Early years Dupuis was founded in 1922 by
Jean Dupuis (1875–1952). The growth of Dupuis towards becoming the leading comic book editor of Belgium started in 1938, when Dupuis added to its portfolio a men's magazine (
Le moustique [the mosquito] in French,
Humoradio in Dutch), a women's magazine (
Bonnes Soirées [good evenings] in French,
De Haardvriend [the hearth's friend] in Dutch) and the children's comics magazine
Spirou. The latter was originally only in French, and contained a mixture of American comics (e.g.
Superman,
Brick Bradford, and
Red Ryder) and new creations ( and
Tif et Tondu). A few months later, a Dutch edition called
Robbedoes followed.
Growth after WWII After some difficulties during the war (mainly because of the scarcity of paper towards the end of it, but also because American comics weren't allowed to be published anymore), Dupuis started to grow quickly.
Le moustique became one of the leading magazines with information on radio and (later) television programs in Belgium, and
Spirou was one of the two leading
Franco-Belgian comics magazines (together with
Tintin magazine). Dupuis started publishing some books as well, but had real success by republishing the comics that had appeared as serials in the magazine, collected as
albums afterwards. Sometimes these were
one shots, but mainly they came in series. Dupuis has some of the best-selling European comic series, including
Lucky Luke,
The Smurfs,
Gaston Lagaffe and
Largo Winch. Many of these comic albums have been reprinted constantly for thirty or forty years, thereby generating constant revenue for the editor.
Stabilization and diversification In the early sixties, Dupuis started with other activities, including the merchandising of its comic series (puppets, posters, etc.), and the making of animated movies. Most of these weren't very successful but further raised the visibility of their comics. Still, towards the end of the 1960s, the golden age of Dupuis seemed to be over. Some of the magazines were struggling, the merchandising activities were vastly reduced, and the movie studio did not seem to be producing any successful movies. But the core business, the comics and the main magazines, continued to be hugely successful, with a comics catalogue of more than 2000 titles available in French. Many of the series were turned into animated movies in the 1990s, including
Papyrus and , and are being sold as movies and comics throughout Europe. Dupuis has also started producing computer games. In June 2004, Dupuis was bought by
Média-Participations, which now owns almost all major European comic book publishers, including
Dargaud and
Le Lombard, More recently, in 2015, Dupuis joined with twelve other European comics publishing actors to create
Europe Comics, a digital initiative co-funded by the European Commission's
Creative Europe program. In August 2007, Dupuis had increased its animation production activities when they alongside its parent Média-Participations had partnered with Belgian broadcasting network
RTBF to form an in-house Belgian graphic & animation production studio called DreamWall, the new animation studio will be located in
Marcinelle, Charleroi and would handle all animation services for all of the animated television series produced by Dupuis' production arm Dupuis Audiovisuel and its fellow animation studios
Dargaud Media and
Ellipsanime Productions alongside outside studios starting with the television series
Cedric with Dupuis holding a 51% in the new animation studio and RTBF holding a 49% in the new studio. In March 2013, Dupuis who owned a minority stake in
Marsu Productions announced that they're buying out and taking full control of publishing house Marsu Productions along with their catalogue, thus bringing their publishing activities and the Marsupilami franchise back to their original publisher Dupuis. In January 2019, Dupuis announced that they've launched their first European webtoon production subsidiary and platform dedicated to European and African authors named Webtoon Factory. In January 2024, Dupuis announced that their manga publishing imprint Vega Dupuis had joined forces with Japanese manga publishing company
Kadokawa to launch a joint venture business named Vega SAS to publish Japanese and Korean comics for the French language markets alongside Kadokawa's own titles which will be their focus with Kadokawa acquiring a 51% stake in Dupuis's imprint Vega Dupuis whilst Dupuis retaining the 49% stake in the imprint. ==Main publications==