Word bubbles and captions were legible so I didn't have to utilize the zoom feature. Should you want to tinker with a comic's presentation, pinching, zooming, and dragging the image around the screen are available options. Left or right swipes, naturally, turned pages. YACReader's automatic scrolling isn't nearly as impressive as Comics' Guided View, so if you're a fan of that particular feature, you may want to stick with Comixology's apps. You cannot, however, flip the iPad into landscape so that YACReader displays two pages at a time (a function found in Comics and ComicRack). ![]() YACReader remembers where you finished reading, so that when you return to a comic after exiting the app, you'll pick up where you left off-a nice touch. ![]() YACReader's page scrubbing is adequate, but isn't as impressive as ComicRack's, which lets you rifle through thumbnail versions of comic pages. YACReader's page scrolling, however, is smoother than ComicRack's (which had the occasional lag). Tapping and holding a comic thumbnail lets you assign a star rating and fill in metadata information (title, issue number, genre, and more). Numbers at the top of the screen represent the page you're reading and the number of pages in total. ![]() There are numerous preferences to digest, so I suggest reading the brief Help section for additional information. Now that a major publisher like Image Comics has given DRM the boot, open, dedicated iPad digital comics readers will become even hotter commodities.
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