
But by the second issue, the message boards were getting something like 2000 posts a month, which was a pretty significant number considering this was 1996 and the online comics community really hadn't taken off yet. Now, this came at a time when comics communities were pretty much non-existent outside of AOL and Compuserve. I set-up a message board for each book of the series. I updated the site throughout the series with news bits here and there, but the big thing about that Web site was it allowed me to play with some emerging Web tech, specifically message board software. Once I started reading about "Kingdom Come," I was blown away and it inspired me to set-up a Kingdom Come fan site. Prior to the publication of "Kingdom Come" I had put together a comics web page with a collection of comic links and some scans here and there, but I never really did anything with it. "Kingdom Come" pretty much began Comic Book Resources. Well, you know, the 10th Anniversary has some pretty significant meaning for myself and CBR.
