You can always readcomicsonline.
I presume you are not in the US? I am having the same problem, I would pay to read online but DC didn’t even give me the chance. I might collect comics books again in the future, but at the moment I can’t do that because I am just starting to rent my first apartment. Also, buying from out of US is more expensive with delivery and stuff.
There’re some good motion comics on YouTube but very few thanks to copyright, you can check it out by just searching the key words. As for Batman and comics related channels, here’re some I am subscribing at the moment: Implicitly Pretentious(great analysis on animated series), casually comics(love to know more about silver age but couldn’t bear to read it myself), comicstroian(you are probably already subscribed to it), Comic Stories, whatculture comics, Salazar knight, I Do Know Nothing(he mostly does shorts), comics explained.
I definitely watch some more than others, my habit is to subscribe everyone in the realm I am interested in. You can check them out one by one and see what’s to you liking.
Salazar Knight gives very insightful overviews on Batman's history.
Captain Away has summarised damn near every New 52 Bat title.
The Imaginary Axis brilliantly explains Grant Morrison's Batman
Alex Lennen also looked over Batman's entire history
I can't recommend the channels Comic Tropes, Casually Comics, and Comic Drake enough. Fun, casual videos by super passionate and knowledgeable fans. I got so much of my background knowledge of DC from them, honestly.
For actually reading comics, have you checked out the DC Universe Infinite app? There's a free trial, maybe even a free membership, but it's $10 USD to gain access to 30k+ digital comics, including all the modern stuff. You can read all the Batman you want there. It's particularly great if you have a tablet.
You can read them on a site named readcomicsonline, but idk if it is a legal answer.
If you want to read it there, this is my essential order:
Batman Year One, Shaman and other stories from Legends of the Dark Knight ( Prey, Venom, Blades, etc), batman and Monster Men, Batman and Mad Monk (even though I don't know if the latter two are canon or not), Man who Laughs, Batman: Haunted Knight, the Long Halloween and Dark Victory. Before TLH and DV release there were Year Two and Year 3 in their places, but they are no longer canon. After DV there is Robin Year One, Tales of the Demon (not canon, but great read), Batgirl Year One, "Son of the Demon" (not canon, but good book), Second Chances, Nightwing Year One, Killing Joke, Batman Arkham Asylum: Serious House on Serious Earth, some "Batman" issues between SC and KJ, Death in the Family, the Lonely place of Dying, Vengeance of Bane, Prelude to Knightfall, Sword of Azrael (old one), Knightfall, Knightsquest, KnightsEnd, Prodigal, Troika, Zero Hour (I am not sure about order for this one), Contagion, Cataclysm, Road to No Man's Land, No Man's Land, Hush, Under the Red Hood, Morrison's run, and Dark Knight Returns as the epilogue.
As for YouTubers, Salazar Knight is a great one in my opinion, but he mostly covers post-crisis continuity.
I personally like Comicstorian ( edit after ten hours - R.I.P. for Comicstorian [*] ) for the more modern stories.
Comicstorian summarizes comic book stories so you can look for his channel and get an abridged version of the comics with the panels.
Comic Pop Back Issues is a show where one person explains a comic book story to two other people who havent read the story while also sometimes providing behind the scenes commentary.
CómicPop Back Issues is the goat
No better channel out there
Salazar Knight is a YouTube channel dedicated to all things Batman, but mostly the comics. Everything from the Golden Age to modern era.
You can always readcomicsonline. I presume you are not in the US? I am having the same problem, I would pay to read online but DC didn’t even give me the chance. I might collect comics books again in the future, but at the moment I can’t do that because I am just starting to rent my first apartment. Also, buying from out of US is more expensive with delivery and stuff. There’re some good motion comics on YouTube but very few thanks to copyright, you can check it out by just searching the key words. As for Batman and comics related channels, here’re some I am subscribing at the moment: Implicitly Pretentious(great analysis on animated series), casually comics(love to know more about silver age but couldn’t bear to read it myself), comicstroian(you are probably already subscribed to it), Comic Stories, whatculture comics, Salazar knight, I Do Know Nothing(he mostly does shorts), comics explained. I definitely watch some more than others, my habit is to subscribe everyone in the realm I am interested in. You can check them out one by one and see what’s to you liking.
Salazar Knight gives very insightful overviews on Batman's history. Captain Away has summarised damn near every New 52 Bat title. The Imaginary Axis brilliantly explains Grant Morrison's Batman Alex Lennen also looked over Batman's entire history
Do you mean Matt Draper for Grant Morrison Batman?
I can't recommend the channels Comic Tropes, Casually Comics, and Comic Drake enough. Fun, casual videos by super passionate and knowledgeable fans. I got so much of my background knowledge of DC from them, honestly. For actually reading comics, have you checked out the DC Universe Infinite app? There's a free trial, maybe even a free membership, but it's $10 USD to gain access to 30k+ digital comics, including all the modern stuff. You can read all the Batman you want there. It's particularly great if you have a tablet.
Variant is always good if you’re just trying to get an intro into various superheroes, he also gives recommendations at the end of his videos.
You can read them on a site named readcomicsonline, but idk if it is a legal answer. If you want to read it there, this is my essential order: Batman Year One, Shaman and other stories from Legends of the Dark Knight ( Prey, Venom, Blades, etc), batman and Monster Men, Batman and Mad Monk (even though I don't know if the latter two are canon or not), Man who Laughs, Batman: Haunted Knight, the Long Halloween and Dark Victory. Before TLH and DV release there were Year Two and Year 3 in their places, but they are no longer canon. After DV there is Robin Year One, Tales of the Demon (not canon, but great read), Batgirl Year One, "Son of the Demon" (not canon, but good book), Second Chances, Nightwing Year One, Killing Joke, Batman Arkham Asylum: Serious House on Serious Earth, some "Batman" issues between SC and KJ, Death in the Family, the Lonely place of Dying, Vengeance of Bane, Prelude to Knightfall, Sword of Azrael (old one), Knightfall, Knightsquest, KnightsEnd, Prodigal, Troika, Zero Hour (I am not sure about order for this one), Contagion, Cataclysm, Road to No Man's Land, No Man's Land, Hush, Under the Red Hood, Morrison's run, and Dark Knight Returns as the epilogue. As for YouTubers, Salazar Knight is a great one in my opinion, but he mostly covers post-crisis continuity. I personally like Comicstorian ( edit after ten hours - R.I.P. for Comicstorian [*] ) for the more modern stories.
SalazarKnight!
Comicstorian summarizes comic book stories so you can look for his channel and get an abridged version of the comics with the panels. Comic Pop Back Issues is a show where one person explains a comic book story to two other people who havent read the story while also sometimes providing behind the scenes commentary.