there's 22 oneshot comics, two literary books, two live action tv series, 30 movie serials (over 10 15-minute short subjects each), 8 live action movies (with a 9th one on the way) a CD album, 4 radio shows, 3 manga adaptations, 2 musicals, 3 pinball games, 44 video games (and 11 more with him in supporting or cameo roles), 2 web series, and he has starred in 11 animated series (7 of which give him top billing) and 17 animated movies (12 of which likewise give him top billing) and enough misc. Tie in toys and merchandise to fill the Batcave! All this, and the series has been going strong for 75 years, and is showing no signs of stopping. To say the least, Holy, Batman! • The DC series has fifty-two issues spread over four collected volumes.
You're going to be a while. • The 2008 Trinity series, being another year-long weekly, has a similar problem - except this time it's 52 issues over three volumes. • Similarly, there is, though nobody would blame you for not reading it. • Then there's. DC have developed a thing for year-long weekly series. • by Fred Perry has 225+ issues of the main series and still going, 6 miniseries side-stories, a number of miscellaneous one-shots, and a three-episode *OAV* made by the artist himself.
To make things easier, it often have characters give a refresher at the start of it's bite-sized arcs, though if you want to jump in, the first 199 issues were put online for free! • The complete series took thirteen years and fifty-five issues to complete. It has since been collected in a handy phonebook form. • The famed and still ongoing has three series that add up to over 200 issues, plus three separate graphic novels.
• clocks in at 300 issues, spread over about a dozen phonebook volumes (though some are a bit thinner). • has The Amazing Spider-Man (700), The Spectacular Spider-Man (300), Web of Spiderman (141), Peter Parker: Spider-Man (155), and Marvel Team Up (186) as his longest running titles.
Then add in some 55 limited series about him and his appearances in other comics. • Many Marvel comics in general would qualify such as and the. While the crossover is only 7 issues long, with all the various tie-ins across the various series', the issue total comes in around 200. It's made worse by the fact that few, if any, of these crossovers that span the entire publishing run are collected as a whole volume; the main series is collected in a single volume, while the tie-in issues are collected under their own individual titles, with the crossover as a sub-title. Moreover, since events in each individual title are influenced by not only the main series of the crossover, but events in other titles as well, one wishing to read chronologically would have to bounce back and forth between titles/trades to get the story in order.
Thus we have the reader reaction known as 'Event Fatigue'—not only weary of the convoluted way these crossover events are told, but equally weary of the fact that sometimes readers are given barely a month or two of publications to absorb the new status quo before a new event launches and shakes things up all over again. One wonders how a new reader could ever manage to get on board when current readers are getting tired of the cycle. • has appeared in around 1700 issues of 2000 AD and 300 issues of the Judge Dredd Megazine. However, the Dredd segment in 2000 AD isn't particularly long. • The comics have been at it since the characters were created.? All around the globe, too! •: John Constantine's original run clocked up 300 monthly issues, plus specials and original graphic novels.
The trade paperbacks originally weren't even numbered, though Vertigo finally corrected that. • and have both been running for more than 70 years and have been going for over 3500 issues each so there is a lot of stuff to read if you must read it all. The comics are which means some strips have been running for a shorter time, but even then some strips such as have had over 3000 episodes.
The Dandy finally ended after 3610 issues in December 2012. • has had over 4000 issues so there's a lot to catch up on. But currently half of the new issues are reprints of older issues. The rundown as of Early 2016: 280+ issues of the still ongoing main comic (the officially longest-running franchise-based comic book ever), 83+ issues of the still ongoing Sonic Universe, 32 issues of Knuckles' spin-off comic, 5 mini-series totaling 16 issues, 8 specials, 15 Super Sonic Specials, 10 Free Comic Book Day issues, several original stories printed in Sonic Archives #5 and throughout Sonic Super Special Magazine & Sonic Super Digest, and, for crossover purposes,, #28, #40, and #24-27 and #50-52. That's over 400 issues. And if you want to read everything Sonic-related Archie put out, there's 39 more issues of plus the eleven issues of. •, over in the UK, has a more manageable length: 184 normal issues (everything after was reprints), 9 poster mags, and four specials.
And once you're finished with those, there's • Belgian comic strip started off in 1945 and new albums are still produced to this day. Their catalogue has over 338 titles now. • Belgian comic strip started in 1947 and ended in 2002, clocking in at 216 titles.
• also started off in 1947, but counts only 81 albums at this point. • is still running since 1955 and has over 274 titles.
• ran from 1941 until 1986 and has 177 available titles. • is massive. First, there's the main 8-issue mini-series. Not too bad, but that's just the start. There's also the lead up with, and Avengers World (20 issues total) and then there's the umbrella titles of Secret Wars: Last Days (9 titles), Battleworld (15 titles) and Warzones! (31 titles!). The best thing about this, though, is that you do not need to read all of them to find out what's going on (the Avengers titles bleed into Secret Wars, but Secret Wars is self-contained) and all of the titles are separate on their own, so you don't have to read to find out what's going on in The Amazing Franchise/Spider-Man:, for instance.
• are a troublesome lot: A large majority of them have run a few decades, with some of them still running today. Not to mention that newspaper archives before 1970-1980 are sometimes incomplete (specially the Sunday sections) and that most papers haven't run an strip's entire existence.
And many of these strips have been adapted to diverse media over the years. • has run since October 1931, and the franchise includes the Warren Beatty/Madonna movie, some film serials, a live-action TV show, an animated adaption and a radio serial.
• started in September 1930. 85 years of not only comic strips, but also a dozen live-action movies, 12 seasons of a radio show, two TV series and one animated special. • Popeye first appeared in Thimble Theater in 1929, but the strip began ten years earlier.
While the strip still runs nowadays, the daily strips are reruns. • and both began in 1918, meaning that both have over 30,000 strips each.
• ran between 1908 to 1982, and the strip actually began in 1907 as 'A. Mutt' (Jeff only appeared some time later). • Winsor McCay's ran from 1905 to 1923, at roughly 52 pages a year.
You have some reading to do. • Similarly ran on Sundays between 1897 and 2006, around 109 years, and we can't forget their counterpart The Captain and the Kids which ran from 1914 to 1979. • At least, the Katzes just had a daily strip briefly. But in the 1910s. Business Ethics Crane Matten Pdf To Jpg. • as well as has an archive of every comic strip ever published. There are over 10,000 strips. To put it another way, it's a 33-year-old seven-day-a-week comic..
And don't forget about a dozen TV specials, a 10th anniversary retrospective, two cartoon shows and some TV movies. And probably two films with Bill Murray voicing the Garf. • Even worse than, had a complete archive dating all the way back to 1968 (the goes back to 1970).
At least Trudeau has taken two sabbaticals (the first in 1982-1985, while the second one began in 2014 and will probably end in 2017). • also has, amongst dozens of comic strips: • The entire available to registered members. Dilbert has been running more-or-less continuously, 3 panels a day (8 on Sundays) since late 1989. The archive at has 5300+ strips. • The complete of, which ran from 1950 to 2000. That's nearly 18,000 strips, not counting reruns. The Complete Peanuts plans on printing every strip in 25 volumes; they're nearing as of 2013.
And we're not counting the specials nor the feature films. • The Walt Disney comic strip output can be a nightmare, lasting from 1930 to 1994. There's the Mickey Mouse comic as well as Donald Duck. But Disney also made a Silly Symphonies Sunday-only strip, Uncle Remus, Scamp, True-Life Adventures and Winnie the Pooh. And there were comic adaptations of many of the studio's movies.
• Mercifully averted with. The strip only lasted a decade (not counting two sabbaticals by Watterson), so the number of strips published (even when you include the poems and extra comics included in the treasuries) is pretty manageable compared to the above strips. Though of course, quite a few of these strips are fairly wordy due to Calvin's, and the fantasy sequences and even the standard outdoor backgrounds are surprisingly rich in detail for a comic strip, so between keeping a dictionary handy and searching out all the Easter eggs, you'll be at it for quite some time. • is over 820,000 words long, with a 27,000 word two-shot spinoff and a sequel that, as of chapter 3, is averaging roughly 12,000 words a chapter. This is longer than the first five Harry Potter books, plus the third one over again, combined. The next largest Harry Potter/ Avengers crossover is 296,000 words long, barely more than a third its size. And it only covers the Prisoner of Azkaban, with the sequel starting on Goblet of Fire, thanks to the bulking out qualities of the, a grander scale plot and the author liking the sound of his own voice.
As it is, he's promised that the sequels will be shorter and more streamlined, but it's still a pretty intimidating sight. • At over 1,080,000 and still ongoing as of 2015 is currently the second longest story on by far (barring ), the next closest one is, at almost 900,000 words. For comparison, is about 645,000 words long with and at about 560,000 and 531,000 words respectively. • After, there's the spinoff,. The story (at the current time of writing) has reached around 2200 posts (it's a forum story), and the 'shop talk' topic is nearing 3300.
Did we mention that it's a good idea to read the shop-talk topic, or else you may miss out on exposition that isn't in the story? •: This fancomic clocks in more than 1,000 pages and it has barely started the third part.