|
Poison Mushroom posted:Did Steffi just charge at Gear with a loving sword? woah steffi e: http://www.kiwiblitz.com/comic/page-484 Is that the EMP sword, or am I confusing Kiwi Blitz with something different in which there was an EMP sword? I mean, if it's an EMP sword, then Steffi's action makes sorta sense, if she manages to hit it'll disable Gear's cyborgy bits. Cat Mattress fucked around with this message at 14:39 on Sep 26, 2016 |
# ? Sep 26, 2016 14:33 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 19:35 |
|
Pavlov posted:I'm still hoping the bittersweet candy bowl author will finish that comic some day, so she can make something that isn't about the cat-people she invented at 7. Taeshi is great and BCB is a ton of fun, but yeah she's winding it down. I'll read whatever comes next! By the way, their books are totally beautiful. The hardcovers are class all over.
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 14:38 |
|
Cat Mattress posted:woah steffi It's something along those lines, yeah. Honestly, given that Gear is a known aggressive crazy person with a gun arm, rushing her at close quarters with a melee weapon is probably the least bad option when she suddenly appears in your garage. Man, Cho is going to be in so much trouble (not that she's really the kind of cop who can deal effectively with Gear either).
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 14:41 |
|
Just Offscreen posted:Deprived is the best webcomic about a buff naked woman with a club that I've read all season.
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 17:42 |
|
Just Offscreen posted:Deprived is the best webcomic about a buff naked woman with a club that I've read all season.
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 20:44 |
|
Jackard posted:Does this site have RSS? https://tapastic.com/rss/series/40020 VVV No thats the address I use in feedly- must really be down. Just Offscreen fucked around with this message at 21:33 on Sep 26, 2016 |
# ? Sep 26, 2016 20:54 |
|
"down for maintenance" Is it really, or does the link have a typo?
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 20:57 |
|
Jackard posted:"down for maintenance" Another comic I read just moved to Tapastic, and the rss link on their page gives the same message.
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 22:39 |
|
The general consensus here on SA seems to be that Dumbing of Age is bad, but I unironically love it. It scratches my soap-opera itch and has characters I feel I can really relate to - them and their internal conflicts. And it gives me hope/lets me live vicariously the dream of pushing through my depression and getting to be in a relationship with a hot girl who's also into girls. I will agree that AmaziGirl is stretching my patience a lot. It's just fundamentally such a break from reality. Everything about DoA is firmly grounded in how the real world works, and then there's the girl with the grappling hook gun, the shoes with pop-out rollerskates, who can skateboard behind a car on the highway and carries caltrops in her belt. The psychological aspect of it intriguing, but like... a hypercapable superhero in a comic mostly driven by relationship drama and Joyce's coming-of-age. It doesn't work. It also had some issues in the beginning with just how dull Walky could be as a character, but he seems to have grown a little so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ (Also Willis is a totally cool guy who dedicated a paper copy of book 5 to my girl name when I mentioned I was a transwoman who just wrote a male name on her shipping address because I needed the mail to arrive.)
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 23:28 |
|
i'm following dumbing of age in the hope that amber one day gets arrested and put in a mental institution
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 23:47 |
|
I've noticed most slice of life comics aren't very well received on SA tbh, I love Questionable Content despite Jacques amazing inability to draw more than five different faces. Although to be fair most slice of life comics are terrible, so
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 23:55 |
|
AriadneThread posted:i'm following dumbing of age in the hope that amber one day gets arrested and put in a mental institution I still really like the bits with the sheltered christian girl. There are a lot of little details and dynamics that really feal drawn from experience, which give some actual weight to those parts. The rest of the comic got too tedious for me to follow just for those though.
|
# ? Sep 26, 2016 23:58 |
|
Wrist Watch posted:I've noticed most slice of life comics aren't very well received on SA tbh, I love Questionable Content Hell, same
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 00:03 |
|
i find questionable content mildly entertaining and am generally surprised when i find anybody feeling passionately about it in any sense
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 00:05 |
|
It's like having cereal for breakfast. Not particularly exciting or important, but once you're in the habit, there's not really a reason to stop?
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 00:12 |
|
Wrist Watch posted:I've noticed most slice of life comics aren't very well received on SA tbh, I love Questionable Content despite Jacques amazing inability to draw more than five different faces. Bad Machinery was fundamentally a slice of life/coming of age comic (despite some supernatural high jinks) and it was generally liked here, also it was not terrible.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 01:47 |
|
Wanna see the Deprived when she starts having to grind for souls.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 02:34 |
|
Gabriel Pope posted:Bad Machinery was fundamentally a slice of life/coming of age comic (despite some supernatural high jinks) and it was generally liked here, also it was not terrible. It was also consistently funny but that's not surprising considering its author.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 02:38 |
|
Poison Mushroom posted:It's like having cereal for breakfast. Not particularly exciting or important, but once you're in the habit, there's not really a reason to stop? pretty much me with El Goonish Shive
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 02:51 |
|
Gabriel Pope posted:Bad Machinery was fundamentally a slice of life/coming of age comic (despite some supernatural high jinks) and it was generally liked here, also it was not terrible. I feel like the slice of life stuff in Bad Machinery was secondary to solving weird mysteries, but wholeheartedly agreed that it owned.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 04:58 |
|
LatwPIAT posted:Everything about DoA is firmly grounded in how the real world works, and then there's the girl with the grappling hook gun, the shoes with pop-out rollerskates, who can skateboard behind a car on the highway and carries caltrops in her belt. The psychological aspect of it intriguing, but like... a hypercapable superhero in a comic mostly driven by relationship drama and Joyce's coming-of-age. It doesn't work. Everything except for the dialogue, how alcoholism works, how university age people act, ultracar... Are we talking about the same comic? I can understand that Willis has a lot of regrets about his previous worldview and is striving to correct that, but he's gone so hard in the other direction it's alienating and weird. Every antagonist is a strawman and his protagonists are so thoroughly unlikely in every single way that reading it is a chore; it feels like you've cracked open his private diary where he writes down his vigilante fantasies (among others...). Wrist Watch posted:I've noticed most slice of life comics aren't very well received on SA tbh, I love Questionable Content despite Jacques amazing inability to draw more than five different faces. I used to really enjoy QC (snarky dialogue and music references are like catnip to a 17 year old I guess) and I cannot even remember why I dropped it from my RSS bookmarks like X years ago. I check up on it now and then but nothing really happens and the robot stuff is just bizarre. Even that other comic he started up with the blue guy is basically QC dialogue but in the different setting with similarly slow pacing. At least he updates on time?
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 05:13 |
|
anti-magic posted:Everything except for the dialogue, how alcoholism works, how university age people act, ultracar... Are we talking about the same comic? I wouldn't call going the opposite direction of "women are meant to breed" is a bad thing. And here's been some pretty reasonable people to balance out the strawmen amongst the religious nuts in Joyce's last arc. Also Ultracar isn't even around so I'm not sure why you'd bring that up. But yeah I can't really argue the alcoholism and vigilante things. I can only assume Willis gets jittery without drama and action scenes in a while, but the comic suffers for it.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 05:28 |
|
Deprived is good. Although if I didn't have background knowledge of the game I'd be confused as poo poo about what was going on.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 05:29 |
anti-magic posted:I used to really enjoy QC (snarky dialogue and music references are like catnip to a 17 year old I guess) and I cannot even remember why I dropped it from my RSS bookmarks like X years ago. I check up on it now and then but nothing really happens and the robot stuff is just bizarre. Even that other comic he started up with the blue guy is basically QC dialogue but in the different setting with similarly slow pacing. At least he updates on time? Jacques has a big thing for the idea of post-Singularity robot rights and it has been bleeding through more and more in the comics. I personally think it's kind of interesting but it's quite a bit different from how the comic used to be, it's a lot more dramatic. I kind of respect the guy for having characters that have issues but then actually get therapy rather than just playing up their unhealthy dysfunctions over and over for comedy like so many TV shows and the like do. Also he talks about robots without blowing his load all over it like Diaz does so that is something, I guess.
|
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 05:35 |
|
Gabriel Pope posted:Bad Machinery was fundamentally a slice of life/coming of age comic (despite some supernatural high jinks) and it was generally liked here, also it was not terrible. this is an odd definition of slice of life that would seem to incorporate everything that isn't high fantasy/science fiction i sort of took 'slice of life' to mean all those comics more or less directly liveblogging the author's uneventful personal life, and the not terribly interesting things their cat does. eventually they realize narrating the day-to-day of a nerdy introvert this way is crushingly boring and start adding wacky monkey cheese, but not as a plot arc or anything, which doesn't actually make any of it less crushingly boring
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 06:22 |
|
A Wizard of Goatse posted:this is an odd definition of slice of life that would seem to incorporate everything that isn't high fantasy/science fiction Those are generally called journal comics (eg Wasted Talent). Slice of life is anything that doesn't have an overarching plot beyond people dealing with normal personal junk (and doesn't have enough real jokes in it to be called comedy), regardless of the setting.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 06:53 |
|
Yeah, slice-of-life comedy is more "laugh with the characters' shenanigans", while sitcom is more "laugh at the characters' shenanigans". Sadly, most of the slice-of-life shows I can think of are anime.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 07:20 |
|
what about dexter
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 07:34 |
|
No that's slice of knife
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 08:20 |
|
anti-magic posted:Everything except for the dialogue, how alcoholism works, how university age people act, ultracar... Are we talking about the same comic? Ultracar isn't actually in this unless you mean Carla who's just a transwoman. And if that stretches your disbelief I'll blow your mind by telling you that transwomen exist and go to college. I know since I'm one of them.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 09:45 |
|
The continuing mental and moral regression of Willis's world is fascinating at least, especially when it was in such a state of arrested development that it didn't seem like it could regress at all.
BravestOfTheLamps fucked around with this message at 10:29 on Sep 27, 2016 |
# ? Sep 27, 2016 10:11 |
|
BravestOfTheLamps posted:The continuing mental and moral regression of Willis's world is fascinating at least, especially when it was in such a state of arrested development that it didn't seem like it could regress at all.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 12:15 |
|
The story is BravestOfTheLamps is not a sane human being
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 12:39 |
|
djw175 posted:Ultracar isn't actually in this unless you mean Carla who's just a transwoman. And if that stretches your disbelief I'll blow your mind by telling you that transwomen exist and go to college. I know since I'm one of them. I think they're referring to how Carla is (of course) a carryover from his old comic and in that one she was Ultracar but in a girl body because ughhhhhhhh why can't i forget this
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 14:28 |
|
nerdman42 posted:I wouldn't call going the opposite direction of "women are meant to breed" is a bad thing. And here's been some pretty reasonable people to balance out the strawmen amongst the religious nuts in Joyce's last arc. Also Ultracar isn't even around so I'm not sure why you'd bring that up. I was listing poo poo and I remembered how dumb ultracar was so I threw that in there. But I agree that it is a good thing Willis is trying to be a better person but when he conveys that through his comics it comes off like he is trying way too hard, like to the point of fetishisation rather than being genuinely supportive/understanding or raising awareness. Then again I am a straight white dude so maybe I have this all wrong? Happy to hear what LGBT readers think of his portrayals/storylines as they pertain to them. DreamShipWrecked posted:Also he talks about robots without blowing his load all over it like Diaz does so that is something, I guess. "Not being Diaz" is the lowest bar to clear for almost any human attribute I could think of. I keep forgetting there is a whole robot rights/singularity thing going on in QC now. I honestly skim over the robot strips because they're all groan-inducing anime stereotypes.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 16:48 |
|
anti-magic posted:I was listing poo poo and I remembered how dumb ultracar was so I threw that in there. But I agree that it is a good thing Willis is trying to be a better person but when he conveys that through his comics it comes off like he is trying way too hard, like to the point of fetishisation rather than being genuinely supportive/understanding or raising awareness. I'm not bothered by his portrayals of L and T people and on the grand spectrum of fetishization DoA rates rather low. I know what the fetishization of transwomen people is like, and Carla is the opposite of that. When it comes to fetishizing lesbian relationships, Becky and Dina as tame as gently caress. And when it comes to supportiveness, understanding, and raising awareness I think he's doing a pretty good job. One thing a lot of LGBT people struggle with in the real world is how they are so rarely allowed to see people like themselves in media, especially in fully fledged and non-villainous roles. Having characters like oneself appear in media feels really supportive when you're starved for it. That goes wider than the LGBT side of things; autism, depression, etc. When it comes to raising awareness... well... he recently did a storyline about an LGBT teen running away from home because her father was going to put her in a pray-the-gay-away camp. That's a thing that actually happens to LGBT teens in the US.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 18:04 |
|
Willis is earnest and seems to try hard, he just has a minor issue in that he has absolutely no god damned loving idea how actual human beings speak or think or function or interact and holds his audience eternally hostage in a series of interachangeable angst-swamps built upon the craggy ruins of his own adolescence.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 18:05 |
|
I think Willis actually writes perfectly serviceable superhero soap opera and wish he would go back to that. For all its flaws, It's Walky! let him get in his progressive character soundbite moments and then gloss over the real life human relationship stuff with "fuggit, aliens happen!" If he did a reboot or true spiritual successor I would read the poo poo out of it, but Willis's stuff falls flat without goofy cartoon action poo poo to prop it up and it falls flatter when he shoehorns the goofy cartoon action poo poo in where it doesn't belong.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 18:18 |
|
"You're just jealous because no one's ever wanted to drug your fat rear end" the scarred rapist says to the campus superheroine.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 19:33 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 19:35 |
|
I can't really object to that line, given I've seen variations on it spat out by internet trolls over the years.
|
# ? Sep 27, 2016 20:54 |