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Ben Nadel at Scotch On The Rock (SOTR) 2010 (London) with: John Whish and Kev McCabe
Ben Nadel at Scotch On The Rock (SOTR) 2010 (London) with: John Whish Kev McCabe

Avengers - Heroes Welcome 001 -2013- -digital- -petethepipster-. New! Site

And that is precisely why collectors will spend hours searching for . It is not just a comic. It is a ghost in the machine. A digital issue #1 that promised a world that never came. Do you own a copy of this edit? Think you’ve seen a page from "Heroes Welcome 002"? Contact your local fan-editing archive. PeteThePIPster is still out there. Probably.

PeteThePIPster’s edit is bleak, paranoid, and analog in a digital world. It suggests that the real enemy of the Avengers isn’t a space god—it’s paperwork, trauma, and public opinion. And that is precisely why collectors will spend

In the vast, unregulated oceans of fan-edited content, most uploads come and go like whispers. They are watched once, deleted, and forgotten. But every so often, a file name becomes legend. For collectors of Marvel’s cinematic and comic hybrid fan edits, one name has achieved near-mythical status: "Avengers - Heroes Welcome 001 -2013- -digital- -PeteThePIPster-." A digital issue #1 that promised a world that never came

If you have spent any time on private trackers, Usenet archives, or deep Reddit forums (r/fanedits, r/marvelstudios), you have seen the name. But what is this file? Why is the "PeteThePIPster" signature so coveted? Why does the "001" suggest a series that never finished? And most importantly—why, in 2026, is this 2013 digital edit still circulating heavily among completionists? Contact your local fan-editing archive

The issue ends on a cliffhanger: Captain America discovers a S.H.I.E.L.D. black site under a rebuilt Stark Tower. Issue #002 was allegedly "80% done" in late 2014, but PeteThePIPster vanished from the internet in January 2015. No social media. No goodbye. Only this single issue remains.

Thus, is treated less like a comic and more like a time capsule. It is the first chapter of a story we will never finish. The PeteThePIPster Aesthetic (Why It Matters) In 2013, most fan-edits were sloppy. People would paste movie screencaps onto white backgrounds with Comic Sans. PeteThePIPster was different. He developed what fans now call the "PIP Grid"—a chaotic, six-panel layout where the borders bleed into each other, mimicking a corrupted hard drive.

Today, with the Multiverse Saga fragmented and AI-generated comics flooding the internet, this humble 2013 PDF feels handmade. It has errors. The lettering is slightly crooked on Page 11. The grain overlay is too heavy.

I believe in love. I believe in compassion. I believe in human rights. I believe that we can afford to give more of these gifts to the world around us because it costs us nothing to be decent and kind and understanding. And, I want you to know that when you land on this site, you are accepted for who you are, no matter how you identify, what truths you live, or whatever kind of goofy shit makes you feel alive! Rock on with your bad self!
Ben Nadel
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