Hubris Comics

Hubris Comics was a pre-War company which had been producing printed entertainment since 2021. It was a branch of Hubris Publishing, and was headquartered in Washington D.C..

About
The most notable product of the company is its Grognak the Barbarian series. Several terminal entries in the company headquarters detail its various other comic book series, as well as future projects; one of them even involving Vault Boy.

The company was, due to heavy sponsorship of the pre-War U.S. military, considered heavily patriotic, illustrated particularly by their publishing of the Tales from the Front series. They also were sponsored by the United States Space Administration for their second most prominent series: Captain Cosmos, partially out of boosting PR for their Mars Shot Project, and also to compensate for the accident that occured at ArcJet Systems.

Known facilities

 * Hubris Comics in Washington D.C.
 * Hubris Comics in Boston


 * Hub 360 Hubris Studios in Boston

Known products

 * Grognak the Barbarian
 * The Adventures of Captain Cosmos
 * Reign of Grelok
 * Kid Wacky's Zany Hi-Jinks
 * Tales from the Front
 * Drake Tungsten, Chrono Cowboy
 * Underground Life
 * Hell's Chain Gang
 * The Inspector
 * Manta Man
 * The Silver Shroud
 * The Unstoppables

Known employees

 * Richard Maynard Watson
 * Peter Shiner - Chief of Publishing
 * Ms. Granier - Secretary
 * Moorellis - Writer
 * Neptura - Editor
 * Tina Hopkins - Writer
 * Vivian O'Dell - Manager
 * Aaron Babowski - Producer
 * Evans Richelli - Producer

Appearances
The Hubris Comics building and the company's Grognak the Barbarian comics appear in Fallout 3. Another division of Hubris Comics shows up in Fallout 4.

Behind the scenes

 * The word 'hubris', from the Ancient Greek (ὕβρις), refers to an individual's pride in their own abilities. In the Greek mythology, the hubris indicated a "sin" of pride in people who arrived at comparing themselves to gods.
 * Historically, U.S comics had been used as a form of propaganda during World War II and later as "red scare" during the Cold War. Famous comic book companies like Atlas/Marvel and DC comics had produced ones with anti-communist messages up until the 1980s.