![]() ![]() Even better, use the options to see eBay completed listings, since a completed sale is more informative Look up your comic on eBay to see what other copies areīeing listed for sale at.Look up your comic using the search on M圜omicShop to see what we're selling it for.You can use our online want list to sell it. If it's not on our want list, then it's usually a common comic and not worth very much. Look up your comic on our online want list to see if we're buying it, and if so how much we'll.Here's how to get an idea of the value of your comics: ![]() We sell most comics from this time period for between $1.00 and $3.00, and buy them for less than $1.00 or not at allīecause we're already well stocked with them. Unfortunately most comics published in the 1980s, 1990s, and newer are very common and so not worth very much. Read this first: If your comics are from the 1980s, 1990s, or newer, or you just want to know what your comics are worth Pulps, digest magazines, fanzines, vintage paperbacks, and pre-1980s Men's interest magazines. In addition to comic books, graphic novels, and comic magazines, we also buy original comic art, We are a two-generation family-owned business with over 100 employees. We make selling comics easy and treat you fairly regardless of your experience and knowledge of comics. Small, estates, and dealer and retail store inventories. We buy single high value comics, collections large and Each year we buy millions of comics from sellers allĪcross the United States and around the world. The largest comic book retailer in the world. We've been selling comics since 1961 and are It is so good that it almost (that's a big almost folks) makes the software worth the price tag.We are Lone Star Comics, selling online as M圜omicShop. The data itself (not the application which presents it) is very useful and detailed. Before closing I'd like to offer some positive remarks on the software. Hopefully the next technically savvy person researching CB11 will google this post and think twice before spending way more than this software is worth. ![]() I'm putting this in my blog for the search engines. Perhaps I'm being a bit critical as I have been writing database driven applications for over a decade myself. You would think that at version 11 a piece of software would be a relatively refined piece of work. I'm not joking and I was told by the author that this is "by design." I couldn't respond to him, I was left speechless. So in summary you get to browse through your collection plus one title at the beginning/end that have nothing to do with your collection. The first/last titles in the database ("0/6, o6Po (Netcomics, 2005)" and "ZZZ, ZZM (Alan Bunce, 2000)") are displayed as a place holder so the software knows when to stop. When you reach the beginning or end of your collection you would think that it would stop on the first or last title of you collection or loop around to the beginning or end. There are browsing arrows at the top of the screen which bring you from one title in your collection to the next. Over the past week I've found several bugs in the software that are written off by the author as 'by design.' Here is a perfect example that left me speechless. All I have to say is if that is truly the case then comic book collection software is in a sad state. I'd always heard it was the ultimate comic book collection software. I recently purchased Comicbase 11 Professional. ![]()
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