Advert comic: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{SITENAME}} defines an "'''advert comic'''" as a piece of sequential art designed to advertise a product. With our philosophy being that a readthrough of ''The Transformers'' UK is incomplete without also absorbing its back-up material, advert comics fall under the purview of this wiki – especially in light of ''Captain Rik's Space Adventure'' being treated as a fully-fledged part of the comic in issue 105, despite being pretty...") |
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==Advert comics==
While we do document these comics, they have no bearing on the wider [[robot universe]].
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==Comic advert comics==
In 1988, to try and claim legal ownership over [[Death's Head]], Marvel UK published the strip that would come to be known as "[[High Noon Tex]]", a single-page comic telling a full – if brief – story. This seemingly opened the floodgates, as editors all over the company apparently all realised they could advertise their comics ''with'' comic adverts, resulting in one-pagers galore.
Unlike the branded advert comics above, these Marvel adverts qualify as valid robot universe appearances for characters and concepts.
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Latest revision as of 11:58, 2 February 2024
The Transformers UK Appendix defines an "advert comic" as a piece of sequential art designed to advertise a product. With our philosophy being that a readthrough of The Transformers UK is incomplete without also absorbing its back-up material, advert comics fall under the purview of this wiki – especially in light of Captain Rik's Space Adventure being treated as a fully-fledged part of the comic in issue 105, despite being pretty transparently a promotion for Kellogg's.
Advert comics
While we do document these comics, they have no bearing on the wider robot universe.
Brand | Title | Debut issue |
---|---|---|
UHU | "Captain UHU and his UHU Task Force are busy patrolling and spot trouble on Planet Earth." | 26 |
Comic advert comics
In 1988, to try and claim legal ownership over Death's Head, Marvel UK published the strip that would come to be known as "High Noon Tex", a single-page comic telling a full – if brief – story. This seemingly opened the floodgates, as editors all over the company apparently all realised they could advertise their comics with comic adverts, resulting in one-pagers galore.
Unlike the branded advert comics above, these Marvel adverts qualify as valid robot universe appearances for characters and concepts.
Brand | Title | Debut issue |
---|---|---|
Death's Head | "High Noon Tex" | 167 |