San Diego is something - as a comic book fan - everyone should do at least one time. There are conventions I enjoy more, but nothing really compares to the madness and mayhem that is SDCC. Think of it as a pilgrimage to Mecca if you were a Muslim.boshuda wrote:This all sounds like a ton of hassle. Is San Diego, oops, sorry, International Comic Con really worth all this? Does it really provide that much more entertainment and/or information than a smaller con where you don't have to sign up for lotteries to get a hotel?

It has its drawbacks: It is insanely crowded. It is highly likely you will not get to spend much time chatting up/getting a sketch from that super-popular artist whose work you absolutely love. If the panel you want to go to is in Hall H you might as well start camping out that morning and give up doing anything else. And as you've heard, securing lodging is an adventure in and of itself.

At the same time, if you like your pop culture fix, there is no other place like it. The best example I can give you: The first time I ever went, I had a list of things I figured I'd at least try to find. I was convinced that I wouldn't find any of these things, but I'd hoped over the course of four days I'd find a few of them or have leads on where to get them. I had all the items on my list bought and bagged within TWO HOURS of the first night (preview night). That's what San Diego Comi-Con is. If you like to shop - what you want is there. If you like star-gazing - the celeb (comic or otherwise) you love is there.
And it doesn't suck that San Diego is a beautiful city with plenty to offer outside the con itself. The wife and I usually take Friday off and go do something non-con oriented. Seaworld, the Zoo, Balboa Park, or just the beach...