Dreamwave Productions: Difference between revisions

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Dreamwave was a fairly unknown independant comic book publisher when it received the Transformers license in 2001.  For a time, there was gigantic buzz surrounding Dreamwave's relaunch of the Generation 1 title, even pushing it past Marvel and DC's top titles.  Many comic book fans had been away from Transformers for a long time and were overjoyed to see highly detailed manga-style art driving a childhood favorite.  Dreamwave published a good deal of Transformers books, including many varied miniseries, before capitulating to the notoriously fickle comic-buying public.  At the very end of 2004, Dreamwave declared bankruptcy, and there were no Transformers comics to be had for more than half of 2005.
[[First Miniseries]] <br>
[[First Miniseries]] <br>
[[Second Miniseries]] <br>
[[Second Miniseries]] <br>

Revision as of 04:05, 29 May 2005

Dreamwave was a fairly unknown independant comic book publisher when it received the Transformers license in 2001. For a time, there was gigantic buzz surrounding Dreamwave's relaunch of the Generation 1 title, even pushing it past Marvel and DC's top titles. Many comic book fans had been away from Transformers for a long time and were overjoyed to see highly detailed manga-style art driving a childhood favorite. Dreamwave published a good deal of Transformers books, including many varied miniseries, before capitulating to the notoriously fickle comic-buying public. At the very end of 2004, Dreamwave declared bankruptcy, and there were no Transformers comics to be had for more than half of 2005.

First Miniseries
Second Miniseries
G1 Ongoing
Armada (comics)
Energon (comics)
The War Within
Micromasters (comics)
More than Meets the Eye
Transformers/G.I. Joe Vol. 1

Transformers/G.I. Joe Vol. 2