Six Months Later, Has it improved?

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On February 14, 2022, comiXology 4.0 was officially rolled out, replacing the popular industry-leading app with its parent company’s Amazon Kindle architecture. Reviews at the time – including from this parish – were largely not favourable. Now, six months and a few rounds of updates later, is the app, web reading, and shopping experience any better? Here are our thoughts.

 

 

Cy Beltran
Review devices: iPad (8th generation), 2020 MacBook Pro

Dean Simons
Review devices: iPad Mini 5 (2019); Samsung Galaxy S5e (2019)

I have been a dedicated and committed digital comics user for the better part of a decade and comiXology pre-4.0 had good reason to boast industry leading status and was a strong reason for me to shift from physical to digital media. The update to 4.0 put a significant dent in that thinking but because of my large library on the service, I have been forcing myself to use the app since the rollout. What was once a happy pleasure has become a point of frustration with different bugs being discovered on iOS and Android devices.

The most noticeable thing about the bug fixing updates thus far (besides how few there have been) is that there have been marginal improvements but not a wholesale fix to make the app feel as comparatively seamless as before. On iOS it crashes less – but still far more than it did in 3.0. It stutters and experiences lags and is temperamental. Six months in and I have started to predict what is likely to cause a problem – downloads are a guarantee for a freeze and crash, for instance.

Books can take a while to load

Android has some noticeable problems but runs far better than on iOS. Page turns feel faster, crashes happen far less – but you can still get the odd freeze and crash (again, usually from downloads). The most significant problem I have discovered on Android is that downloaded books may not open offline – despite the check mark (✔) indicator. I found that only by opening the book immediately after download, while still connected to the internet, will ensure it is available to read on the bus or plane. It is a sad thing to have to consciously think come up with your own workarounds for problems that were non-existent, or much rarer more than six months ago but here we are.

What is common across both iOS and Android is excruciatingly long boot times. You will be staring at the boot logo or a frozen page for up to a minute. It could be library size but this happens in offline mode too.

There are a handful of OK touches – one comes to mind is that when reading in landscape you can now have a continuous vertical scroll so you just keep swiping up as you reach the bottom of the page to begin the next page. This is neat for comic strip collections.

One of the big selling points for buying books on the old comiXology website – aside from having a cart – was the symbol on a book page indicating if a book was in ‘HD’ or a high-quality format. Some books can have very busy pages and some artists are too amazing to just speed past. Being able to zoom in on a high-resolution page to see how they did a certain effect was a highlight. Unfortunately, like the website, this promise/feature has been junked and I have noticed that a significant amount of my library has been downgraded. It is up to Amazon to fix but who knows how low it is on their list of priorities. Thus far this has made me regret my previous purchases and made me far more suspicious of quality commitments that the old service made. Especially since there is seemingly little curation process in allowing books on Amazon Kindle – as I have spotted plenty of pirated digital books for sale make it through the net.

Some entrepreneurial spirit uploaded Gantz via KDP, without author or publisher permission, some months ago (it has since been removed)

The online shopping experience remains a backwards step in many respects. For one, the store feels hidden. To even find the new comiXology (or ‘Kindle Comics’) store you must navigate a lot of menus – or cheat by typing the old comiXology web address, which will automatically redirect you. Once there, finding books from certain series or specific publishers (especially ones that aren’t big names) is a serious hassle – and unintuitive. You now have to buy books one at a time, so it requires far more thought and patience than necessary on a Wednesday – if you remain inclined to check anymore.

I used to be a fiend for sales. Now I debate whether I can honestly be bothered to browse – and single issues seem to be disincentivised in sales in favour of collections. Some publishers are starting to place single issues in sales again, but the pages are too disorganised to browse and identify them in the jumble. This is a shame as there were some benefits to digital single issues: sometimes single-issue sales used to be cheaper than collections on the old site; often collections removed ancillary elements like letter columns; you could also fit far more single issues than collections on a device.

Sale prices on Amazon are also a problem. On my regional store, in UK, the sale prices often remained the same as regular non-sale prices or did not indicate that they were the ‘lowest price in 30 days’. As well as that, not all sales would appear in the sale section. Europe Comics, a favourite publisher of mine, holds frequent sales and price drops that never appear in the sale section but are applied to their books on the store. But you have to find them. I can’t easily search by publisher anymore, so I now have to go through the list on the Europe Comics website and search for each individual book by name and author. It remains frustrating and rather futile.

Books in sales come out in a disorganised list. You will have to hunt around if you want to find other issues or click on the book, view the whole series and work via there. Not too efficient.

I briefly tried the Beta web reader on my laptop and immediately ran into issues so the less said about that the better.

In sum: Every element since the 4.0 rollout remains a trial of errors on Amazon’s part. We shall see if much will improve over the next six months.

 


Agree? Disagree? Let us know your thoughts and experiences using comiXology since the February 2022 update in the comments!

 

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