

Seeing that Rosie has left Major Thorn tied up in her stolen jeep, Combat takes one of the enemy tanks and rams the jeep sending it rolling away. The pair steal the enemies uniforms to cross through enemy lines undetected eventually tracking Rosie to a secret base next to a dam that their air recon has failed to find thanks to a camouflage tarp stretched over the enemy fleet of troops and tanks. Along the way they are ambushed by enemy soldiers but easily subdue them. Once the other prisoners are locked back up, Combat and Cookie go out into enemy lines to track down Yalu River Rosie and rescue Major Thorn. Unwilling to sacrifice the life of his commanding officer, Kelly allows Rosie to flee in a jeep with the Major as her prisoner. He finds her in Major Thorn's tent where the Major has been taken prisoner.


After subduing the other escapees, Combat leaves Cookie in charge while he chases after Rosie. This escape attempt is spotted by Combat Kelly and Cookie Novak who try to stop her but are tripped up by other Chinese soldiers trying to launch themselves over the fence. So, thank you! I'm looking forward to whatever comes next.Yalu River Rosie escapes from the American prisoner of war camp once again, this time having the other prisoners construct a crude sling shot to fire her over the fence. My work week was way busier than I expected, and I wasn't even expecting anyone to share my interest.

YAC Reader is the best we've got on Linux, but in my opinion, GCstar is a better database program for comics, even with its currently limited support for comic-specific fields.Īnd, oh: Sorry to take so long to reply.
Yacreader comic vine windows#
Lots of comic book forums include threads with Linux users bemoaning the fact that it's really difficult to pull away from Windows machines because there's nothing on Linux yet that can meet our needs. Meanwhile, for what it's worth, I suspect that quite a few comic readers would be interested in using GCStar if it included a few more of the fields that are important for comic collections. On the other hand, some users prefer ComicBookDB because it is more carefully edited, so it contains fewer errors and subjective assessments than ComicVine. For example, all of my comic books have synopses on ComicVine, but none on ComicBookDB. In my experience, ComicVine's entries are more thoroughly populated. Indeed, GCstar is the only comic book database program I've seen that scrapes ComicBookDB. If I knew any code, I would plink away at the project myself, but my coding skills are just about nil.īut if I were to learn some coding, what would I need to learn to help with this project? I cannot promise anything, but maybe I could teach myself something that would be helpful here? I'm good at following directions, and I have a lot of patience on repetitive or tedious tasks.ĬomicVine is a very popular comic book database, and several other comic book database programs scrape it because ComicVine makes their API really easy to use.
Yacreader comic vine update#
But I'll update this thread as soon as I have a comic that I can use to test whether the synopsis field is working as expected.Īnd yeah, it seems right to me that GCstar's UI panels and plugin code would have to be revised to include the additional fields that comic book databases use. I actually don't know whether the synopsis field is working because ComicBookDB does not have any synopses for any of the comics in my collection.
