2003 in webcomics
Years in webcomics: | 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 |
Centuries: | 20th century · 21st century · 22nd century |
Decades: | 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 2030s |
Years: | 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 |
Notable events of 2003 in webcomics.
Events
- Mike Krahulik and Jerry Holkins of Penny Arcade founded Child's Play.[1][2]
Awards
- Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards, "Outstanding Comic" won by Justine Shaw's Nowhere Girl.[3]
- Ignatz Awards, "Outstanding Online Comic" won by James Kochalka's American Elf.[4]
- Justine Shaw's Nowhere Girl becomes the first webcomic to be nominated for an Eisner Award.[5]
Webcomics started
- January 1 — A Modest Destiny by Sean Howard
- February 1 — Dinosaur Comics by Ryan North
- February 7 — A Softer World by Joey Comeau and Emily Horne
- February 10 — Least I Could Do by Ryan Sohmer and Lar DeSouza
- February — Idiot Box by Matt Bors
- March — Digger by Ursula Vernon
- April 6 — Girly by Josh Lesnick
- April 20 — No Rest for the Wicked by Andrea L. Peterson
- May — Wondermark by David Malki
- June 11 — Count Your Sheep by Adrian 'Adis' Ramos
- June 30 — Badmash by Sandeep Sood, Nimesh Patel, and Sanjay Shah
- June 30 — The Right Number by Scott McCloud
- July 13 — Zap! by Chris Layfield and Pascalle Lepas
- August 2 — Questionable Content by Jeph Jacques
- August 4 — Loxie & Zoot by Stephen Crowley
- September 25 —The Order of the Stick by Rich Burlew
- September — Smithson by Shaenon K. Garrity et al.
- October 22 — Twisted Kaiju Theater by Shin Goji
- November 1 — y2cl by John Horsley
- Anima: Age of the Robots by Johnny Tay
- El Listo by Xavier Àgueda
- Hetalia: Axis Powers by Hidekaz Himaruya
- Inverloch by Sarah Ellerton
- Is This Tomorrow? by Kelly Shane and Woody Compton
- Li'l Mell and Sergio by Shaenon K. Garrity et al.
- Star Cross'd Destiny by Juno
- Unspeakable Vault (Of Doom) by François Launet
Webcomics ended
- Leisure Town by Tristan A. Farnon, 1997 – 2003
- Makeshift Miracle by Jim Zubkavich, September 10, 2001 – March 4, 2003
- Zombie and Mummy by Olia Lialina and Dragan Espenschied, 2001 – 2003
gollark: It, er, sounds like you stir up conflict somehow then?
gollark: > They'll make it as good as all the software they makeThis is Google. They will randomly kill it, or make another application doing nearly the same thing but lacking some critical feature and make everyone switch, while mining your data.
gollark: Greetings, mortal.
gollark: Apparently having music functions is very trendy in Discord bots, so I just have six of them streaming random YouTube videos into my brain.
gollark: Also bad.
References
- Maragos, Nick (2005-11-07). "Will Strip for Games". 1UP. p. 4. Archived from the original on 2016-05-13.
- Atchison, Lee (2008-01-28). "The Third Age of Webcomics, Part Three". Sequential Tart.
- "2003 Winners and Nominees". Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards. Archived from the original on 2012-02-04.
- "2003 Ignatz Award Recipients". SPX. 2003-10-01.
- Price, Matthew (2003-04-18). "DC leads in nominations; Norman artist in race for award". The Daily Oklahoman. Missing or empty
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