Though nothing official has come through from Wizard or owner Gareb Shamus, there are multiple reports, including Bleeding Cool, saying the magazine has shuttered.
Our own calls to Wizard’s listed public relations phone number go unanswered, and their “bullpen website” is down, listed as under maintenance mode. The Subscriptions page on WizardUniverse.com gives a 404 error as well.
Johnston speculates ToyFare and the multitude of Wizard conventions will continue on. Shamus has come under heavy fire in the last several years, with reports of non-payment of freelancers, mail fraud from the Wizard store, and hefty layoffs, all while purchasing more comic book conventions in his own name.
UPDATE
We’ve just received a Press Release from Gareb Shamus announcing his intent to launch a digital magazine called “Wizard World” in February 2011, and a 12-city convention tour. While there’s no explicit mention of the print magazine in the release, this serves as functional confirmation of the print monthly’s end. Full Press Release follows:
GAREB SHAMUS UNDERTAKES PUBLIC COMPANY WIZARD WORLD, INC. AND LAUNCHES NEW ONLINE PUBLICATION ‘WIZARD WORLD’
New York, NY (January 24, 2011) – Gareb Shamus, recently appointed President and CEO of public company Wizard World, Inc. (“Wizard World”) (OTC: GOEE.PK), today announced that the Comic Con Tour, which consists of pop culture conference events that provide high visibility marketing opportunities to pop culture brands and companies in multiple venues throughout the year, is now being produced by public company Wizard World. The Wizard World Comic Con Tour intends to cover 12 cities in 2011, including major cities such as New York City, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Austin and New Orleans. The Tour will include sponsors ranging from major movie studios and TV networks to gaming and toy companies to content publishers.
In addition, Wizard World plans to launch in February 2011 an all-new digital magazine called ‘Wizard World’ that will appeal to pop-culture fans, the same audience to which Mr. Shamus has catered to, for over 20 years. Wizard World digital magazine will provide coverage of the world of comic books, toys and superheroes, and the personalities behind them.
“This is a very exciting day for Wizard World and the industries it serves,” said Shamus. “Having the Tour produced by a public company provides additional opportunities to expand and grow the Tour. The new digital magazine Wizard World will give consumers the content they want in a magazine format with which they are familiar, but distributed in a form that is always available at any time on any device. It is a natural evolution for us in this market.”
Wizard World Comic Con will begin its North American tour at New Orleans Comic Con held from January 29 to 30, 2011. The full event schedule can be found at www.wizardworld.com.
UPDATE #2
Albert here. Just got an e-mail from Jerry Milani at Wizard World PR, confirming that ToyFare is also ending publication:
Wizard Entertainment is ceasing publication of the print magazines Wizard and ToyFare. Wizard World, Inc. will begin production of the online publication “Wizard World” beginning in February. We feel this will allow us to reach an even wider audience in a format that is increasingly popular and more readily accessible.
January 24th, 2011 at 12:21 pm
Will I get my money back from unpublished issues of my subscription? Probably not…
January 24th, 2011 at 12:25 pm
Yeah I expect a refund for my toyfare sub.
January 24th, 2011 at 12:27 pm
Wow! Huge news. End of an era. Wizard was gold dust for me in London in the early nineties. The best source of comic book news in its heyday. Before the internet hit its stride. Thanks for the memories and good times…
January 24th, 2011 at 1:17 pm
I can’t say i’m surprised but it is kind of a big deal. Wizard became kind of moot with the multitude of internet sites totally stealing its thunder. Good job, internet!
January 24th, 2011 at 1:18 pm
Truely the end of an era, but one that has been coming. Before the internet news sources really gain traction, Wizard was the best source out there. Many a trip overseas where I read and re-read each issue.
I’ll second Rawle, thenaks for the memories.
January 24th, 2011 at 1:19 pm
Wizard and Toyfare Magazines, as well as the Wizard Universe Message Boards and many former Wizard staffers were responsible for the creation of PanelsOnPages.com. While we at PoP! have not agreed with the direction of the company in recent years, we can’t help but mourn the loss.
January 24th, 2011 at 1:25 pm
I read Wizard for years and years, but I stopped when they concentrated too much on movies and TV. If I want to read about those things I can read Entertainment Weekly. I read Wizard for COMICS!!! I remember when Wizard was filled with jokes (like the monthly calendar). I just didn’t feel the same when I read it the last few years. It was expensive and it kept getting smaller and smaller. I remember when it used to be like, 1/2 in thick.
It did seem like they were more concerned with their conventions than the magazine. Oh well…definitely the end of an era. I do wish them the best of luck.
January 24th, 2011 at 1:25 pm
Gareb ‘Sham’US.
Nuff said.
January 24th, 2011 at 1:57 pm
It’s not a surprise, but it’s hard to imagine a clearer picture of the changing landscape of comics publication. Wizard going digital, DC’s “Earth One”, aggressive moves by Marvel, DC and others into the digital arena… It certainly seems to paint a picture, doesn’t it?
January 24th, 2011 at 2:04 pm
Frak an online magazine… I just renewed last month, where the frak is my money?!?
January 24th, 2011 at 2:18 pm
The Wizard needed to be put out of its misery. It was a shell of what it once was. Toyfare was even better than Wizard in the last few months.
January 24th, 2011 at 2:25 pm
I’m not surprised. I stopped reading Wizard when I discovered Newsarama.
/
January 24th, 2011 at 2:25 pm
I’ll admit I was one of the fewer and fewer who bought Wizard every month out of habit. It had started getting easier to read cover to cover for every reason one could come up with: relevance, timeliness, length of article, etc. The only pieces that were any fun lately were the ones with original art or the ‘countdown/top ten’ columns. Don’t think I’ll miss it much, and it frees-up about $6. RIP, Wizard.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:02 pm
I remember being a kid in the 90′s and getting really excited about every issue of Wizard. Before the internet was relevant, of course. A lot of good articles, memories and events.
I’ll remember the good times, casting calls, top ten, hot comics and informative articles.
Thanks Wizard.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:11 pm
Ah, actually sort of sad. Like most, this magazine did wonders for me. Unlike most, I was living in Japan in the early 90′s when Wizard first came out (around the same time Image would take the industry by storm), so I missed the first few issues (I remember thinking how cool it was that they were going to incorporate the purple with white star wizard’s cloak on every cover…sigh). I mean, I would ‘collect’ Wizard – the foil trading cards, multiple panel covers, pull out posters….sigh. A friend of mine was even featured in the ‘create a cover’ section (pretty sure there were a few guys who got a start in comices that way). But, they sort of got too big for their own good with all their other interestes (toys, rating/grading comics, online stores, ashcan editions, etc.) and just lost focus. They took the easy way out with movies and anime and instead of cool Jim Lee or Bart Sears covers with stories about COMICS, it was another photo of Ben Affleck as Daredevil.
Wizard was great for a while but this is probably long overdue.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:12 pm
I stopped subscribing to Wizard last year after many years. It just wasn’t fun to read anymore. But I’m still going to miss it.
Well, at least there still is BACK ISSUE.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:13 pm
BTW, why did Newsarama stop the TALK@ section?
January 24th, 2011 at 3:15 pm
suprised this did not happen a long time ago. for wizard the magizine wound up becoming a dinosaur with everything gong to digital toy fare will miss flipping through it for twisted toy fare theatre and sneak peek at up coming figures. otherwise at least the wizard name will live.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:25 pm
For anyone looking to fill the void I would recommend Comics Buyer’s Guide. They’ve been around for 40 years and they’ve always been the best. They’re not full color and glossy like Wizard but the content of the articles more than makes up for that fact. You can get a one-year subscription for $24.95. Check out their website at http://cbgxtra.com/.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:27 pm
Sadly this is something nor really unexpected. I loved the Wizard Magazine of the late 90´s, early 2000′s. When they changed the format to a more magazine-like iteration, at first I thought it was cool, since the info remained mostly the same. However when they started to focus on things like Lost, Battlestar Galactica and other properties that were not related to comic books, I was not really comfortable with the new approach. I stopped buying Wizard around the last months of 2008, when the economy went to hell and I just couldn’t afford it anymore. It was an easy decision to make since the contents were less and less comic book-ish and more pop culture-ish.
Thanks for all the good times Wizard!!!
p.s. internet killed the magazine’s star!
January 24th, 2011 at 3:34 pm
I picked up the magazine in the late ’90s, and because of articles like “Last Hero Standing,” “Casting Call,” and “How to Draw,” as well as the various pack-ins the magazine offered way back when and exclusive art that one couldn’t find anywhere else, I became a subscriber for a good 3-4 years. I also remember the “Thursday Morning QB” sessions on their website, where the staff would get together to discuss the releases of the previous day. And of course, Twisted Toyfare Theatre…
However, as Gareb fired staffers, changed the magazine’s format, and generally made Wizard a shell of itself, (not to mention the internet exploding the way it has), I cancelled my subscription and started going to Newsarama and other comics-related sites for my info.
Sad to see Wizard and Toyfare fade out of existence – but it was only a matter of time.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:36 pm
Wizzard dejo de ser interezante desde hace años, cada ves mas cara y con menos contedido, lastima la verdad me encantaba hasta que iniciciaron con mas contenidos de TV y Cine, ya era sooo borring!
Pero si tengo muchos recuerdos buenos, graciosos de Wizard…
God Bless Wizard, de verdad la extrañare, pero que suerte tenemos de que existe Newsarama!
Cheers from Guatemala City.
January 24th, 2011 at 3:46 pm
en Guatemala tambien habemos hardcore fans de comics, en nuestro pais Wizzard es parte de nuestra memoria! Wizard RIP.
Somebody speak spanish?
Cya!
January 24th, 2011 at 3:54 pm
As others have said, Wizard used to be great. It used to be a sell-out the same day it came out at my local comic shop. But suddenly with the internet, the owner of the shop was left with many copies gathering dust in a corner. Also lately it was less and less about comics. Guess was a desperate attempt at trying to act other new customers. But as someone said earlier, they are other magazines for that, and even those mags might have a hard time competing with the internet.
Also, the only thing that is good to see go is the WIZARD STORE. That thing was bad. I had a bad experience with the very 1st order I made, and never bought from them again.
and yeah, whatever happened with TALK@????
was it owned by Wizard?! LOL
January 24th, 2011 at 3:57 pm
@ Ravager and Catman: Ustedes viven en Guatemala? Ustedes le compraban comics a Mark? si si yo tambien! Si pueden envienme un PM.
January 24th, 2011 at 4:00 pm
For people looking for a refund I hate to say it but I bet your screwed. I used to have a sub to the anime mag they had. When they closed it was damn near impossible to get a hold of anyone at Wizard, and they never honored anything.
Sorry.
January 24th, 2011 at 4:27 pm
This is unbelievable-I always looked forward to my monthly issues! Hope the digital publication is a great replacement, but I don’t know: I’m really worried about what happens next!
Good luck, Shamus I’m with you all the way!!!
January 24th, 2011 at 5:02 pm
Have no Bsarama and Comic Book Rapesources will fill your needs for the biased Marvel fix. Free and online!
January 24th, 2011 at 5:23 pm
Good. I would have continued with wizard mag, it was not due to the internet I stopped buying, I was not going to buy a magazine just so I could read what hints damon lindorff and wizard had on LOST season 4 or whatever. The Hollywood Hot list – WTF, On the set of Johah Hex – who cares. They turned on their fans by giving them another hollywood magazine and never explained the change.
January 24th, 2011 at 5:27 pm
I too gave up on Wizard last year as well. After getting updates from here and bleeding, by the time Wizard reported it it was old news.
That and the fact of Marvel’s dominance in the magazine I came to enjoy Newsarama’s balance of all the publishers.
January 24th, 2011 at 5:33 pm
I haven’t read Wizard for years, but I have pretty fond memories of it in the early 1990s. It was a fun read at the time and while it may have centered on the big two and Image, it was a good gateway to other books: Bone, Cyberfrog, Scud the Disposable Assassin, and Strangers in Paradise to name a few (all books I discovered through Wizard as a teen).
Also, and I mean this in all kindness, it was a pretty good read on the toilet
This isn’t to much of a surprise with the format and content changes in recent years. For those who begrudge the internet for the end of Wizard: it’s not Newsarama or CBR’s fault that Shamus & Co. didn’t evolve for new media.
January 24th, 2011 at 6:06 pm
The refund money is gonna come up a lot in the next few days, anyone have any contact info that is still active that us consumers can take? The magazine may have shuttered but not refunding pre-paid subscriptions is a criminal act.
January 24th, 2011 at 6:40 pm
Para la mara de Guate Ravager, Jedimastercap y Catman que anda por aca, si alguna vez compraron comics donde Mark en Video shop en la zona 14, ahi trabaje yo en el 2004-2005. Saludos. Ahora vivo en San Jose, California, pero la pasion por los comics no termina.
Se acabo la Wizard. Un dia triste. No cabe duda. Tienen Facebook o email? Si quieren platicar un rato, ahi me dicen.
January 24th, 2011 at 6:49 pm
I’ve read Wizard a few times over the years, collected a couple of special editions, but never was a subscriber or big reader of it. So, no major loss there. But, hearing that TOYFARE magazine is ceasing really pisses me off. I love that mag, especially “Twisted Toyfare Theater”. I’ve collected every one put out over the years (tossing those that were published in the bound collected editions). Many never making it to the bound versions. Other than that, TOYFARE has always been an enjoyable read and very informative in what’s new and coming in the collectible world. There isn’t another mag like it. It’s stupid to stop publishing TOYFARE.
January 24th, 2011 at 7:06 pm
Wow, what a shock! For us comic fans, Wizard was an institution. Every month, I would buy the latest issue, then take it home and absolutely devour it! Of course, this was back when it was still a square-bound comic-sized magazine. And I loved it in the ’90s when they would have free mini-comics, the stories of which often tied in to the main comic titles. Even when they would release the 1/2 issues, they were still worthy additions to the related comics.And I have to agree; Wizard (and comics in general) was best when it focused solely on comics and not the worlds of movies, TV, video games, etc..
But, even with its cancellation, I don’t think that the tangibility of print media will ever truly go away. Even if it’s the whole aesthetic of the thing. I mean, you can’t exactly curl up with a good computer (Kindles and lap tops notwithstanding). There’s something to be said about actually holding a book, and having the added anticipation of turning that next page. I can hope to say that I speak for a lot us in saying that “progress” (i.e. big business) and, most certainly, the Internet can never destroy that.
January 24th, 2011 at 7:07 pm
Last Wizard I purchased was in summer of 2003…last Toy Fair in 2000. Nuff said! Newsarama is the best place for comic info in my opinion and NO I wasnt told to say that.
January 24th, 2011 at 7:40 pm
I remember when I actually read Wizard like a holy book, then something happened. I will contend, unlike most here, that the internet is not the reason Wizard is going under. It is the same reason that 99% of newspaper are going under. The magazine became overburdened with its own point of views and biases. It started out as a fresh take on the comic world, however it slowly became political and “self important”. Hence, the fall in readers and the only possible conclusion to the story. I remember telling my friends at the comic shop about my point of view, when I dropped Wizard completely. At first they didn’t think I had any idea what was going on, however two years later the shop stopped buying the magazine all together due to poor customer service/reader numbers/and just plain bad reviews.
January 24th, 2011 at 7:46 pm
I remember when I first discovered Wizard in ’94. I was 11 years old, and was in pure awe when I read my first issue. I don’t remember the issue number, but it had the X-Men’s Bishop on the cover. I opened this thing up, and couldn’t believe how thick it was, and how much info it contained. Wizard used to be THE place to go for all comic book related news. I could sit there for 2 or 3 days and still not get through the entire magazine because there was so much to read. It was the coolest thing ever. Then Toyfare came along, and I was once again blown away. I could not wait for these two books to hit the stands every month.
When Wizard switched formats and became a regular sized magazine, it truly was the beginning of the end. They eventually dropped the price guide, and started covering less and less about comic books, and more and more on movies/TV. Then they went to the even more horrendous ‘Top 40′ format, and I started saying to myself, “why the hell am I still wasting my money on this?”. I hung in there, though. I continued to buy it month after month, hoping it would be restored to its former glory. Sadly, this never happened. All the while, the price went up, and the page count got smaller and smaller. I’ve been struggling for 2 years, wondering whether or not to drop it. Well, it looks like the decision has been made for me. Farewell, Wizard. It was good while it was good, then it sucked. Let’s all take this time to mourn the Wizard of yesterday. Thanks for the good years. You will be missed.
January 24th, 2011 at 8:02 pm
I am the proud owner of EVERY SINGLE Wizard magazine ever published.
At least 5 of them are good.
January 24th, 2011 at 8:24 pm
Bad news.
I know that is dificult… Sad.
http://www.europanet.com.br/superheroi
Seek in iPad: “revista mundo”
January 24th, 2011 at 9:14 pm
I think we saw this coming.
WIZARD used to have so many interesting articles. You can read the last issues in a few minutes. The recent articles have no depth.
I miss the magazine for what it was but I won’t for what it is today.
Let’s hope the new digital version brings back articles from the EDGE magazine.
Farewell
PS: Probably the Brazilian version, which really is a magazine about COMICS, will also be canceled.
January 24th, 2011 at 9:24 pm
Wizard was a great magazine in the early 90′s.
It didn’t itself too seriously, had great srticles and would interview industry artists, writers etc.
Their articles on Bill Finger, Wally Wood etc. were stellar.
In recent years it has become a joke, but those first 100 issues are still in my wardrobe and reread at various times.
January 24th, 2011 at 9:31 pm
The 9-year-old me is deeply saddened by this news. Wizard was my main pipeline to comics for the years before I had the ability to drive to the comic store or the money to purchase said comics. I turned to my Wizard subscription to keep me up on what was happening in comics in my absence.
A few years ago I decided to buy another subscription to the magazine, only the find out the new Wizard was just a shell of its former self. The Wizard from my childhood was chock full of entertainment from cover to cover. Every picture had a funny caption and they had fun articles like “Casting Call” and “Mort of the Month.”
The new Wizard pretty much cut all of the fun out of the book. It felt lobotomized. One of the last issues I received in my subscription was put together wrong so that the second half of the magazine repeated itself. I didn’t even bother trying to get a replacement, I just let my subscription die out.
Even as the magazine started to slip, I held out hope that if Wizard just got back to its former fun roots and stopped trying to consider itself a serious source of comic book news, it could get back on top. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like they did.
RIP Wizard. Maybe like Cracked you’ll be able to successfully reinvent yourself online. Even if you don’t, we still had some good times together, I’ve even got a giant rubbermade tub of back-issues to prove it.
January 24th, 2011 at 9:42 pm
This just in: Newsarama closes their “Talk @” section. Film @ eleven!
January 24th, 2011 at 10:28 pm
I always looked forward to every issue of Wizard until they ranked Wolverine #1 in the Top 200 Comic Book Characters of All Time, ahead of Superman, Batman or Spider-Man.
January 24th, 2011 at 11:09 pm
I think the last issue of Wizard should have the Comics Code Authority seal of approval!
January 25th, 2011 at 12:00 am
I just renewed both Wizard and Toyfare in Dec for $28 a piece. I hope there is some way to right this situation.
January 25th, 2011 at 12:31 am
Newsarama sort of killed Wizard when people started to get their comic news on the net. Now what will replace Newsarama? ;D
January 25th, 2011 at 1:04 am
Why couldn’t they just end there horrible convention tour instead
January 25th, 2011 at 1:30 am
Man, what a shame. Haven’t bought an issue of Wizard in something like seven, eight years and haven’t been a regular reader of the mag in almost ten. What a shame, used to be great.
But it’s been coming for a long time. Their downward spiral came when they stopped really going in depth into the industry and started putting out vapid features like Top Ten Marvel stories/DC/X-Men/Super-hero slugfests/Plot twists/yada yada yada all butressed with, I’ll admit, hilarious writing styles. But towards the end of the 90s they just weren’t covering anything of interest. Their news section was basically full of press releases, rumors and pap, the price guide was fairly useless for prices, though good at noting who wrote and drew what and when characters made first appearances or died. Eventually they stopped bringing anything new to the reader and were coasting on a lot of good will which runs out eventually, and did.. Then when the video game industry exploded and when superhero movies were being made left and right, any focus on no name comic creators was all but gone. Video games were cool and writers had more incentive to try to land interviews with famous actresses and big name directors then that jerk who wrote some no name book for some third tier publisher.
Alas poor Wizard, I knew it well!
January 25th, 2011 at 4:26 am
It will be interesting to see if the fanboys and the comics companies continue to support the conventions after they screw all of their subscribers and employees out of their remaining money.
Did everyone notice that Wizard World is a separate company now? That’s so that they won’t be liable for any debts owed by the former company. In other words, everyone they owed money to will be screwed, when the old company files for bankrupcy.
Will the comics publishers and comics pros (and of course, the movie studios!) continue to pimp themselves out at their conventions, knowing how many fans and staffers they’ve screwed out of their money?
Will the zombie fans continue to support the sister company that ripped off so many other fans, because they can’t miss the chance to meet some pros and see some movie trailers?
It remains to be seen.
January 25th, 2011 at 8:45 am
I purchased the very first issue if Wizard, with the McFarlane cover, at the July 1991 San Diego Comicon. I don’t think I continued buying past the first year, but it’s still a bit of a bummer to see something like this come to an end.
I did like picking up the occassional ToyFare, though. Thought it was a much more fun magazine. But I haven’t actually seen it on the stands for a long time.
January 25th, 2011 at 11:50 am
Good bye and good riddance to a couple of worthless rags put out by an egomaniac.
January 25th, 2011 at 12:28 pm
so i wont get a refund from the company, they pretty much stole money from me..
January 25th, 2011 at 10:13 pm
I had a few issues (pun intended) with Wizard regarding a few things, they were:
- Issue # 100, Captain America with a caption saying “Remember kids, French Canadians are just as worst as the real thing”. I’m French Canadian and I found it offensive, especially considering that we frenchies here bought the book each month.
- The Wizard World website once had a cool online comic filing system that cost $20 a year to use. Then one day the website shut down. They were now using another domain name with the system. When I asked them what happened to my service, they claimed that they had sold that website to someone else and the website owner declaired bankruptcy. They said they were not responsible for any refunds but did not help me in getting more information.
- The cover price in Canada was $2 more than it was in the U.S.. When the Canadian dollar’s value became at par with the U.S. dollar they did not reduce the price, this despite the fact that all comic companies had done so already. When Wal-Mart Canada announced that they would now sell all their magazines at the listed U.S price, Wizard responded by having all copies shipped to Canada WITHOUT the U.S. cover price. I found that to be very shallow on their behalf.
- The last Wizard I bought had a page count of less than 70. It was more than double that previously. To make matters worse, the cover price did not go down with the page count.
- When they included cards or samples with their magazine I had no problem with them selling the mag bagged. But the last few months the book was still bagged but with no freebies. I think they did that to prevent people from seeing the page count.
All in all I’m not surprised and I will miss the old Wizard, but good ridance to that thin expensive new magazine that tried to be a sell-out and ended up not having an issue sold-out in years.
January 26th, 2011 at 1:31 am
What does this portend for the future of Black Bull Comics?!
January 26th, 2011 at 5:58 am
G-d bless you, Grabem Shameless!
January 26th, 2011 at 10:14 am
I remember when it changed formats from comic book size to standard magazine size. I knew it wasn’t going to last. And the movies and TV stuff was really starting to get on my nerves.
Comic books have come a long way. But they will never be entertainment medium of choice for the majority. I think Wizard probably could’ve weathered the storm if they’d remained true to the medium instead of trying to rub elbows with Hollywood all the time. It’s a beautiful dream, but reality caused a once great comic book news magazine to fold.
By the way, I’ve been there since issue #1.
January 26th, 2011 at 5:08 pm
The end of an era. Here is hoping Shamus and Co. will follow the example of The Huffington Post and Mother Jones and remain online.
January 27th, 2011 at 5:50 pm
As someone who worked at Wizard from day 1, I wanted to share some thoughts and memories with you fine folks…. http://dougistyping.wordpress.com/
January 29th, 2011 at 9:36 am
thank for sharing.Good blog.
January 30th, 2011 at 6:53 am
I will not be sad in the least to see it go. I think Wizard magazine was irrelevant for at least the last 6-10 years. It became to real comic news what the National Enquirer is to the NY Times. I can’t believe there are people on here who are sad to see it go.
Gareb Shamus (worked with him at a convention almost 10 years ago) was a little egomaniacal but whatever. Still doesn’t change the fact that Wizard had overinflated prices (which sad to say, some comic shops actually used to price their back issues), and started to dictate what was “cool” and ignore a LOT of the good comics out there. Won’t be sad to see it go at all, not in the least bit.
Good-bye Wizard, don’t let the door hit you on the @$$ on the way out…. and btw, don’t bother wasting time re-inventing yourself as a online comics news site, unless you do something VERY VERY unique and different. Other sites have already beat you to the punch.
January 30th, 2011 at 6:56 am
oh yeah, I wouldn’t count on getting your money back. Wish I could feel sorry for you, but I just can’t believe you would spend your money on such tripe.
January 31st, 2011 at 11:30 am
Hey Jedimaster cap, mi correo es deathstroke1@hotmail.com, si somos de la school de Mark, bueno realmente mis comics los comprara en varios lugares, espero que veas este post.
January 31st, 2011 at 11:41 am
Hey luis buena onda, con gusto platicamosm busca mi fb o msn con el correo de deathstroke1@hotmail.com, espero saber mas de mara coleccionista de comics en Guate. espero que mires este msj, saludos.
February 8th, 2011 at 12:09 pm
I just bougt 2 subscriptions right before christmas. Have yet to get one magazine. I am ultra pissed off. If anyone knows how to get a refund let me know
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March 25th, 2011 at 3:25 pm
April 5th, 2011 at 2:06 pm
I’m trying desperately to find a way to get a refund, anyone learn anything yet?
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