The "path of the database" may be a simple excuse to visit Brussels, although some might consider it a real pilgrimage, which includes twenty and giant murals of famous local comics as well as a number of specialized libraries are a gold mine for both collectors of books and magazines classic BD, and for those who simply seek political cartoons and cutting-edge social caricature characters like Nicolas Sarkozy and George Bush, and resume sensitive issues such as climate change, global warming, racism and terrorism. The route is so funny comics for adults and children, all are always with something. You can do self-a great way to discover the streets and hidden areas of Brussels or in a tour organized by the Centre of Comics. Anyway, some murals have to be seen in any way possible: one is representing a bank robbery of Lucky Luke (Buanderie Street), another that of Cubitus (Rue de Flandre), a mischievous dog that removes white famous Manneken Pis statue from its pedestal and posing himself urinating. On the market Jeu de Balle in the Rue des Capucins, there is a mural of two little-known characters Hergé, Quick and Flupke, and a second representing two politically incorrect heroes of 1930, Blondin and Cirage, one of which is a black caricature. And for those who want to buy, if it is true that "Aladdin's Cave" Comic Center seems sell any imaginable issue of gender, there are a number of bookshops scattered throughout the city. The not to be missed is the colorful Brusel, who is half half bookstore and gallery of original comic, and organizes weekly events with BD authors worldwide, including Tony Sandoval of Mexico. Nearby are two excellent thrift shops, Little Nemo, named after the first cartoon, Winsor McCay, and Le Depot, a meeting place for collectors to buy and sell their BDs for over 50 years. And those who want to take a memory of Hergé's work, will find everything imaginable in the Tintin Boutique. LAND IN BELGIUM