Revisit and relive your favorite Betty and Veronica comic books from the Bronze Age. A total of 120 comic books covering a span from February 1970 through December 1979, including annuals, all articles, and every single advertisement.
Very enjoyable. I was amazed at how many of these stories I had actually read before – presumably reading B&V digests at friends’ homes over the years. Standard packaging and not much bonus material, but it’s the comics themselves (the stories) I came for and this is a lot easier than digging through bins at the comic book store.
Archie Comics have been a Christmas stocking tradition since my kids were very young. Now they are grown up and in their own homes, but they still want Archie comics at Christmas. This year they got hundreds on DVD. My only question is whether they will read them “on screen.” I admit to being of the generation that has problems with reading a comic book without being able to hold it in your hands. For my grandkids it will be a no-brainer. They’ll probably wonder what a “book” was- back in ancient times.
Award-winning Linux operating system with complete set of open source applications for desktops, laptops, and serversOffice productivity suite, Web browser, and email for your ever..
Inventory based mini-games help the player solve the mysteries of the White HouseOver 30 levels take the player from the Oval Office to the Lincoln BedroomLavishly decorated rooms ..
Over 1000 vocabulary words and over 3000 unique questionsAdaptive algorithms force your brain to learn the wordsIdeal for SAT, GRE, PSATRequires minimal supervision by parents or t..
Revisit and relive your favourite Star Trek comic booksIncludes all issues from 1967 - 2002, including every annual, all articles and advertisements--over 500 issuesAll content in ..
Over 40 hair-raising situations from which to escape!Puzzles, hidden objects, mini-games and more?Richer, deeper game-playExcellent storylineOver 100?s of levels ? never the same g..
Very enjoyable. I was amazed at how many of these stories I had actually read before – presumably reading B&V digests at friends’ homes over the years. Standard packaging and not much bonus material, but it’s the comics themselves (the stories) I came for and this is a lot easier than digging through bins at the comic book store.
Archie Comics have been a Christmas stocking tradition since my kids were very young. Now they are grown up and in their own homes, but they still want Archie comics at Christmas. This year they got hundreds on DVD. My only question is whether they will read them “on screen.” I admit to being of the generation that has problems with reading a comic book without being able to hold it in your hands. For my grandkids it will be a no-brainer. They’ll probably wonder what a “book” was- back in ancient times.