Comic Zeal Review: Digital Comic Readers Go Portable
- easy to read and navigate
- links to free comics
- can't edit details after conversion
- might encourage piracy
Comic book collectors have a reputation for being a meticulous sort. Often times they’ll buy comics without ever folding a crease on the page in fear of diminishing their value. While most comics fans can’t help but balk at such characterizations, there’s a hint of truth there. Comic book fans value their four color treasures and want to keep them sealed away to protect them from the many threats the natural environment poses to a delicate newsprint collectible.
It’s this spirit of preservation that has allowed the underground world of digital comics to flourish. Rather than risking damage to that Action Comics #71 you have tucked away for a down payment on a house, digital reproductions allow you to view the comics in your collection without ever taking them out of their protective plastic. The lack of a decent portable program that allowed for the reading of these digital iterations has kept many a reader tied to their desktop… until now.
Comic Zeal allows you to transfer your digital comic book collection directly to your iPhone or iPod Touch, and presents you a number of great viewing options for reading. Each page can be zoomed and navigated using the same tap and zoom mechanics that iPhone users have grown used to. Comics can be read in landscape or portrait depending on your preference, with pages being flipped through by simply sliding your finger to advance through the story. The fundamentals of page navigation, something that is at the core of any good comics reader, should be second nature to any iPhone user.
Clarity is the other cornerstone of a solid comics reader, and here too Comic Zeal excels. While the default view even in landscape blurs the words a little too much too be readable, a light zoom fixes that right up. And since you can still navigate from the zoom, you can simply set it once and forget it forever. Presentation outside of an issue is just as good as inside. Comics are displayed in “boxes” of series, which when clicked on will give you a cover view of every comic in that box. It’s a nice touch, and a fantastic step up from the boring old text lists that most programs of this nature rely on. Comics is a visual medium, and Comic Zeal embraces that fact.

Not everyone who loves comics has ventured into the world of digital reproductions, and unless you’re willing to scan your own or step into some of the internet’s shadier locales to download back-ups of comics you already own (MacApper in no way supports piracy, comic books are a dying medium, please support it!) you may not have much of a use for Comic Zeal. Thankfully the developers at bitolithic recognized this and added some built in functionality for those looking to pick up some public domain comics to get a taste of something new. Links to downloads from the indie superhero imprint Flashback Comics as well as a selection of Golden Age classics ranging from Atomic War to The Blue Beetle are available to anyone looking to expand their collection.
Despite these inclusions, Comic Zeal isn’t really aimed towards the reader with little previous experience with digital reprints. Those with massive collections filling their hard drives have been dying to get their hands on a convenient portable reader that would allow them to read their collections. Fantastic single issue iPhone apps have demonstrated the devices amazing capabilities pertaining to digital comics on the go, and while Comic Zeal can’t offer the amazing readability they do, it does allow you to port your comics to the iPhone with ease.
While one might hope for out-of-the-box support for the standard .cbr file type that most comics are read in, it’s not entirely the case. Rather than reading .cbr files, Comic Zeal require you to convert your comics to their proprietary .cbi format via their freeware desktop application. It may seem like a nuisance, but it makes a lot of sense when you see the reason behind it. Traditional cbr’s exist at resolutions that are ridiculously high for iPhone usage. Converting to cbi brings these down to a reasonable size, helping to conserve battery life by putting less strain on the processor.
When the app first launched there were endless hoops you’d have to jump through to get your files converted. Before installing the desktop coversion software Comic Zeal Creator, you had to install supporting software. Then you had to sort out server nonsense. It was a mess. Bit if past experiences with Creator turned you off of Comic Zeal, you might want to give it a second shot now that they’re released Creator’s successor, ComicZeal Sync.

Sync cuts out all the run around of it’s predecessor and opts for drag and drop simplicity. After you drop an item into Sync, it will immediately begin the conversion. If file names follow a certain structure, Sync should be able to sort out what file belongs to what series and keep your collection tidy without any first-hand involvement from you. If your files aren’t that tidy, don’t worry. While processing you can add basic info for the item such as series name, issue name, and issue number. This will make sure that when you pop open Comic Zeal on the go everything is ready and waiting for you. The only real problem here is that you can’t go back and edit that data after the file has been converted. It’s not a major hassle, but it’s downright silly that the option to edit after conversion isn’t available. And while you can also bulk convert, the necessity of providing correct info to keep your collection nice and neat kind of suggests that maybe you shouldn’t.
Syncing is a fairly painless process as well. Clicking the sync button on the desktop app and the sync button in the iPhone app will get all of your new comics copied and sorted for you with no fuss or muss. It’s all handled on the backend through the universally-acclaimed SyncDocs, so it’s highly unlikely you’ll find yourself running into data issues as a result.
The only real downside to the app, apart from the inability to edit your collection once converted, is how it underperforms compared to those single issue apps that exist for comics like Atomic Robo or The Terminator. Being designed to specifically capture an individual issue means that each “page” can be a single panel, navigated frame by frame. Using pre-existing scans simply doesn’t allow for that level of ease. Despite this, ComicZeal offers up a fantastic experience for readers looking to take their collection on the go, even if it means they’ll have to pan and zoom to get through each page.
Unless Marvel and DC start to offer single issue downloads of their complete back catalogue in the AppStore, Comic Zeal will reign king as the premiere app for comic book lovers looking to take their favorites on the go.
Comic Zeal is available on the iTunes AppStore for $2.99.

I LOVE this app. And while it is nice that some other apps for iPhone/iPod Touch break the comics into a panel-by-panel slideshow, I prefer ComicZeal because it puts me in control and sometimes page layouts are complex enough or artistically designed in such a way that separating each panel detracts from the creator’s intent.
Reading comics on the iPhone/Touch is a pleasure. I get more out of my reading experience because I interact with my comics. I mull over the art longer because I focus more on each panel or well-designed page. As a comics reader, not a collector, I welcome the addition of digital comics. I have tired of expensive comics and long boxes that take up precious space in my home. I hope publishers get on board with releasing comics in digital format.
Remember that there are many comics available legally online for free or for very little money. ComicZeal doesn’t promote piracy. I’m glad they made such a wonderful app.
[...] app out there for all you comic book loving nerds. The kids down at Macapper.com have the skinny on Comic Zeal, a comic book reader for your [...]
Check out panelfly, it has in-app purchases.
I think it’s a wonderful app, I really just wish it had the capability to edit after converting because I had to reconvert about 50 comics, one by one, after a silly typo (typos and OCDs don’t mix well)