Pulp Sunday The Black Beetle made its first appearance on the forum drawingboard.org on the twelfth of January, 2006, as ten-minute doodle. In 2009, Francesco Francavilla held a poll on his blog,
Pulp Sunday. He had decided to do a
webcomic and asked readers whether they would rather
Max Malone or
The Black Beetle, described as "in the vein of masked vigilante pulp in some sort of '40s/'50s settings, with some slight (40s/50s) sci-fi tone to it". More than two-thirds of the readers voted for
The Black Beetle. Shortly after, he came up with the setting of Colt City, his own mix between New York City and
Gotham City.
No Way Out On Sunday, May 17, 2009,
The Black Beetle made its debut as the opening page of
No Way Out (although at the time this title had not yet been announced). This first appearance ran for a total of ten pages, appearing on most Sundays until August 2, when it ended with The Black Beetle falling from a rooftop. These ten pages were billed as the first part of six. The pages were printed in
The Black Beetle ashcan, which was first sold at
HeroesCon 2009.
Kara Böcek In December 2009 Francesco Francavilla attempted to tell a shorter
Black Beetle story, a
one-shot, roughly 20 pages, between his paid publishing work. This story was released in a landscape format. The plan was to update as frequently as possible, sometimes twice a week on Sundays and Wednesdays. Upon reaching the tenth page, Francavilla stated the comic was one-third finished. Page 11, which was supposed to be the first page of the middle third of the story, was the last completed page. The Kara Böcek was mentioned in the Dark Horse printing of
The Black Beetle #1:
No Way Out (Part 1), and Francavilla said he intends to return to the story some day in the letters column of
The Black Beetle #0:
Night Shift.
Dark Horse Comics Night Shift In December 2011 Dark Horse announced
The Black Beetle's debut in the pages of
Dark Horse Presents. The story,
Night Shift, was told in three eight-page parts in issues #11–13 (April–June, 2012). The story was later republished as
The Black Beetle #0 in December 2012.
No Way Out At a Dark Horse convention panel in July 2012, Francavilla announced that
The Black Beetle had been picked up for its first
miniseries,
No Way Out, the story originally started on his
Pulp Sunday blog. The series began its run in January, 2013. The first ten pages were from the original version of the story on
Pulp Sunday, but recolored and with altered text and art. In 2013, at the
Emerald City Comicon, it was announced that
The Black Beetle would continue at Dark Horse as an ongoing monthly series. This was later corrected by editor
Jim Gibbons, who said the series was going to be "semi-monthly". Francavilla has further clarified, it will be an ongoing series of miniseries.
Kara Böcek In 2016,
The Black Beetle returned to
Dark Horse Presents. The new story,
Kara Böcek, was adapted from the version originally published on the Pulp Sunday blog. The story commenced in
Dark Horse Presents #28 in November 2016. The story ran in five issues, ending with
Dark Horse Presents #32 in March 2016.
Necrologue Necrologue was initially announced as a five-issue miniseries to be released in 2013. However, no further issues were solicited after the fourth, and the title was removed from Dark Horse's publishing schedule. ==Publications==