Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The Weird World of Jack Staff #5




The Weird World of Jack Staff #5
Oct 2010 | 32 pages | CBR | 17.4 MB




Cartoon Network Action Pack #52




Cartoon Network Action Pack #52
Nov 2010 | 26 pages | CBR | 27.3 MB




Soldier Zero #1




Soldier Zero #1
Oct 2010 | 27 pages | CBZ | 17.5 MB




Usagi Yojimbo #132




Usagi Yojimbo #132
Nov 2010 | 28 pages | CBZ | 14.5 MB




Time Masters - Vanishing Point #4




Time Masters - Vanishing Point #4 (of 6)
Dec 2010 | 25 pages | CBR | 12 MB




Fear Agent #30




Fear Agent #30
Oct 2010 | 35 pages | CBZ | 45 MB




Bart Simpson #56




Bart Simpson #56
Nov 2010 | 29 pages | CBR | 13.4 MB




Star Wars - Blood Ties #3




Star Wars - Blood Ties #3
Oct 2010 | 26 pages | CBR | 9.6 MB




Gen13 #38




Gen13 #38
Dec 2010 | 24 pages | CBZ | 21.4 MB




Creepy #4




Creepy #4
Oct 2010 | 52 pages | CBR | 65.3 MB




Velocity #1




Velocity #1
Dec 2010 | 29 pages | CBR | 19.5 MB





Queen Sonja #12




Queen Sonja #12
Dec 2010 | 32.3 MB | CBR | 30 pages
Before she was a queen or a warrior, before she was Red Sonja, she was a thief known only as 'Red'. Her pride and skill are put to the test by a new partner in crime. Together they discover corruption deep in the heart of Dah-Disha and in the gamble find each other.



Red Robin




Red Robin #1 thru #18
CBR | 2009-2010 | 18 issues | DC Comics | 387.6 MB (ONE LINK only)
Robin is the name of several fictional characters appearing in comic books published by DC Comics, originally created by Bob Kane, Bill Finger and Jerry Robinson, as a junior counterpart to DC Comics superhero Batman. The team of Batman and Robin is commonly referred to as the Dynamic Duo or the Caped Crusaders.
The first incarnation of the character, Dick Grayson, debuted in Detective Comics #38 (April 1940). Conceived as a vehicle to attract young readership, Robin garnered overwhelmingly positive critical reception, doubling the sales of the Batman related comic books.[1] The early adventures of Robin included Star Spangled Comics #65-130 (1947–1952), which was the character's first solo feature. As Robin, Dick Grayson made regular appearances in Batman related comic books and other DC Comics publications from 1940 through the early 1980s until the character set aside the Robin identity and became the independent superhero Nightwing.