Way Early Comics

The Dozerfleet 1990s Project Catalog is a portion of the Dozerfleet Complete Project Catalog which documents the years 1990-1999 in Dozerfleet Productions' project history.

Significance of the Nineties
The early 90s, 1993 to be more precise, are where it all began. The idea to take and actually keep a collection was rendered official a year later, on October 10th of 1994. It was from that day forward that what would later become known as Dozerfleet first sprouted. The 90s hallmark some very critical baby steps in the development of Dozerfleet Productions:


 * 1) The Nineties were the absolute most formative years of all.
 * 2) First idea for a fanfic/TV show was Annihilators Aerodynamic.  It was followed up a very short time later by Super Knights, Pentagon's Bots, and other lesser-known ideas.  The desire to make a show, and these avenues carried out with typical children's toys, were merely an outlet for a desire that actually began around 1986-1987, inspired by watching a VHS of The Empire Strikes Back.  The video division eventually born of this desire was later known as Dozerfleet Studios.
 * 3) This era is the only decade in which Dozerfleet was never called by its current name.  It swapped several identities prior to receiving its current name in May of 2006.
 * 4) Few works in this era were original; nearly everything being a parody or homage or fanfic of something else.
 * 5) Defenders of Stick-Man Village became the first comic strip, consisting mostly of character sheets.  It became the foundation of what is now called Dozerfleet Comics.
 * 6) The era stretches from the time the Dozerfleet founder left kindergarten to the fall of his sophomore year in high school.  During this era, the family moved twice.
 * 7) Yo-Splaz! proved to be an early venture into journalism, of the sort that would later lead to the creation of The Dozerfleet Blog.
 * 8) Some very early attempts at writing literature that didn't fit into the mold of the "Comics" imprint would lead to the eventual creation of Dozerfleet Literature.
 * 9) The idea to write song parodies first yielded its crop with "Doughboy Rock" and "Livin' It Like a Loco," which would later be renamed "Doughboy" and "Livin' It Like al-Queada."  Both of these parodies, written in 1999, became foundational to Dozerfleet Records and Every Ape and His Brother.