See you at 4pm Central for all the fun! Heck, if you folks are willing to lay it on the line, the least we can do is help you keep your comics in order! Drop us a line at support comicbase. Foreign comics too! Weekly content and price updates based on actual market values —keep you up to date with the latest information. Go beyond comics: ComicBase now lets you manage your book and magazine collections too!
Works with the free ComicBase Mobile app for iOS and Android to let you view your collection and add new purchases from your phone or tablet! New: "Wanted" report helps you track down those elusaive items you've been searching for. A crucial aid to variant identification, as well as an amazing visual reference. New: Archive Edition users can now download pristine cover images for new and old comics at up to 4K resolution.
New: ComicBase Cover Gallery screensaver gives Archive Edition users a fascinating and ever-changing view of the world of comics. New: Psychic Typing 2. Integrates with Atomic Avenue to let you locate hard-to-find comics; also sell comics only with your own online store! Compatible with Windows 8 and later, including Windows No, but we do have an awful lot, making us the most comprehensive and accurate comic book database available. ComicBase has over , individual issue listings as of this writing, ranging from Golden Age super-heroes to mini-comics to manga.
Every week, active subscribers may download additional and new issues and titles. Our goal is to come as close to covering every comic as possible, and our current database covers comics from around the world from the past years or so. With the latest versions, we've also introduced the ability to track books and magazines as well. These latter categories are brand new for us, so the information we track is primarily comic and pop-culture related.
We do have an interest in tracking magazines of all types, however, as well as books of interest to our customer base. Please feel free to use the Submit New or Corrected Data command to submit any additions you make to your own collection so our editors can review it for possible inclusion in the weekly updates.
We make a special effort to cover independent publishers, and as a result, list titles from over 5, publishers in the current edition of ComicBase. Right here. This listed is updated weekly. We generally try to smooth such transitions by noting where series are continued in the notes of the last issue of the original run, as well as where they are continued from in the first issue of the renamed series. As a final note: we probably would have continued listing the X-Men under the original series name had Marvel not introduced a second title also called X-Men which ran simultaneously with the newly renamed Uncanny X-Men.
Oh, those wacky publishers Some very rare and independent titles don't make it into ComicBase, because, well, even our intrepid crew hasn't been tipped off about their existence. Unlike mere price guides, ComicBase prices are actual reports of live market data from over 2 million verified market transactions from Atomic Avenue, as well as auction sales data from Heritage Auction Galleries.
These prices are updated each week, reflecting successful sales and seller pricing. The cost of an issue is what you paid for it. If you want to track the cost of your collection, you should fill in the cost fields as you add issues to the database. ComicBase tracks the near-mint values of all its issues for the past four years, from which it can calculate the value of that issue in other conditions see Grading Setup in the ComicBase user guide.
As ComicBase ships, this is set to its current value, although you are free to set the selling price higher or lower. ComicBase calculates the value of a comic strictly, using the grading values table. You can go to the Setup menu to customize your Grading Setup. Many publishers have started following this convention, and in these cases we'll follow the publisher's designation of how the variant is labelled. ComicBase Archive Edition is especially useful for variant identification, as it includes photo reference for thousands of variant covers, making issue matching much easier.
It takes an extra minute or two to save the database when you quit, but this extra copy can be a lifesaver if your regular database is damaged by a disk error or virus. In addition to the daily backups, we also recommend periodically burning a copy of your database off to a CD or DVD or using a tape backup , or using ComicBase 17 or later's Save to Cloud command in Sidekick. There was also a problem, as it turns out, with a stored procedure on the back-end which wasn't associating titles and their media types properly.
Fixed now, so older versions of ComicBase shouldn't have a problem. Posting a new version which should work for all media types. TLDR: Fixed in build Longer: Kind of a fun one: the actual query was just listing all the various countries' currencies in alphabetical order. Try now--I had to restrict the auto-downloaded list to just comics for the moment. Working on a newer rev to ComicBase that will properly process magazine, book pictures into their proper locations using a new web interface in order to preserve compatibility with older versions of ComicBase.
Additional Reporting Options Peter R. Steve answered this well. Collection report, Issue checklists, Price List -Pete. App Login Peter R. To anyone having an issue logging in: go to ComicBase. If you have a very old password, it might not be seen by the mobile app.
If the problem persists, please follow up directly with support comicbase. Minor Upgrade to. The problem is that your database is locked--essentially meaning another program is using it often something like OneDrive. If this happens to you: 1. Or just disable OneDrive altogether. If Sidekick is actively backing up or updating your database, just let it finish. It won't attempt to start an operation like this if it sees ComicBase is open.
Comicbase Title Appearance Peter R. Try resetting your preferences. If the problem persists, please contact tech support directly.
Thoughts on app-based issue entry The problem is that you're using the mobile app for something it's not really meant to do: phones are lousy at barcode entry, compared to actual barcode scanners. That they can do it at all is a small miracle, considering what's involved with stabilizing the camera image, decoding the image pixels, etc.
The new mobile app is downright miraculous in what it does, but it's easily 4x slower than using an actual barcode scanner as are all phone-based barcode scanners. The mobile app is meant for light duty lookup and adding of issues on the go--it's not suited and was never designed for m.
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