Epsilon Publishing

Epsilon Publishing is an American publisher specializing in comic books, but also releases graphic novels, art books, and comic strips. The company was founded in late 1991 and began creating various superhero titles, hoping to become an alternative to the works of and. Since then, the company has become one of the biggest comic book publishers in the United States, behind but above. The company is most well known for its Epsilon Universe, which is a shared superhero universe and features most of the company's biggest characters.

1990s
The company was formed by disgruntled employees of DC and Marvel Comics and was the brainchild of Kirsten Swore, former member of DC's editorial staff and publisher/first editor-in-chief of the company. Various members of the two companies had come to believe that they were intentionally being overlooked for pay raises and promotions, which caused them to decide to create their own company which they hoped to run more ethically than the ones before them. Various editors and writers, such as Rob Lowan, B.M Ryan, and Seymore O'Reilly, who had either supported the idea or were also losing faith in their companies went with them, which led to the formation of what would become Epsilon Publishing (then known as Epsilon Comics). Hoping to become direct competitors to DC and Marvel, the various creators came up with the characters Voltage, Dash, The Word, Zombie, and more, setting them all in the same universe akin to the works of their former employers.

Because they didn't follow trends of the time, Epsilon stood out in a way others before them hadn't. Rather than cashing the trends of the time, Epsilon published what they saw as "throwbacks", which were told more akin to Bronze and Silver Age stories rather than their contemporary Dark Age comics. It became clear their company was formed at the most inopportune time, as just a few years after their formation the comic crash of 1996 occurred, which greatly decreased interest in comics and their overall net worth. While Epsilon wasn't affected as much, having survived the crash unlike some others, their overall income decreased by a staggering 40%, which forced them to expand outward and begin publishing other comic adjacent properties, changing their name to Epsilon Publishing to reflect this. An unknown percentage of stocks was also sold to, who also bought the rights to any adaptions made of original works created by Epsilon, which also helped them keep afloat during this time.

Key People

 * Publisher: Kirsten Swore
 * Editor-in-Chief: Rob Lowan
 * Executive Editor: Horatio Perez
 * Head of Creativity: Dana Prescott
 * Media/Marketing Manager: Liam Scott