Penthouse Comix began as a series of short segments in
Penthouse magazine. After three of these sections were printed (featuring artwork by Adam Hughes, Kevin Nowlan and Garry Leach), publisher
Bob Guccione dictated that
Penthouse Comix become its own stand-alone magazine, something which he envisioned competing in both US and European magazine markets. Guccione agreed to a budget that was designed to cherry pick art talent from both American comic book companies and non-US publishers and this resulted in
Penthouse Comix offering a per-page rate among the highest ever paid to freelance comic book artists. The first issue of the stand-alone
Penthouse Comix was a 96-page, color, glossy magazine with cover price of $4.95 US. It appeared in spring 1994 and featured work by
Adam Hughes,
Mark Beachum,
Garry Leach,
Kevin Nowlan,
Mike Harris,
Arthur Suydam, Jordan Raskin,
Horacio Altuna, and
Milo Manara. Subsequent issues contained work by artists such as
Roberto Baldazzini,
Richard Corben,
Tony Salmons,
Bart Sears and
Gray Morrow. The magazine's early issues avoided hardcore sex in favor of "soft-core erotica" and
satiric humor that poked fun at various popular genres and popular culture. Sold on
newsstands, the periodical debuted in a squarebound magazine format 10¾" x 8¼" (27.5 cm x 20.7 cm). With issue #11, the size was reduced to 10½" x 8" (26.7 cm x 20.4 cm). From issue #26 to the end of its run,
Penthouse Comix was published at standard modern comic-book size, with saddle-stitching, card-stock covers, and glossy interior pages. Issues #6-7 were published in both a magazine-size newsstand edition and a comic-book sized direct-market edition for sale in comic-book stores. and the three-issue (March/April 1995 – Oct./Nov. 1995)
Omni Comix, the latter a companion to the science magazine
Omni. The reboot released in 2024 similarly features a 96-page, color, glossy magazine, with the more expensive version including a nude cover that is polybagged and contains a free poster that is folded and covers the front. The periodical also has the original squarebound magazine size of 10¾" x 8¼". == Disintegration ==