I started reading a year before Cynlee (in '86 just after the Summer Special was released and sold out completely), but the 1987 SDCC was my first-ever San Diego Con trip. I was 13 years old... I remember going mainly for Usagi and the TMNT... I finally found the UY Summer Special... I ended up buying four copies at the Con...lol
Here's a cut and paste from
http://usagiyojimbo.com/intro/uydhistory.html
It was 1986 (possibly in the summer) when Todd-Shogun (then nothing more than an insignificant boll weevil) first picked up an issue of Critters with Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo in it. Young 12-year-old Todd-Weevil, a "Black-and-White Boom" baby, was picking up every black-and-white funny animal/mutant ninja anthropomorphic comic book he could get his grubby little fan-boy hands on... Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was his personal fave, followed closely by Critters, Albedo, Cutey Bunny, Cerebus, Equine the Uncivilized, Captain Jack, Fish Police, Black-belt Hamsters, Commando Koalas, Boris the Bear, Menagerie, Spaced, Panda Khan, Bean World, you name it (he also liked Groo, Robotech, GI Joe, X-Men, Batman, etc but those don't count cuz they weren't part of the B&W Boom). Back then Usagi to him was yet another cool warrior animal character....
1987
It wasn't until the next year when Todd-Weevil began becoming more and more crazy about Usagi. TMNT was still #1, but Usagi came up a close 2nd place. He hunted down all the back issues of Critters and Albedo (sans #2) and even got to go to the 1987 San Diego Con and acquire 4 copies of Summer Special #1 (which was published in 1986 but escaped his grubby little hands because of even MORE greedier fan-boys). He even got to see Stan, albeit as another anonymous fanboy.
1988
With the sell-out of the TMNT, and the fizzling out of the B&W Explosion, Todd's taste in comics changed. He was no longer the grubby little fanboy, but a more sophisticated comic book enthusiast. Usagi was #1 on his list, and his brain almost exploded when he got his first letter printed in uy-vol1-nr8#letters-column. Stan also mailed him a free signed copy of #8 along with a free fully-drawn-and-inked Usagi drawing (the one to the left)! He started getting more and more into Feudal Japan, drawing, and martial arts weapons. He never really got too caught up with the Manga craze, but he did like Anime... when he could find it.
1989
Todd started sending more and more letters in to the UY Letter Column, and even got his own fan art published in uy-vol1-nr18 (a trend which would strangely follow in every issue of UY with a #8 in it for several more years... #28, #38, and Vol. 2 #8 had fan art by Todd). He also acquired a copy of Albedo #2 at the 1989 SDCC for a whopping $100! He also got his very first commissioned piece of Usagi art from Stan... a cool drawing of Usagi and Shingen in team-up mode! RYAAAAAAAA!!!
1990 - 1995
Todd continued to read UY religiously and became known as the "Ace Letterhack" of UY fandom, with well over 20 letters printed in the two volumes of UY that were published. UY had switched publishers twice during this period of time.
January, 1996
Todd started attending college at Long Beach State University, and in doing so received a student Internet account... The thing is, Todd didn't know a whole lot about the Internet, so he had some computer-savvy friends hook him up. He had a PC at home, but he had never used the modem until now...
February, 1996
Todd learned quickly about the Web, Email, FTP, and HTML, enough to create his very own website, with the help of one of his instructors. He had browsed around the Dark Horse website, saw a few Usagi sites (Bill Burge's, Todd Jenner's, Jared Smith's, and of course the UY RPG site by Mark Arsenault), and decided to create his own personal webpage about Usagi, called the "Usagi Yojimbo Dojo". It was very simple, and he had to steal graphics from the other sites until he could learn to make them up on his own using a program. There was no true "official" Usagi website, and Todd had no initial intention of creating one... this was just a small link from his personal website.
March, 1996
Soon the site began to grow, and Todd started submitting it to search engines like Infoseek, Webcrawler, Excite, Lycos, and Yahoo. They indexed his site and he soon began receiving email about it, even from people who knew him from the old UY letter column days (UY afficionado Dan Benjamin was one of the first to contact him). It was cool. He started scanning his own images and creating graphics with a pirated copy of Corel Draw 5.0 for Windows 3.1 he got off a friend (don't tell anyone!). He added extra sites like the Tomoe Ame Website, the Dragon Bellow Conspiracy site, and later on the "cover gallery", Dojo News, and Space Station Usagi and Nilson & Hermy sites. He started getting more and more creative and soon a vision of this big UY site began to emerge in his mind. The other UY sites out on the net were pretty small, little more than personal webpages, with the exception of the UY RPG site, which had a pretty good amount of info on the then upcoming game.
April, 1996
One day in programming class he started messing around with Perl, a CGI language used in web pages to operate programs like guestbooks and discussion boards. He decided to add a guestbook to his page, but instead of a traditional guestbook, he decided to have it as a type of fan club sign-up form. And so the Unofficial UY Internet Fan Club was born. Additionally, he added a web-counter to track the amount of hits he was getting. That same counter graces the UY.com homepage to this very day, and has never been reset! [Actually it's not there anymore...wonder if it's still active somewhere in cyberspace limbo]
Many web-surfer Usagi fans began posting to the guestbook (UYD Members like Jared Smith, Josh Ford, Ronald Edge, J.R. Brown, David Royer, Ben Kelly, Simon Knowles, Kenneth Chisholm, Denis Hackney, Jason Sawtelle, Jon VanDuzee, Don "DUSTY" Rhoades, Tim "Crog" Ingram, Rosemary Reeve, Matthew "Fellstar" Morgan, Jamie Rich from DHC, Bill Burge, Amy "Amara" Pronovost, Stephen Escobedo, Evan "Gyumaoh" Jacobson, Adriel Lee Serna, Clint Moulds, Tom Bolling, Simon Magid, and Glenn "not Yoriki" Masuda). Some even began expressing an interest in helping out with it. Thus Todd came up with the idea of a simple two-way structured ranking system in the UY Dojo, with all helpers as "Hatamoto" or Retainers (this included himself -- Todd didn't set his eyes on the Shogunate until later on that year). Regular members would be known as "Shugyosha" (student warriors). Before this, everyone was known simply as "Usagi-Otakus". The first Retainer was Ben Kelly from Australia (creator of the ill-fated UY Online RPG). Others followed, like Jonathan "Kitsune" Roth, Simon Knowles, Tim "Crog" Ingram, David Royer, and Matt "Fellstar" Morgan.
May, 1996
In late spring, Jamie Rich (then editor of UY) informed Todd that the UYD address (the URL back then was
http://heart.engr.csulb.edu/~tbustill/usagi.html) would appear in DHC UY #5. Todd was stoaked. Imagine the traffic that would come through once everyone in UY fandom knew the site was there. And increase it did.
In the early summer of 1996, something really cool happened: Stan Sakai expressed an interest in contributing to the site! It was Todd's wildest dream come true (right next to landing a date with Laetitia Casta... alas, still just a dream...). Stan offered to contribute story plots and cover art for future issues (via snail mail), well in advance of what the Dark Horse web site had to offer. He also offered up advanced and sometimes exclusive info on signings, merchandise, and upcoming specials. Todd graciously accepted the offer and soon there was a UY New Releases section with previews, synopses, and cover art!!! Also in June, the Dojo was indexed by Yahoo... something that rarely happend these days! Also in June, Tim "Crog" Ingram created the very first UY Animation, we found emulated copies of the UY C-64 video game and created the UY Video Game site
To read the rest, check out the above link!!!