I love 8-bit theater. It's one of the funniest webcomics I've come across, with enjoyably stereotypical charaters and plenty of laughs.
When I found out Clevinger had a novel, I promptly decided to buy it. I thought, since his webcomic is so great, his novel is probably great, too.
Nuklear Age is not a great novel. In fact, it probably would have made a better webcomic that a book. You see, so many things that make Clevinger's webcomic great make his book... unsatisfying.
One-dimensional characters are hillarious and easy to identify with. It's so easy to chuckle at the crazy antics of Nuklear Man and his crew. There are so many belly-laugh moments in this book. My personal favortie is a phone-call from the devil himself. And while it's hard to be bored while reading Nuklear Age, after 500 pages (this is one tremendously long book) you realize you've spent 50 pages of your life on...nothing. The book is a comedy, but it fails because it never delivers any satisfying plot development. Sure, some super-villians arose and were beaten down, but if all you wanted was the usual super-hero tale, couldn't you have picked up an anthology collection of Spider-man? You'd get the same effect, but you'd have pictures to look at, too. If Clevinger had focused a little more on plot, cut out 200 pages on drabble, and sent this thing to an editor (you can find a typo on every page), then this would have been a good book. Since he didn't, this is simply a so-so comic book without the panels.
Just stick with his webcomic, it's better quality anyway.