Comic creation for artless Spidey fans

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http://news.cnet.co.uk/software/0,39029694,49282107,00.htm

19 July 2006

Caroline McCarthy

The role of comic book auteur will soon be within easy grasp of Spider-Man fans -- even if their artistic talent extends to stick figures rather than web slingers.

Software maker Planetwide Games has signed a licensing deal with Marvel Entertainment to allow the use of Spidey, the X-Men, the Fantastic Four, the Incredible Hulk and other Marvel characters in a new version of Planetwide's Comic Book Creator, a program that lets fans whip up comics using pre-existing art and a drag-and-drop interface. Planetwide announced the deal on Tuesday at ComicCon in San Diego.

The standard Comic Book Creator, released in November 2005, lets users create digital comics using backgrounds, characters, logos, speech bubbles and other components from 'real' comic books -- as well as their own digital art, photos and screenshots from DVDs or videogames. Updates to the original software now allow for audio, video and even some animation.

"The software is drag-and-drop simple," says Mark Politi, vice president of marketing and corporate communications at Planetwide. "Comic books are part of Americana. Many of us have never been able to create those from scratch in a professional-looking form. This is designed for an average person."

This isn't the first time Planetwide has partnered with another entertainment company for Comic Book Creator. Earlier this year, it introduced its first specialised version of the software, centred on the Paramount film Nacho Libre.

When Planetwide releases the Marvel Heroes version of Comic Book Creator in August, the program will feature three characters: Spider-Man, Elektra and the X-Men's Wolverine, according to Politi. Eventually, Planetwide will release 'booster packs' featuring more characters. But comic enthusiasts who were hoping to see Nacho actor Jack Black fight Dr. Octopus may be disappointed: the Marvel version and the booster packs won't be compatible with either the original comic software or the Nacho Libre version.

In addition to partnering with Marvel, Planetwide will be venturing into the burgeoning world of online social networking when it launches Comic Book Society. The Web site will let Comic Book Creator users share their work, meet other fans, collaborate on projects and compete in contests.

The original, non-Marvel edition of Comic Book Creator retails for $30 (£16.40). Planetwide did not provide pricing information for the Marvel version.

A trial version of Comic Book Creator version 1.0.8 is available to download for free from our Downloads section.

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