2017 in webcomics

Years in webcomics: 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Centuries: 20th century · 21st century · 22nd century
Decades: 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s 2030s 2040s
Years: 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

Notable events of 2017 in webcomics.

Events

Awards

  • Eisner Awards, "Best Webcomic" won by Anne Szabla's Bird Boy.[1]
  • Ignatz Awards, "Outstanding Online Comic" won by Der-Shing Helmer's The Meek.[2]
  • Joe Shuster Awards, "Outstanding Webcomic Creator" won by Ty Templeton (Bun Toons).[3]
  • Reuben Awards, "Online Comics"; Short Form won by Ruben Bolling's Donald and John, Long Form won by Ngozi Ukazu's Check, Please!.[4]
  • Ringo Awards, "Best Webcomic" won by Dean Haspiel's The Red Hook.[5]
  • Cartoonist Studio Prize, "Best Web Comic" won by Christina Tran's On Beauty.[6]
  • Special Prometheus Award won by Mark Stanley's Freefall.[7]

Webcomics started

  • January 1 — Live with Yourself! by Shen and David Mercier
  • January 10 — Leaving Richard's Valley by Michael DeForge
  • March 6 — My Giant Nerd Boyfriend by Fishball
  • March 8 — Rise from Ashes by Madeleine Rosca
  • March 8 — Woman World by Aminder Dhaliwal
  • March 12 — My Dear Cold-Blooded King by lifelight
  • March 18 — Dogeza de Tanondemita by Kazuki Funatsu
  • April 2 – Ghost Teller by QTT and LICO
  • April 7 — I Love Yoo by Quimchee
  • June — SandSerif by Sandy
  • July — Winter Moon by Merryweathery
  • October 3 — Nothing Special by Katie Cook
  • October 12 — Sweet Home by Kim Kan-bi and Hwang Young-chan
  • November 7 — Let's Play by Mongie
  • November 7 — 1000 by Chuck Brown and Sanford Greene
  • December 5 — War Cry by Dean Haspiel
  • Acception by Coco “Colourbee” Ouwerkerk
  • A Days of Hana by Seok-woo

Webcomics ended

References

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