Moonlake Comics

Moonlake Comics is an independently-owned comic company being founded by Emilia Houghton and her husband Zachary Duncan, being founded in 1991, known for comic strips and comic-books. The Badly-Damaged Face Paints is the comic's flagship franchise with August being the mascot.

The Badly-Damaged Face Paints' success/Foundation of Moonlake Comics
In 1989, Emilia had started production on the Badly-Damaged Face Paints (the zombie Face Paints horror comic the earlier years, but it was retooled into the comedy series that is known and love today) with the series become a sensation. Amazed with the series' success, Emilia then decided to take an opportunity to make more comics, but noticed that she has no comic company at the moment. Influenced, she decided to read most comics from the European comic companies like The Smurfs, Calvin and Hobbes and Astérix and look up inspirations for her comic company. WIP.

Comic strips

 * The Badly-Damaged Face Paints (1990-2021, 1991-2021 under the Moonlake Comics branding)
 * Doggone It, You Chicken! (1993-present)
 * Vampires Next Door (1996-present)
 * Luchador Café (1997-present)
 * Stacy's Evil Reflection (1998-present)
 * The Perilers (2001-present)
 * Comet 145 (2006-present)
 * Emma: Hero of the Jungle (2008-present)
 * Orcs Inc (2010-present)
 * Brandon vs. Landon (2015-present)

Comic books

 * Samara: The Ultimate Sheriff (1994-present)
 * The Dreamwalkers (1995-present)
 * The Athenaeum Wizardry (1996-present)
 * Night Creek (1997-present)
 * Legacy of the Valkyrie (1999-present)
 * The Badly-Damaged Face Paints (1999-present)
 * Ferd the Zombie Horse: The Supernatural Adventures (2000-present)
 * The Children of Superheroes (2000-present)
 * Project Prism (2001-present)
 * Olympus, USA (2001-present)
 * My Secret Life as a Vampire (2002-present)
 * Agent Wolf (2003-present)
 * Shanna: Bringer of the Apocalypse (2004-present)
 * Spies in the Future (2004-2008)
 * Ginny and the Odd Girls (2005-present)
 * Five Lives (2005-present)
 * Killing It (2005-present)
 * Lily the World Wanderer (2005-present)
 * The Powerful Heracles (2007-present)
 * My Father's A Mad Scientist (2008-present)
 * Ghost Walkers (2009-present)
 * Blots (2011-present)
 * Branchnut 101 (2012-present)
 * Ares, The God of Tormenting (2013-present)
 * Shift (2014-present)
 * Andrew Jackson: Monster Slayer (2015-present)
 * The Cat President (2016-present)
 * Brittney the Witch! (2017-present)
 * Markus and Angela: Treasure Hunters (2019-present)
 * The Blood List (2021)

Comic book miniseries

 * The Immortal Ninja (2011)
 * The Flooded Earth (2012)
 * Daniel Frost and the Elemental Gun (2015)
 * Moonlake Heroes Unite (2019)
 * Moonlake Heroes Unite Again! (2021)
 * Adventures of Fiddlesticks (2021)

Tropes
See /Tropes.

ViacomCBS' rumored acquisition of Moonlake Comics
On August 2019, various rumors surfaced that ViacomCBS would buy the rights to Moonlake Comics for $5 million dollars. However, on May 2020, nine months after the rumors surfaced, ViacomCBS confirmed that they have no intentions of buying the comic company, especially due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the fact the company intended to sell Simon & Schuster soon to focus exclusively on film, television and streaming, as it would only renew its ongoing deal, ultimately debunking the rumors.

Despite this, during a recent interview, Emilia stated that she is actually interested in letting ViacomCBS buy Moonlake Comics for a decent amount, but also stated that "it's up for them to decide if they would do that, or do the deal for the third time" and will bring that up when "they meet again whether or not they'd extend the deal".

Trivia

 * The company creates comics targeted for different ages, like children, teens and adults.
 * Much like Dark Horse Comics, IDW Publishing and Boom! Studios and unlike Marvel Comics and DC Comics, the company doesn't focus almost exclusively on superhero titles, presenting a variety similar to European comic publishers and Japanese manga publishers.
 * Emilia has stated European comics such as Tintin, The Smurfs and Astérix as an inspiration to bring a variety similar to the ones in Europe, as well as Garfield, Peanuts and Calvin and Hobbes as domestic influences for their comic strips.
 * The company has a policy that would have two issues release each month.
 * The reason behind this is due to it being more efficient to publish issues and keep readers invested.
 * Despite that, that policy is confirmed that it would not affect the comics with story arcs or the miniseries comics, with the former having 3 issues a month while the latter only having one issue a month.
 * Ares, The God of Tormenting is currently the only comic book series not to be affected, since the series, at times, can have a story arc.
 * In August 2014, Viacom and CBS Corporation (merged into ViacomCBS in 2019) signed a 5-year deal with Moonlake Comics, being recently renewed the same month in 2019 and currently set to expire in August 2024.
 * Both companies expressed long interest on setting a partnership with Moonlake Comics, especially due to Time Warner (currently WarnerMedia) owning rival publisher DC Comics and The Walt Disney Company acquiring fellow rival publisher Marvel Comics in 2009 as representatives for Viacom expressed that "a deal with Moonlake would be beneficial for the ones who want to see projects based on comics on theaters, television and streaming platforms, but don't want them to just be superheroes".
 * The deal allows the company to use Moonlake's IP library to produce film adaptions through Paramount Pictures as well as to produce television adaptions for CBS, MTV, Nickelodeon and Showtime, with Nickelodeon mainly aiming for animated adaptions and CBS and Showtime aiming for live-action adaptions, while MTV aims for a mix of live-action and animated.
 * When asked about a possibility of renewing the deal after the deal expires in 2024, representatives for ViacomCBS stated that "although we'd be glad to renew our partnership, it's a little soon to discuss about it".
 * During one interview, the Moonlake Comics company all use the Macintosh and iMac computers due to them being easier to use and can have them multi-task at once compared to Windows.