

The tabbed interface supports reading multiple books at once, and its double-pane main view focuses on the user’s library or standard file browsing more than some of the other programs on this list. Which is weird, because it’s one of the more technical and analytical options out there. Though ComicRack comes in Android and iOS flavors, it’s Windows-only on the desktop. Sadly, though YACReader plays nice with all three major desktop platforms and can remotely serve files to iOS, there’s no Android client as of yet. The interface itself is a bit minimal for my taste, but it quickly disappears if you’re reading in full screen anyway. The application is available on Windows in both installer and portable flavors, plus 64-bit macOS and various Linux distro versions.

#Yacreader stopped working install
The application will automatically fetch tags and issue data from the ComicVine database, and those who are keen on sharing with friends can install the UI-free server version to remotely host comics on iOS. It supports all of the common file types and archives, with a focus on building up an extensive and well-organized library of personal comics.

If you live a multi-OS lifestyle and you prefer some cross-platform consistency, YACReader is probably your best bet. The download comes as a standalone package, so you don’t even need to install anything, though you might want to associate some of the more common comic file types with MComix soon after trying it out.
