Clifton 01-19 -c- Cbr Nlt-release -
, specifically a release formatted as a CBR (Comic Book Archive) file by the digital group NLT.
The "01-19" designation typically refers to a collection containing Volumes 1 through 19 of the series. Below is a list of the core albums included in the early run of the Clifton series: Core Albums (Volumes 1–19)
The series features the adventures of Colonel Sir Harold Wilberforce Clifton, a retired MI5 agent turned amateur sleuth, and was famously handled by the duo Turk and Bob de Groot for its most popular era. My Dear Wilkinson (1978) The Laughing Thief (1978) 7 Days to Die (1979) Alias Lord X (1975) (1982) Kidnapping (1984) Pass it on, Clifton (1986) The Memory Thief (1987)
(2003) — Note: English numbering often differs from original French releases Black Moon (2004) Elementary, My Dear Clifton (2006) Series Overview Clifton - original comic art - 2DGalleries Clifton 01-19 -c- CBR NLT-Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 10 2026
2.1 Overview
- First appearance: Clifton #1, 1959 in Le Journal de Tintin
- Genre: Spy comedy, adventure, detective
- Main character: Colonel Harold Wilberforce Clifton — elderly, polite, bumbling but effective British spy, often compared to a less absurd Inspector Clouseau or a British Lucky Luke.
- Setting: Cold War-era (later modernized), international espionage.
Availability & Partnerships
- Beta Trials – Currently being field‑tested with the U.S. Department of Defense (Joint Special Operations Command) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
- Commercial Release – Full production units will be available Q4 2026 for domestic and international customers.
- Strategic Alliances – Clifton 01‑19 has signed memorandums of understanding with Raytheon Technologies, Siemens Energy, and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory to embed CBR NLT‑Release in next‑generation platforms.
2.2 Key Creators
| Period | Artist/Writer | Characteristics | |--------|---------------|------------------| | 1959–1960 | Raymond Macherot | Original creator, lighter tone, whimsical animals (early comics) | | 1960–1980s | Jo-El Azara (art), Turk (scripts) | Golden age; dry British humor, fixed character design | | 1990s–2000s | Turk & Bob de Groot | Refined the modern Clifton; longer stories | | 2010s+ | Bédu (art), De Groot (scripts) | Contemporary settings, more action |
Part 3: The Modifier – "-c-"
The tiny -c- is where things get technical. , specifically a release formatted as a CBR
In version control systems (like Git, SVN, or Perforce):
- -c- often stands for "Change" or "Changeset."
- Alternatively, in forensic contexts,
-c-could denote Copy number or Classification level (e.g., Confidential). - In legal discovery (e-discovery),
-c-might mean "Custodian" – the person responsible for the data.
Given the presence of CBR later, the most plausible interpretation is Revision C (where -c- is a separator denoting the third major revision of the "Clifton 01-19" asset).
"NLT-Release" – The Smoking Gun
Searching memory of 2000s–2010s scene groups: NLT appears in releases like "NLT-Release" or "NLT-iNT" – often a small team specializing in European comics or rare graphic novels. They used predictable naming: [Series].[Issue Range].[Format].[Group-Release]. First appearance: Clifton #1, 1959 in Le Journal
Thus: Clifton.01-19.-c-.CBR.NLT-Release would mean:
- Series: Clifton
- Issues: 1 to 19 inclusive
- Format: CBR (scanned comic)
- Group: NLT
- Status: Release (as opposed to sample or repack)
This fits like a glove. The period instead of space is common. The only anomaly is that "Clifton" is not widely scanned in English; most releases are in French. But NLT might have been a European group.
Verdict: Highly plausible. This is almost certainly a scene release of a comic book collection. The only missing piece is the lack of a visible tracker or hash, but the naming convention aligns perfectly with early 2010s P2P comic archiving.


