Not Long now
Moderators: Daniel Jackson, greg
- Sting
- My posts can all fit in a short box
- Posts: 156
- Joined: Mon May 03, 2004 7:29 am
- Valiant fan since: 1992
- Favorite character: Rai
- Favorite title: X-O Manowar
- Favorite writer: Jim Shooter
- Favorite artist: BWS
- Location: Edmonton
- Contact:
Not Long now
The Valiant Entertainment Website says coming in 2007
2007 is almost over , any chance it will be up before January 01st?
2007 is almost over , any chance it will be up before January 01st?
- ManofTheAtom
- Deathmate was cool
- Posts: 13352
- Joined: Wed Feb 04, 2004 5:19 pm
- Location: Mexico City
- Contact:
- IanAlexavier
- Valiant. Back to basics.
- Posts: 6370
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 3:06 pm
- Location: SE Michigan, 21 bound books done.. many more to go...
- Daniel Jackson
- A toast to the return of Valiant!
- Posts: 38007
- Joined: Mon Jun 21, 2004 8:33 pm
- ManofTheAtom
- Deathmate was cool
- Posts: 13352
- Joined: Wed Feb 04, 2004 5:19 pm
- Location: Mexico City
- Contact:
That wasnt the standard back in the old days, thats for sure.Daniel Jackson wrote:Eh, being late with something in the comic biz seems pretty standard to me.....

Sometimes I miss the 70s and early 80s when comics came out on time and comics grew in 'value' due to the appearance of a new character (good/bad) or a special occurance and not because it was the 'variant cover' edition.
I buy way more back issues (older comics) than new comics (I still buy but merely to keep the comic business IN business and the fact that there ARE a FEW good titles out there these days).
I miss a lot of things from the old days... a lot. ($hit, even my style of combat was simpler back in the 'old days

- Daniel Jackson
- A toast to the return of Valiant!
- Posts: 38007
- Joined: Mon Jun 21, 2004 8:33 pm
Yeah, it was a fun time collect comics back then. That was when a kid could actually afford to spend his five or ten dollar allowance on comics. Now a grown man can barely afford the prices they want for the new issues.Knightt wrote:That wasnt the standard back in the old days, thats for sure.Daniel Jackson wrote:Eh, being late with something in the comic biz seems pretty standard to me.....
Sometimes I miss the 70s and early 80s when comics came out on time and comics grew in 'value' due to the appearance of a new character (good/bad) or a special occurance and not because it was the 'variant cover' edition.
I buy way more back issues (older comics) than new comics (I still buy but merely to keep the comic business IN business and the fact that there ARE a FEW good titles out there these days).
I miss a lot of things from the old days... a lot. ($hit, even my style of combat was simpler back in the 'old days)
- Dr. Solar
- Spanked like a 4 year old in K-Mart.
- Posts: 10898
- Joined: Sat May 15, 2004 8:09 pm
- Favorite character: Sven
- Favorite title: Psi-Lords #2
- Location: Los Angeles Surviving Sectors
Five or ten dollars!?!?!?Daniel Jackson wrote:Yeah, it was a fun time collect comics back then. That was when a kid could actually afford to spend his five or ten dollar allowance on comics. Now a grown man can barely afford the prices they want for the new issues.
That is a HUGE allowance. I got $2 a week. Do you know how many lawns I had to mow to get enough money to buy all of Unity?!?
- Daniel Jackson
- A toast to the return of Valiant!
- Posts: 38007
- Joined: Mon Jun 21, 2004 8:33 pm
Seriously? 2 bucks a week? Wow.....Dr. Solar wrote:Five or ten dollars!?!?!?Daniel Jackson wrote:Yeah, it was a fun time collect comics back then. That was when a kid could actually afford to spend his five or ten dollar allowance on comics. Now a grown man can barely afford the prices they want for the new issues.
That is a HUGE allowance. I got $2 a week. Do you know how many lawns I had to mow to get enough money to buy all of Unity?!?
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- Chief of the Dia Tribe
- Posts: 22415
- Joined: Thu Feb 05, 2004 8:55 pm
What's the bidding up to...?ManofTheAtom wrote:Doesn't make it excusable, though.Daniel Jackson wrote:Eh, being late with something in the comic biz seems pretty standard to me.....
Yet, I'm sure they're bidding their time to come up with something really cool.
(yeah, that'll fly over some heads....)
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- Chief of the Dia Tribe
- Posts: 22415
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- TKWill
- Don't squeeze the Deathmate!
- Posts: 4644
- Joined: Mon Apr 16, 2007 12:42 am
- Location: Richardson, TX
That's the same way I made my money. I just got the $2 and then made myself a sandwich and took it to school.siren3-4 wrote:I got $10 a week allowance and my parents also gave me $2 a day for school lunch . . .
So obviously I would not eat lunch at all at school and have $20 to spend on comics . . .
- IanAlexavier
- Valiant. Back to basics.
- Posts: 6370
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 3:06 pm
- Location: SE Michigan, 21 bound books done.. many more to go...
- Fatal Rose
- My posts can all fit in a short box
- Posts: 164
- Joined: Tue Oct 03, 2006 11:55 pm
- Location: Cali, USA
- Contact:
- Zaphod
- Zaphod's just this guy, you know?
- Posts: 2582
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2006 12:11 pm
- Valiant fan since: 1992
- Favorite character: VH1 - Armstrong
- Favorite title: VEI - Harbinger
- Favorite writer: Joshua Dysart
- Location: BC Canada
Jim Shooter. Shooter was the reason that no matter what, Marvel would ship on time. It starts at the top but I hate how comics companies these days forget the old adage of "under-promise, over-deliver"Knightt wrote:That wasnt the standard back in the old days, thats for sure.Daniel Jackson wrote:Eh, being late with something in the comic biz seems pretty standard to me.....
Sometimes I miss the 70s and early 80s when comics came out on time and comics grew in 'value' due to the appearance of a new character (good/bad) or a special occurance and not because it was the 'variant cover' edition.
I buy way more back issues (older comics) than new comics (I still buy but merely to keep the comic business IN business and the fact that there ARE a FEW good titles out there these days).
I miss a lot of things from the old days... a lot. ($hit, even my style of combat was simpler back in the 'old days)
Missing deadlines should be the exception, not the rule.
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- Chief of the Dia Tribe
- Posts: 22415
- Joined: Thu Feb 05, 2004 8:55 pm
- superman-prime
- scratch 1 for the coog guys
- Posts: 23252
- Joined: Wed Mar 14, 2007 3:27 am
- Location: phx az (east valley)
- tarheelmarine
- Ask me about the Mellow Mushroom
- Posts: 3747
- Joined: Thu Sep 23, 2004 4:14 pm
- Valiant fan since: 1992
- Favorite character: Magnus Robot Fighter
- Favorite title: Shadowman
- Favorite writer: Jim Shooter
- Favorite artist: Jim Calafiore
- Location: Japan
Yeah, I had no allowance. I had to keep my lunch money to buy comics. I literally never ate lunch, but I had lots of comics.Dr. Solar wrote:Five or ten dollars!?!?!?Daniel Jackson wrote:Yeah, it was a fun time collect comics back then. That was when a kid could actually afford to spend his five or ten dollar allowance on comics. Now a grown man can barely afford the prices they want for the new issues.
That is a HUGE allowance. I got $2 a week. Do you know how many lawns I had to mow to get enough money to buy all of Unity?!?
I've probably missed a few meals as an adult as well due to buying comics. Not lately, though.

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- Chief of the Dia Tribe
- Posts: 22415
- Joined: Thu Feb 05, 2004 8:55 pm
It took Jim Shooter and Steve Massarsky roughly 3 years to set up Valiant and begin publishing new stories with Magnus #1. It took another several months to start publishing the second superhero title, and another several months to start the third.tarheelmarine wrote:I'm not paying money for any more new TPB's from VEI. It's either put out new comics on a monthly basis or forget getting my money.
And THEY didn't have all sorts of legal issues to deal with. The Western folks were itching to give the rights to Solar, Magnus, and Turok to Shooter.
And everything else, they created from scratch.
And it was Jim Shooter, the guy who ran the largest comic book publisher for 9 years.