New Release: 'Incredible Doom: Eternal September' Issue 2 Free for All
Issue two of “Incredible Doom - Eternal September” is now free online.
Great news. Issue number two of "Incredible Doom - Eternal September" is now fully available online for free. Here's how you can enjoy it:
- Patrons: Grab your free e-book now as a token of our appreciation.
- Everyone else: read the whole story on the archive page here, get the e-book for just $3, or, if you love flipping through physical pages, snag a beautiful 53-page print version for $9. Tip: Buying both issues together saves on shipping.





In this issue, Doug's approach to his radically transparent blog collides with his mysterious new friendship with Thea. A relationship filled with exploration, trepidation, and wonder, sets root in against a backdrop of retro-web nostalgia.








And there's more on the horizon: Issue #3 is gearing up for serialization soon, with early access to the full issue already available for our patrons. Plus, we're putting together some exciting bonus content for issue two, including an interactive creator's commentary page. It's packed with clickable icons throughout the comic revealing time-lapse videos, behind-the-scenes trivia, and insights into our creative process.
Stay tuned here, check our RSS feed, or follow me on Mastodon, Blue Sky, and Instagram to not miss out.
Returning to self-publish "Incredible Doom" has been thrilling yet challenging, especially as we uphold open web principles in an algorithm-driven world. If you enjoy these stories and support independent web creators, please consider backing us on Patreon or sharing our story with a friend. Let's keep making fun stuff for the internet together.

LINKS

Jesse Tribble delves into how technological advancements have both improved and compromised “The Lord of the Rings” films over the years.

God, I love this stuff. NBC Evening News from 1995 covering the challenges of first-time PC users.

I've found these extremely well-produced deep dives into various folks' family histories relaxing. They are part history lessons, part detective shows, chasing clues hidden in archives over hundreds of years. Contrast this episode with the difficult one about Jason Sudeikis discovering his family's abandonment history.

Just beautiful to see these lines be made. Many folks don't know that Schultz's trademark shakey line later in his career wasn't a stylistic choice or lack of expertise, it was due to a neurological disorder called an "essential tremor"

This comic version of a conversation between Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito on life and Death from Interview Magazine hit me just right. I wrote Dan Schkade to tell him it's my favorite comic on Instagram.

