Real Screen Funnies debuts with a Spring 1945 cover date. The title changes to Real Screen Comics with the second issue (Summer 1945) and features The Fox and the Crow and other Columbia-licensed talking animal characters.[1] - (National Comics)
Wim Meuldijk creates his newspaper comic Ketelbinkie, which will become so popular that it inspires its own magazine.[2]
March 30: Willy Vandersteen publishes Rikki en Wiske in De Nieuwe Standaard. It's the first Suske en Wiske story and marks the debut of the characters Wiske, Schanulleke and Tante Sidonia, even though his editor renamed the character Suske into Rikki, without his knowledge or approval. After one story Vandersteen will remove Rikki from the series and replace him with the remodelled character Suske.[8]
May 17: The Flemish newspaper De Zondagsvriend launches a children's supplement magazine, De Kleine Zondagsvriend, which will offer room for several comics series. It will run until 18 December 1963.[10]
June 1: Debut of Valiant, le jeune patriote, weekly magazine for children published by the PCF ; the first issue contains the first chapter of a comic about French Resistance (Fifi, gars du maquis by Roger Lecureux and Auguse Liquois). In the year the magazine launches also the humoristic comics Les Aventures de R. Hudi junior et de Nitrate by Eugene Gire and Placid et Muzo by Josè Cabrero Amai.
In Milan the publishing house Audace, after the break due to the war, restart publishing. It’s again a family run company: Tea Bonelli is the editor, her estranged husband Gian Luigi the writer and their thirteen year old son Sergio the delivery and warehouse boy.[12] Simultaneously, Gian Luigi Bonelli launches, in the Genoa magazine Il cowboy, a new character, the Tarzanesque Yorga.[13]
October 7: In Il Vittorioso, the first chapter of Pippo in montagna (Pippo in the Mountains) by Benito Jacovitti makes its debut. This is the first story starring the master criminal Zagar, antagonist of Cip.[14]
October 15: The first issue of the Dutch comics magazine Stripfilm is published. It also offers information about animation techniques, provided by the animation studio Stripfilm.[15] The magazine will last until 23 November.[16]
October 19: The first episode of Olmo's gag comic Don Celes is published. [17]
October 22: The first episode of Phiny Dick's Olle Kapoen is published. Coen van Hunnik provides artwork but is later replaced by Richard Klokkers. The series will run until 15 November 1955.[18]
October 26: In the Italian Fulmine giornale the first chapter of La legione del mistero (The mystery legion) by Andrea Lavezzolo and Carlo Cossio is published, which marks the return of detective Dick Fulmine. Although he was previously at the service of Fascist propaganda he is now recycled as a democratic hero and cuts down a neo-Nazi gang, led by a revived Adolf Hitler.
Belgian comics publisher Fernand Cheneval founds the first issue of the comics magazine Heroïc Albums. It will run until December 1956.[19]
On the French magazine Clic-Clac Images, Uderzo debuts as cartoonist with Flamberge gentilhomme gascon.
December 15: after a four-year interruption, due to the Fascist censure, the magazine Topolino comes back in Italian newsstands.[20] The same day, first issue of La Gazzetta dei piccoli (The little ones’ gazette), supplement for kids of Gazzetta del popolo.
December 19: The story Op Het Eiland Amoras starts in De Nieuwe Standaard. This marks the first official Suske en Wiske story by Willy Vandersteen. New character Suske is already shown in the announcement strips, but will only make his official debut halfway the story when Wiske meets him at the Isle of Amoras.[8] At the start of the story Professor Barabas also makes his debut.
December 27: Marc Sleen's series Piet Fluwijn introduces a new character, namely Fluwijn's son, Bolleke. From that moment on the series is renamed: Piet Fluwijn en Bolleke.[23]
December 27: Marten Toonder's Kappie makes its debut. It will run in the papers until 12 July 1972.[24]
March 20: Johannes Franciscus Nuijens (Korporaal Achilles), Dutch teacher and comics artist (Het Rapport der Defensiecommissie toegelicht en eenigszins uitgebreid door Korporaal Achilles, De Toekomststaat (Een Nachtmerrie Fin de Siècle). Visioenen en Droombeelden uit de 20ste eeuw, Klacht van een Onderwijzer over De Vrije & Orde Oefeningen op de Lagere School and Aanleiding tot den Engelsch-Transvaalschen Oorlog), dies at age 78.[32]
March 31: Gaietà Cornet, Spanish caricaturist, illustrator and comics artist, dies at age 66.[33]
Albi Uragano, (December), care of the so-called "group of Venice" (Alberto Omgaro, Dino Battaglia, Hugo Pratt) ; from the second number, it changes name in Asso di Picche (see over).[47]
^Van Hooydonck, Peter (March 1994). Biografie Willy Vandersteen. De Bruegel van het beeldverhaal (in Dutch) (2nd ed.). Antwerp: Standaard Uitgeverij. page 60.