Screenshots iPhone iPad. Nov 3, Version 2. Ratings and Reviews. Generic Review N. App Privacy. Size Category Books. Compatibility iPhone Requires iOS Languages English, Spanish.
Price Free. Developer Website App Support. Family Sharing With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app. More By This Developer. Thoughts — The thinking app. You Might Also Like. CloudReaders pdf,cbz,cbr. These will enable you to either build a comic book collection from scratch or read your existing comics. If you're reading this, there's a strong chance you already own a sizable collection of digital comic books in CBR or CBZ formats.
If that's the case, you're probably looking for a way to read them on your iPad. Chunky might be the most popular comic book reader available on the iPad. It's totally free to install and offers a range of different ways to import your collection. What's great is that Chunky automatically upscales your comics to improve low-resolution images. You can even turn on Auto Contrast to compensate for faded panels and muted colors. If that isn't convenient enough, upgrade to Pro to wirelessly download comics from a computer or NAS drive.
The Pro upgrade also gets you access to alternate color schemes and automatically crops the borders from each page. Even without the upgrade, though, Chunky offers all you need to enjoy comics on your iPad.
Panels is a sleek new comic reader that uses your Google account to sync your reading progress across your iPad and iPhone. The free version of Panels only lets you import your comics using iCloud Drive. Even without upgrading, you can still connect your iPad to a computer to transfer comics using Finder or iTunes. ComicFlow takes a free, simple, and open source approach to reading comics on your iPad. Just put your comics into a folder to treat them as a series.
You can transfer comics via Wi-Fi using a web server or a WebDAV server: simply drag and drop your comics into the server window and wait for them to appear in the comic reader on your iPad. Unfortunately, ComicFlow limits this feature to 50 transfers. After this, you need to upgrade via an in-app purchase. But you can still sync comics for free using Finder or iTunes if you don't want to upgrade. Thanks to its focus on simplicity, ComicFlow promises to handle thousands of comics and many gigabytes of files.
It does so while offering all the features you need to enjoy your collection. The app offers light and dark themes, with just a few tools for organizing your library. There's no handy web server transfer, but you can connect to Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, or Box to import comics instead.
If that's not good for you, you can also transfer files from a computer using iTunes or Finder. That said, the majority of digital comics are in one of those two formats anyway. A CBZ is a digital comic book file, consisting of sequentially-numbered image files.
These image files each represent a page in the comic book. All the pages are then grouped into a compressed ZIP file. This has the result of reducing the overall file size of the digital comic book, while packaging all the individual images -- of which there can be large amount if it's a big comic book -- into a single file. A variety of applications that are compatible with digital comic book files is available for the iPad, including CBZs.
The e-book reader application Stanza is able to open and display CBZ-packaged comic books, and it stores them in its library alongside text-based e-books. Searching for the term "CBZ" on the App Store will identify a wide range of compatible comic book readers for the iPad.
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