Ultimately my opinion on why comic books are dying. Your average comic is between $2.99 to $4.99 for something that net you an hour's worth of entertainment at best. A Netflix/Amazon Prime subscription is $12.99 for something that will get you thousands of hours of entertainment. Now factor in that comic books are not self-enclosed stories and thus can/will cost multiple times that of a Netflix subscription in order to see that story from beginning to end, you are now looking at something that fails any kind of reasonable cost benefit analysis. And given how the average response by the comic book companies to this is to raise the price, we now have a self-fulfilling prophecy on our hands.Deledrius wrote: ↑Tue Dec 31, 2019 4:31 pm This highlights a specific problem I've had with comics for a long time, and a big reason I've never gotten into them: the individual issues too often feel like nothing happened, and that nothing happened with extremely low density. Of all the times I've bothered to try getting into comics, I could probably count on one hand the number of issues that didn't make me feel like I'd wasted a lot of money on something that took three minutes to read. As a kid they were always far outside of being remotely affordable, and as an adult, I'd rather wait for the trade paperbacks. At least bad issues are easier to swallow in that format.
The rest of the stupid decisions he points out meant to "get new readers" are things I've encountered as well. Some industries really have a hard time with thinking outside of their perspective, so much that it almost hurts trying to wrap my brain around the stupid.
I agree with you totally: any comic book i read today is a trade. And that isn't often.