User:Maplestrip/Temporary list of webcomics
Temporary list, intended to help me create "20xx in webcomics" articles.
1985
- Witches and Stitches by Eric Millikin, 1985 on CompuServe
1986
- T.H.E. Fox (also known as Thaddeus) by Joe Ekaitis, 1986 – 1998 on CompuServe, Q-Link and then on GEnie
1991
- Where the Buffalo Roam by Hans Bjordahl, 1991 on Usenet, 1993 – 1995 on the web
1993
- Doctor Fun by David Farley, September 24, 1993 – June 9, 2006
1994
- Dysfunctional Family Circus by various artists, March 1994 – November 1999
- Stafford Huyler, Summer 1994 —
- Rogues of Clwyd-Rhan by Reinder Dijkhuis, November 1994 – August 1996 (in Dutch), July 2000 — (in English)
1995
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/60/Fetusx_fx082106painting.jpg/220px-Fetusx_fx082106painting.jpg)
- Art Comics Daily by Bebe Williams, March 2, 1995 – 2007
- Polymer City Chronicles by Chris Morrison, 1992 – 1994 (print) and March 13, 1995 – October 31, 2007 (on the Internet)
- Argon Zark! by Charley Parker, June 27, 1995 – September 4, 2005
- Kevin and Kell by Bill Holbrook, September 3, 1995 —
- Eric Millikin (titled Fetus-X from 2000 to 2008) by Eric Millikin (formerly with Casey Sorrow), Fall 1995 —
1996
- Bruno by Christopher Baldwin, January 1, 1996 – February 14, 2007
- Help Desk (webcomic) aka UberSoft by Christopher B. Wright, March 31, 1996 —
- Max Cannon, June 10, 1996 —
1997
- Goats by Jonathan Rosenberg, April 1, 1997 – April 30, 2010
- Pete Abrams, August 25, 1997 —
- Roomies! by David Willis, September 10, 1997 – May 19, 2005
- Piled Higher and Deeper by Jorge Cham, October 27, 1997 —')
- J.D. "Illiad" Frazer, November 17, 1997 —
- Buzzer Beaterby Takehiko Inoue, 1997 —
- Dharma the Cat by David Lourie, 1997 —
- Leisure Town by Tristan A. Farnon, 1997 – 2003
- You Damn Kid! by Owen Dunne, 1997 – 2007
1998
- D. C. Simpson, January 1998 – 2008
- Pokey the Penguin by Steve Havelka, February 18, 1998 —
- Lore Brand Comics by Lore Sjöberg, February 1998 – 2006
- PvPby Scott Kurtz, May 4, 1998 —
- Bruno the Bandit by Ian McDonald, July 20, 1998 —
- NeverNever by John "The Gneech" Robey and Allen Pellock, September 9, 1998 —
- Bobbins by John Allison, September 21, 1998 – June 3, 2002
- The PC Weenies by Krishna M. Sadasivam, October 21, 1998 —
- General Protection Fault by Jeffrey T. Darlington, November 2, 1998 —
- Penny Arcade by Mike Krahulik and Jerry Holkins, November 18, 1998 —
- Boy on a Stick and Slither by Steven L. Cloud, 1998 —
1999
- College Roomies from Hell!!! by Maritza Campos-Rebolledo, January 1, 1999 —
- Superosityby Chris Crosby, March 1, 1999 —
- Elf Life by Carson Fire (Eric Gustafson), June 14, 1999 —
- Sheldon by Dave Kellett, June 21, 1999 —
- Bigtime Consulting by James Sanchez, July 1, 1999 – April 19, 2003
- Triangle and Robert by Patrick Shaughnessy, August 1999 – September 2007
- Avalon by Josh Phillips, November 8, 1999 – February 8, 2006
- Real Life by Greg Dean, November 15, 1999 —
- It's Walky! by David Willis, December 25, 1999 – October 27, 2004
- Cat and Girl by Dorothy Gambrell, 1999 —
- Stealth by William Satterwhite, 1999 —
2000
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2b/Dieselsweeties_01583.png/220px-Dieselsweeties_01583.png)
- explodingdog by Sam Brown, January 9, 2000 —
- The Beevnicks by Owen Dunne, January 16, 2000 —
- Tatsuya Ishida, January 17, 2000 —
- Greystone Inn by Brad Guigar, February 14, 2000 – May 28, 2005
- Bob and George, by David Anez, April 1, 2000 – July 28, 2007
- Diesel Sweeties by Richard Stevens, April 2000 —
- Lethargic Lad by Greg Hyland, Print: 1991 —, Web: April 2000 —
- Schlock Mercenary by Howard Tayler, June 12, 2000 —
- Exploitation Now by Michael Poe 7 July 2000 – August 26, 2002
- GU Comics by Woody Hearn, July 10, 2000 —
- Chopping Block by Lee Adam Herold, July 25, 2000 – May 5, 2009
- Narbonic by Shaenon K. Garrity, July 31, 2000 – December 31, 2006
- Bruce Evans, August 14, 2000 —
- Megatokyo by Fred Gallagher and Rodney Caston, August 14, 2000 —
- RPG Worldby Ian J, August 27, 2000 – September 15, 2008
- Angst Technology by Barry Smith, August 28, 2000 – June 20, 2005
- The Pain – When Will It End? by Tim Kreider, September 20, 2000 – June 8, 2009
- Sosiaalisesti rajoittuneet (Socially Challenged) by Pekka Piira, Ossi Mäntylahti and Jukka Piira, October 20, 2000 —
- Mac Hall by Ian McConville and Matt Boyd, November 7, 2000 – September 22, 2006
- Kristofer Straub, November 10, 2000 —
- Little Gamers by Christian Fundin and Pontus Madsen, December 1, 2000 —
- Dork Tower by John Kovalic, January 1997 (web appearance: 2000 —
2001
- King of Fighters Doujinshiby Vinson Ngo, January 1, 2001 – March 26, 2001
- Okashina Okashi - Strange Candyby Emily Snodgrass and J. Baird, January 16, 2001 —
- Jack by David Hopkins, March 1, 2001 —
- 8-Bit Theater by Brian Clevinger, March 2, 2001 – June 1, 2010
- Aaron Williams, March 29, 2001 —
- Drowtales by various artists, April 17, 2001 —
- Drew, September 2, 2001 —
- VG Cats by Scott Ramsoomair, September 9, 2001 —
- Makeshift Miracle by Jim Zubkavich, September 10, 2001 – March 4, 2003
- Chris Onstad, October 1, 2001 —
- The Devil's Panties by Jennie Breeden, October 8, 2001 —
- Get Your War On by David Rees, October 9, 2001 —
- Dandy & Company by Derrick Fish, October 11, 2001 —
- Big Fat Whale by Brian McFadden, October 16, 2001 —
- Nowhere Girl by Justine Shaw, October 2001 —
- Nicholas Gurewitch, 2001 –
2002
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e6/Scarygoround_20060922.png/220px-Scarygoround_20060922.png)
- Zach Weiner, January 28, 2002 —
- Buttercup Festival by Elliot G. Garbauskas, January 2002 – January 2005
- Van Von Hunter by Mike Schwark and Ron Kaulfersch, February 14, 2002 —
- PartiallyClips by Rob Balder, February 15, 2002 —
- Unshelved by Bill Barnes and Gene Ambaum, February 16, 2002 —
- Nothing Nice To Say by Mitch Clem, February 25, 2002 —
- Saturnalia by Nina Matsumoto, February 2002 —
- Oh My Gods! by Shivian Balaris, March 7, 2002 —
- Pibgorn by Brooke McEldowney, March 11, 2002 —
- No Need for Bushido by Alex Kolesar and Joseph Kovell, April 11, 2002 —
- Copper by Kazu Kibuishi, April 2002 —
- Snafu Comics by David Stanworth, May 5, 2002 —
- American Elf by James Kochalka, May 12, 2002 —
- Sam and Fuzzy by Sam Logan May 27, 2002 —
- A Miracle of Science by Jon Kilgannon and Mark Sachs, June 3, 2002 – February 12, 2007
- Scary Go Round by John Allison, June 4, 2002 – September 11, 2009
- Pixel by Chris Dlugosz June 14, 2002 —
- Jeffrey RowlandJuly 1, 2002 —
- Queen of Wands by Aeire July 22, 2002 – February 23, 2005
- Theater Hopper by Tom Brazelton August 5, 2002 — December 31, 2012
- Ctrl+Alt+Del (webcomic) by Tim Buckley October 23, 2002 —
- Natalie DeeSeptember 17, 2002 —
- Day by Day by Chris Muir November 1, 2002 —
- Errant Story by Michael Poe November 1, 2002 —
- Fuzzy Knights by Noah J. D. Chinn December 8, 2002 —
- Demonology 101 by Faith Erin Hicks, December 2002 – July 2004
- Elsie Hooper by Robert D. Krzykowski December 2002 —
- Dicebox by Jenn Manley Lee, 2002 —
- Gods of Arr-Kelaan by Chuck Rowles, 2002 —
- Red String by Gina Biggs, 2002 —
- Sparkling Generation Valkyrie Yuuki by kittyhawk, 2002 —
2003
- Anima: Age of the Robots by Johnny Tay, 2003-2006, revamped in 2011
- A Modest Destiny by Sean Howard, January 1, 2003 – June 10, 2010
- Suburban Tribe by John Lee, January 2003 —
- Dinosaur Comics by Ryan North, February 1, 2003 —
- A Softer World by Joey Comeau and Emily Horne, February 7, 2003 —
- Lar DeSouza(previously with Chad WM. Porterand Trevor Adams), February 10, 2003 —
- Idiot Boxby Matt Bors, February 2003 —
- Girly by Josh Lesnick, April 6, 2003 – September 16, 2010
- No Rest for the Wicked by Andrea L. Peterson, April 20, 2003 —
- David Malki, May 2003 —
- Antihero for Hire by Mark Shallow, June 1, 2003 —
- Count Your Sheep by Adrian 'Adis' Ramos, June 11, 2003 —
- Badmash by Sandeep Sood, Nimesh Patel and Sanjay Shah, June 30, 2003 —
- Zap! by Chris Layfield and Pascalle, July 13, 2003 — September 28, 2014
- Questionable Content by Jeph Jacques, August 2, 2003 —
- Loxie & Zoot by Stephen Crowley, August 4, 2003 —
- Haiku Circus by Ken Samamoto, September 9, 2003 —
- The Order of the Stick by Rich Burlew, September 30, 2003 —
- Smithson by Shaenon K. Garrityet al., September 2003 —
- Twisted Kaiju Theater by Shin Goji, October 22, 2003 —
- The Adventures of Dr. McNinja by Chris Hastings, 2003 —
- Ananth Panagariya, 2003 —
- Hetalia: Axis Powers by Hidekaz Himaruya, 2003 –
- Inverloch by Sarah Ellerton, 2003 – September 24, 2007
- L'il Mell and Sergio by Shaenon K. Garrityet al., 2003 —
- Star Cross'd Destiny by Juno, 2003 – October 18, 2005
- Unspeakable Vault (Of Doom)by Goomi, 2003 —
- Is This Tomorrow? by Kelly Shane and Woody Compton, 2003 —
2004
- XQUZYPHYR & Overboardby August J. Pollak, January 1, 2004 —
- Powerpuff Girls Doujinshiby Vinson Ngo, January 18, 2004 —
- Tasha Harris, and Gabe Cinquepalmi, February 2004 —
- Two Lumps by James L. Grant and Mel Hynes, March 16, 2004 —
- New Gold Dreams by R. K. Milholland, April 2, 2004 —
- Town Called Dobson by Storm Bear, – June 4, 2004
- Little Dee by Christopher Baldwin, June 7, 2004 —
- Candiby Starline Xiomara Hodge, June 25, 2004 —
- 319 Dark Street by David Wade June, 2004 —
- Contemplating Reiko by Vincent Grisanti, July 2004 —
- Rob and Elliot by Clay and Hampton Yount, July 5, 2004 — June 21, 2012
- A Lesson Is Learned But The Damage Is Irreversibleby David Hellman and Dale Beran, July 15, 2004 —
- Steven Frank, July 15, 2004 —
- Joe and Monkey by Zach Miller, July 27, 2004 —
- Sinister Bedfellows by mckenzee, August 13, 2004 —
- Bunny by Lem August 22, 2004 —
- Beaver and Steve by James Turner, September 10, 2004 —
- Girls With Slingshots by Danielle Corsetto, September 29, 2004 —
- Grim Tales from Down Belowby Vinson Ngo, December 12, 2004 —
- Sokora Refugees by Semaui and Melissa Dejesus, December 31, 2004 – November 10, 2006
- Alien Loves Predator by Bernie Hou, 2004 —
- Arbit Choudhury by Shubham Choudhury and Hemantkumar Jain, 2004 —
- Canadiana: the New Spirit of Canada by Sandy Carruthers, Jeff Alward and Mark Shainblum, 2004 —
- D. C. Simpson, 2004 —
- Mom's Cancer by Brian Fies, 2004 — (comic no longer online due to print publication)
- Kondreman by Arnout Wittebrood, 2004 —
- Adventure Log by Scott Ramsoomair, 2004 —
2005
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b5/Xkcd_philosophy.png)
- Le blog de Frantico by Frantico, January 1, 2005 —
- Courting Disaster by Brad Guigar, January 12, 2005 —
- Shortpacked! by David Willis, January 17, 2005 — January 17, 2015
- Aoi House by Adam Arnold and Shiei, January 24, 2005 —
- Cyanide & Happiness by Kris Wilson, Rob DenBleyker, Matt Melvin, and Dave McElfatrick, January 26, 2005 —
- George by John Norton, January 27, 2005 —
- Salamander Dream by Hope Larson, February 2, 2005 – July 28, 2005
- Jeffrey Rowland, February 6, 2005 – April 15, 2005
- Inherit the Earth by Allison Hershey, March 2005 —
- Girl Genius by Phil Foglio and Kaja Foglio, 2001 — (in print), April 18, 2005 (as webcomic)—
- Whispered Apologiesby various authors, April 26, 2005 – May 12, 2006
- Gunnerkrigg Court by Tom Siddell, April 2005 —
- Concerned: The Half-Life and Death of Gordon Frohmanby Christopher C. Livingston, May 1, 2005 – October 31, 2006
- TIN The Incompetent Ninjaby David Stanworth, May 1, 2005 —
- Kristofer Straub, May 23, 2005 - August 31, 2007; ..
- Ugly Hill by Paul Southworth, May 23, 2005 – March 13, 2009
- Yamara by Barbara Manui and Chris Adams May, 1988 —; Web: May 23, 2005 —
- Evil Inc. by Brad Guigar, May 30, 2005 —
- Templar, Arizona by Spike Trotman, June 5, 2005 —
- Goblins by Tarol Hunt, June 26, 2005 —
- Timing by Kang Full, June 2005 -
- Wally and Osborne by Tyler Martin, July 4, 2005 (as On the Rocks; title changed July 3, 2006 —
- Dresden Codak by Aaron Diaz, June 8, 2005 —
- Multiplex by Gordon McAlpin, July 10, 2005
- Crying Macho Man by Jose Cabrera, August, 2005 —
- xkcd by Randall Munroe, September 29, 2005 —
- Dueling Analogs by Steve Napierski, November 17, 2005 —
- Raruto by Jesús García Ferrer (JesuLink), November 30, 2005 —
- Winger by Carson Fire, December 5, 2005 —
- Sam & Max by Steve Purcell, December 9, 2005 —
- Finder by Carla Speed McNeil, 2005 —
- Jesus and Mo by the pseudonymous Mohammed Jones, 2005 —
- Happy Hourby Jim Kohl and Phil Kriser, June 1, 2005... —
2006
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/64/Lackadaisy_%28panel%29.jpg/220px-Lackadaisy_%28panel%29.jpg)
- The Dreamland Chronicles by Scott Christian Sava, January 5, 2006 —
- San Antonio Rock City by Mitch Clem, January 22, 2006 —
- J.F. Kinyon, January 27, 2006 —
- The New Adventures Of Queen Victoria, by Pab Sungenis February 8, 2006 —
- minus by Ryan Armand, February 9, 2006 – July 4, 2008
- Natalie Dee, February 13, 2006 —
- Planet Karen by Karen Ellis, March 1, 2006 —
- Fission Chicken by J.P. Morgan, April 16, 2006 – December 24, 2010
- Tonari no 801-chan by Ajiko Kojima, April 18, 2006 —
- What the Duck by Aaron Johnson, July 2006 —
- Lackadaisy by Tracy Butler, July 2006 —
- Suicide Rabbit by Liu Gang
- Lar DeSouza, November 6, 2006 —
- Erfworld by Rob Balder and Jamie Noguchi, December 7, 2006 —
- Last Blood by Bobby Crosby and Owen Gieni, December 25, 2006 —.
- Jo Seok, 2006 —
2007
- A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge by Josh Neufeld, January 1, 2007
- Create a Comic Project by John Baird, January 4, 2007 —
- Digger by Ursula Vernon, February 1, 2007 – March 17, 2011
- Galaxion by Tara Tallan, March 2, 2007 —
- Sugar Bits by Vinson Ngo, March 18, 2007 —
- Octopus Pie by Meredith Gran, May 14, 2007 —
- Veilchen by Bissan Rafe, December 29, 2007 —
- MS Paint Adventures by Andrew Hussie, June 3, 2007 —
- The Abominable Charles Christopher by Karl Kerschl, June 20, 2007
- Wendy PiniJuly 2007 —
- Eben 07 by Eben Burgoon and D.Bethel, September 7, 2007 –..
- Phoenix Requiemby Sarah Ellerton, Sept 27 2007 – March 17, 2011
- Grey Legacy by Wayne Wise and Fred Wheaton, October 29, 2007 —
- High Moon by David Gallaher, Steve Ellis, and Scott O Brown, October 30, 2007 —
- Don't Forget To Validate Your Parking by Mike Le, December 11, 2007 —
- The Night Owls by Peter and Bobby Timony, December 13, 2007 —
- Noblesse by Son Jae Ho and Lee Gwang Su, December 20, 2007 —
- Hori-san to Miyamura-kun by HERO, 2007 — 2011
- pictures for sad childrenby John Campbell, 2007 — 2014
- Pink Lady by Yeon Woo and Seo Na, 2007 — 2009
- Sugarshock! by Joss Whedon, 2007 —
- Subnormality by Winston Rowntree, 2007 —
2008
- Hitlercito by Tormentas and Alejandro Cavallazzi, January 1, 2008 —
- Yehuda Moon and the Kickstand Cyclery by Rick Smith, January 22, 2008 —
- Welcome to Convenience Store by Ji kangmin, February 2008—
- FreakAngels by Warren Ellis and Paul Duffield, February 15, 2008 — 2013
- Star Wars: The Old Republic, Threat of Peace, written by Rob Chestney, and illustrated by Alex Sanchez February 27, 2008
- Garfield Minus Garfield by Dan Walsh, February 2008 —
- The Black Cherry Bombshells by Tony Trov and Johnny Zito, March 1, 2008 —
- Truth Serum by Jon Adams, April 1, 2008 —
- Super Effective by Scott Ramsoomair, April 23, 2008 —
- Hark! A Vagrant by Kate Beaton, May 2008 —
- Super Siblings by Patrick Scullin, May 1, 2008 —
- XDragoon by Felipe Marcantonio, July 2008 —
- Ananth Panagariyaand Yuko Ota, September 21, 2008 —
- Sandra and Woo by Oliver Knörzer and Puri Andini, October 19, 2008 —
- The Meek by Der-Shing Helmer December 27, 2008 —
2009
- Maya Zankoul's Amalgam by Maya Zankoul, February 1, 2009 —
- Homestuck by Andrew Hussie, April 13, 2009 —
- One-Punch Man by One, July 3, 2009 —
- The Oatmeal by Matthew Inman, July 6, 2009 —
- Drive: the scifi comic by Dave Kellett, Aug 15, 2009 —
- Guilded Age by T Campbell, Erica Henderson and Phil Khan, September 4, 2009 —
- Bad Machinery by John Allison, September 21, 2009 —
- La Morté Sisters by Tony Trov, Johnny Zitoand Christine Larsen, October 2009 —
- Dirt Napby Gabe Cinquepalmi, October 7, 2009 –
- Death Day by Sam Hiti, November 1, 2009 —
- Axe Cop by Malachai Nicolle and Ethan Nicolle, December 25, 2009 —
- Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh, July 2009 —
2010
- Molarity Redux by Michael Molinelli, January 2010 —
- Kubera by Currygom, February 7, 2010 —
- Zahra's Paradise by Amil and Khalil, February 9, 2010 —
- Salgood Sam, February 23, 2010 —
- I Taste Sound by Mike Riley, April 1, 2010 —
- Go Get a Roomie! by Chloé C., May 8, 2010 —
- Whomp!by Ronnie Filyaw, June 12, 2010 —
- Shadowbinders by Kambrea and Thom Pratt, August 27, 2010 —
- Cheapjack Shakespeare by Shaun McLaughlin
- Cheese in the Trap by Soonkki, 2010 —
- Tower of God by Lee Jong-hui, 2010 —
2011
- Battlepug by Mike Norton, February 2011 —
- The Fox Sister by Christina Strain and Jayd Aït-Kaci, October 2011 —
- Steroids 'n' Asteroids with Quadra Bluby Lyman Dally May 24, 2011 —
- Dr. Frost by Lee Jong-beom, 2011 —
- Fashion King by Kian84, 2011 — 2013
- Girls of the Wild's by Hun and Zhena (Kim Hye-jin), 2011 —
- God of Bath by Ha Il-kwon, 2011 —
- Orange Marmalade by Seok Woo, 2011 — 2013
2012
- Ability by Son Jae Ho and Lee Gwang Su, 2012 —
- Ava's Demon by Michelle Czajkowski, 2012 —
- Junior Scientist Power Hourby Abby Howard, 2012 —
- Misaeng by Yoon Tae-ho, 2012 — 2013
- Strong Female Protagonist by Brennan Lee Mulligan and Molly Ostertag, 2012 —
- It's Geek 2 Me by Francis Cleetus, 2012 —
- Soul Cartel by Kim Eun-hyo and Kim Yeong-ji, 2012 —
2013
- The Gamerby Sung Sang-Young and Sang-Ah, 2013 —
- Million Doll by Ai, 2013 —
- ReLIFE by Sō Yayoi, 2013 —
- A Simple Thinking About Blood Type by Real Crazy Man, 2013 —
- Year Hare Affair by Lin Chao, 2013 —
Web launch date ambiguous
- Arcana Jayneby Lisa Jonté
- Cox & Forkum by John Cox and Allen Forkum
- Electric Sheep Comix by Patrick Farley
- Love Story by Kang Full
- Ninja Burger by various artists
- Parade (with Fireworks) by Mike Cavallaro
- Platinum Grit by Trudy Cooper, Danny Murphy and Doug Bayne 1994 —
- The Spiders by Patrick Farley? – 2004?
- Terinu by Peta Hewitt 1986 —
- When I Am King by demian5
- Wulffmorgenthaler by Mikael Wulff and Anders Morgenthaler
Newspaper comics with large online audiences
- Bob the Angry Flower by Stephen Notley
- Maakies by Tony Millionaire
- Max Cannon(June 10, 1996 —)
- Rehabilitating Mr. Wigglesby Neil Swaab
- Liberty Meadows by Frank Cho
- This Modern World by Tom Tomorrow
- Thinking Ape Blues by Mark Poutenis
- Dilbert by Scott Adams
- Garfield by Jim Davis
- Macanudo by Liniers
- Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller
- Cul de Sac by Richard Thompson
- Tom the Dancing Bug by Ruben Bolling
- Bad Reporter by Don Asmussen
- Big Nate" by Lincoln Peirce
See also
- List of comic strips
- List of professional webcomic artists
- List of webcomics in print
References
References
TEMP
The first online comic was Eric Millikin's
Other online comics followed in the early '90s. Hans Bjordahl's college-themed comic strip Where the Buffalo Roam was published on FTP and usenet in 1991,[4] and David Farley's single-panel gag cartoon Doctor Fun was published on the web in September 1993.[5] Stafford Huyler's stick figure comic NetBoy began publishing on the web in the summer of 1994[6] and NetComics Weekly from Finnish Comics Society was started in mid-1994.[7] Among the longest-running webcomics, some of which are still being published, are Rogues of Clwyd-Rhan (a Dutch comic that started in November 1994) The Polymer City Chronicles (March 1995),[8] Art Comics Daily (March 1995), Argon Zark! (June 1995), Kevin and Kell (September 1995), Slow Wave (November 1995), and Eric Millikin (Fall 1995). The term "webcomics" was used as early as April 1995.[9][10]
- ^ "Webcomic[permanent dead link] ". PC Magazine, Ziff Davis, Inc.
- Garrity, Shaenon (15 July 2011). "The History of Webcomics". The Comics Journal. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
- ^ "T.H.E.-FOX.TXT". The Commodore 64/128 RoundTable on GEnie. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
- ^ Bordahl, Hans. "Where the Buffalo Roam -- First Comic on the Internet". ShadowCulture. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
- Chapel Hill HeraldPg. 9
- ^ Silverman, Dwight . (August 24, 1994). "Cybertoons: Comic artists find an instant audience on the Internet". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Pg. 5C
- ^ "What's New With NCSA Mosaic and the WWW (June, 1994)". Retrieved 2006-11-03.
- ^ "Dr. Otto's Do-It-Yourself Bomb Disposal". Game Zero magazine. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
- ^ "rec.arts.comics.strips (April, 1995)". Retrieved 2010-05-14.
- ^ "What's New With NCSA Mosaic and the WWW (July, 1995)". Retrieved 2010-05-14.