rdfs:comment
| - Comic strips are the art from Ubisoft Company. The comic strips were the unreleased content before Might & Magic: Heroes VI was released. They display the new features Might & Magic: Heroes VI has. 4 strip comics were released.
- A number of Star Wars comics strips were first published in newspapers by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate starting in 1979. Dark Horse Comics edited, colored, and reprinted most of these stories in comic-book form decades later. Starting in 2004, all-new comic strips known as "webstrips" were published on StarWars.com's Hyperspace, alongside reprints of most of the original strips from the 1970s and 1980s.
- Traditionally, throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, these were published in Newspapers, with horizontal strips printed in black-and-white in daily newspapers, while Sunday newspapers offered longer sequences in special color comics sections. There were more than 200 different comic strips and daily cartoon panels in American newspapers alone each day for most of the 20th century, for a total of at least 7,300,000 episodes.
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abstract
| - Comic strips are the art from Ubisoft Company. The comic strips were the unreleased content before Might & Magic: Heroes VI was released. They display the new features Might & Magic: Heroes VI has. 4 strip comics were released.
- A number of Star Wars comics strips were first published in newspapers by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate starting in 1979. Dark Horse Comics edited, colored, and reprinted most of these stories in comic-book form decades later. Starting in 2004, all-new comic strips known as "webstrips" were published on StarWars.com's Hyperspace, alongside reprints of most of the original strips from the 1970s and 1980s. In honor of the 30th anniversary of the Star Wars newspaper strips, a blog was started on blogspot.com in 2009 that posted a newspaper comic a day on roughly the same month and date of its original release.
- Traditionally, throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, these were published in Newspapers, with horizontal strips printed in black-and-white in daily newspapers, while Sunday newspapers offered longer sequences in special color comics sections. There were more than 200 different comic strips and daily cartoon panels in American newspapers alone each day for most of the 20th century, for a total of at least 7,300,000 episodes. Strips are written and drawn by a comics artist or cartoonist. As the name implies, comic strips can be humorous (for example, "gag-a-day" strips such as Blondie, Bringing Up Father, Marmaduke, and Pearls Before Swine). Starting in the late 1920s, comic strips expanded from their mirthful origins to feature adventure stories, as seen in Popeye, Captain Easy, Buck Rogers, Tarzan, and The Adventures of Tintin. Soap-opera continuity strips such as Judge Parker and Mary Worth gained popularity in the 1940s. All are called, generically, comic strips, though cartoonist Will Eisner has suggested that "sequential art" would be a better name. In the UK and the rest of Europe, comic strips are also serialized in comic book magazines, with a strip's story sometimes continuing over three pages or more. Comic strips have appeared in American magazines such as Liberty and Boys' Life and also on the front covers of magazines, such as the Flossy Frills series on The American Weekly Sunday newspaper supplement.
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