What? Another one?

Yup. Fallout: Nuka Break: The Series: Episode 2. Colon.


Download that shit like you’re in a Gibson novel

The first issue of Atomic Robo and the Ghost of Station X is available digitally! Jack to the net, hack the web, and surf the download.


Better than a reboot to the head

The first issue of Atomic Robo and the Ghost of Station X comes out tomorrow. I invite you to check it out at your local comic book store. The “buzz” indicates it’s really very good.

If you don’t have a local shop or if yours sells out before you get there, I’ll link you up to a digital copy for your iOS or Android device and/or PC and Mac later this week. If you don’t have at least one of those things, you’re obviously a hacker who’s gone dark while waiting for the heat to cool off. There, you don’t deserve to read great comics. Not because of the hacking, no, because you were caught.

We all thought you were elite, man. That was a simple smash and grab. What happened to you?

You used to be beautiful.


Fallout: Nuka Break THE SERIES, also other stuff.

Just the first episode of a little somethin’ we’ve been working on. No big deal.

Here’s the 411 on the Firestorm story I never got to write.

The Atomic Robo story we did for this year’s Free Comic Book Day is now available on this very webfotainment site.

And Mr. Speroni’s perfectly dreadful weird west comic continues!


Nerdy Stuff

The latest edition of Nerdy Show will make sweet ear-sex all up on ya. It’ll get you ear-preggers. Man or lady. It don’t matter.

I’m just going to blame that entire train of thought on having been awake for 20 hours on half my normal dose of coffee and move on. There is no delete. Delete is regret. What’s passed is in the past. Let us forge ahead into a bold new future and never again mention ear-sex.

Last time, I swear.

While I’m at it though: they’ve got a crazy Minecraft contest going. If you are into crafting mines, you should do it to the max.

Finally, I would like to share with you the Wikipedia article that most fails to cash in on the potential of its own title. Behold.

H.G. Wells and Tesla both predicted systems quite like our modern internet — up to and including live streaming media. Tesla’s vision was superior, I think you’ll agree, as it was predicated on data transmission via lightning bolts.