![]() This Week's Link |
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Welcome to my weekly links page for my favorite comics I've found on the Web. Every week I recommend a new particular comic to the readers of the Wunderland Weekly News; here I archive my recommendations, and go into a little detail why I recommend each one.
In general, I really enjoy reading comics. Newspaper dailies, graphic novels, "alternative" weeklies or even "underground", I like the way that comics combine art and writing, and the different balances that result from each artist and the deadline nature of the medium. I've discovered that there are surprising number of comics on the Web, many available only on the Web! Over the past few months I have built up a list of these that not only do I read regularly, but some that I can't wait to read evey day, and sometimes re-read their archives over and over. My reason for running this feature is to share these amazing finds. Just about all of the Web Comics I've fallen in love with have the common characteristic of a complete archive section, so I recommend that to get the full flavor of any of these links you start reading the archive, from the very beginning if possible.
Lastly, the answer to a frequently asked question: What is that hand-creature in the logo for the weekly picks? It's called a "leech," and you can make your very own. Just stick your index finger and pinky up and bring the remaining two to meet with your thumb. This is not an annubis. Now, make it talk, give it an annoying personality, and don't forget to use it to suck blood from your little sister or other sibling.
List of Recommended Comics To Date:
| Link | Date | Comments |
| Bruno | 9/9/99 | Bruno is one of the oldest Web strips I am aware of, and one which has had a surprisingly strong effect on my life, because of the strength of its writing. It's format is a little strange, a single panel in the apect ratio of the "3-panel" strip, with lots of dialogue, but I've gotten used to it. It unfolds in near-real time, and the story of a life it tells is alternately mundane and transcendent, much like our own. After you read a few, start at the beginning of the archive, and read it *as slowly as possible* to savor the experience. |
| Bob The Angry Flower | 9/16/99 | One of my very favorites on the Web, this one seems to be published more or less weekly in various alternative papers, apparently in Canada. Steve Notley (or "snotley") has a complete archive on-line which allows you to follow the changes in his artistic style; personally, I prefer the earlier version of Bob over the current, more polished look. But the best part of Bob's pages is the "Annotations" section, in which Steve describes a little bit about the history behind each comic, things he liked or disliked artisticly, etc. This is the kind of fascinating insider information I love to get on my favorite artists! |
| Sluggy Freelance | 9/23/99 | This Web-only daily is light fare, but I've found it utterly addictive. A not-extrordinary self-referential collection of "ordinary" guys who go on adventures, their foils and love interests, talking animals with switchblades, vampires, and aliens, this strip is distinguished by subtle brilliance in both its art and writing. Not over-done, the expressiveness of the drawing never fails to amaze me. As an example, the main female character of Zoe is not drawn as any kind of "bombshell", and is rather ordinary in fact, but she nonetheless has an everyday beauty of the kind you could fall in love with very easily. The storylines alternate between original adventures that serve well to develop the characters, and outright parodies of T.V. shows and movies which are generally pretty good. As an X-files fan, I totally loved the appearance of Dana and Fox in "The Slug Files"! Lastly, this comic is a must read for any fans of ferrets, as the character of "Kiki" is utterly perfect. |
| Bobbins | 9/30/99 | Even though the others got earlier billing, this is the one I currently check first every day. It's sort
of a charmingly drawn "friends" type of story, and a daily in *color*. This comic is not so much a joke a day, but a
continuing unfolding story of a happy group of characters I've come to like a lot. Even so, it's a little odd; it took me
quite a while to realize that the story and author are in England. To me, it looks like it could be a feature of some
british fashion magazine (although the characters seem to have recently fallen into the habit of wearing the same clothes
every day). However, the author John Allison is apparently trying for newspaper syndication.
Update 7/15/02Bobbins was officially ended a couple of months ago. After a short sabatical, the author decided he wanted to just start up a new comic, which turned out to be Scary-Go-Round, which is turning out fine in it's own right. |
| Waiting For Bob | 10/7/99 | Written by Doug Sheppard and drawn by Katrin Salyers, this comic has only a handful of characters. But they're
surprisingly real and believable characters. I'd have to say that I know people like these, which is what makes it
interesting to me. The comic is daily, in black and white, and the author takes great pride in the fact that the daily
page downloads fast. Another aspect of the real-ness of the
characters is the art. I am particularly impressed by the character of "Bernie";
Bernie is really hard to draw, I would think. She is not the usual skinny body type, and yet is drawn very attractively.
Update 6/25/01Currently inactive due to a burnout-induced sabattical. Read the archive. |
| Red Meat | 10/14/99 | Yeah, I know you're saying "We get this one in the City Paper all the time! It's not a Web Comic!" True, but Max Cannon's site has a truly amazing feature: an archive that goes waaaaay back. By this point there are so many titles on his index page that it's several screens long. You could kill, maybe, an 8-hour work day just reading the archive, laughing your head off, and getting your mind thoroughly twisted in the process. Best use of xerox art since "The Angriest Dog In The World". |
| Freefall | 10/21/99 | This net-only comic is in black and white, and has the audacity to be published only on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. It is science-fictionish, and contains among its unapologetically complex concepts a "Bowman's Wolf" as one of it's three main characters. The strip is really clearly drawn, but the story moves quite glacially, taking the time to fully explore every situation on the way to what I hope is a well-planned story arc (it's been published for about two years now). Despite its sparse schedule, I find I check it eagerly when it's there, and the archive goes all the way back for several hours of entertainment. His links page is very complete, and frankly the source of many of my recent comics finds (so be careful reading it if you don't want to spoil your appetite for the Cool Comic of the Week). |
| Cynicalman Not Available Comics |
10/28/99 | News Flash! Cynicalman is on the Web! While this is not exactly a Web Comic in that it isn't on the web for
purposes of publication but rather as advertisement to get you to buy the products, I was so happy to learn (thanks
Diane!) that it existed anywhere on the Web that it became this week's link. I first discovered Cynicalman in a
discarded indie comics-only paper of the type that proliferated when I was in college. From that chance encounter, a
whole unexpected world of underground comics opened up for me, the effect was sweeping and realligning. Cynicalman
himself seems a part of the definition of his times; the small-shop punk attitude of the "franchise", the stories and
style are inseparable from the 80's for me. On this topic, Matt's latest comic is as hilarious as ever, in which CM
declares "Hey, Man, I remember the 80's! I was
there!"
The comics at the link given are all-new, and tailor-made for this media; Matt Feazell has several well thought-out
innovations on his pages, and describes in great detail his method of preparing the comics for HTML. After consuming
everything Matt's own site has to offer, you might follow his suggestion and read the hilarious Cute Girl comics at the old Not Available Comics site. You might then begin performing web
searches for any other CM stuff out there. So far I've come up with:
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| The Lemmings of Norstrilia | 11/4/99 | This comic is being (re)published by our very own Andrew Plotkin (Zarf)! I haven't seen much references to it except for an e-mail forwarded to me by Andy Looney, so I'm mentioning it here. According to his index page for the series, it's a web posting of some comics he did for print media in '92, and is a series of only 15 strips. Right now he's at number 9, I've read the first ones with great mirth and now eagerly await each week's. Maybe he'll do some new ones? |
| Robotman | 11/11/99 | Robotman will be the first of my many suggestions for comics which are published in daily newspapers (syndicated), but which are nontheless also available on the Web. I used to strongly dislike this comic based on its non-technical representation of the robot, but have since gotten over it. This comic seems at first to be the usual idiotic syndication formula, but further reading has revealed that the author's sense of humor is really kind of screwy. Sadly, this comic's web site archives only a month of comics (the usual procedure for syndicated comics that appear on the web), but hey, you could always buy the books for more. |
| The Boondocks | 11/18/99 | This syndicated comic is one I've been dying to suggest for weeks. The main
reason I have to point it out to those who may have missed it in the daily paper is that it's so funny! The main
characters of this strip are black, and the author, Aaron McGruder, has no fear of finding humor in everyday situations
that most white people are afraid even to admit to. I'm amazed that it's syndicated, much less in the Washington Post,
and the sad thing is that the mere sight of this comic's characters seems to make a lot of people angry. If none of this
bothers you, you'll find a comic with hilarious, often old-timey jokes, and characters so well explored that, you'll
laugh out loud practically every day.
The character descriptions provided by the author provide a lot of the clues to what's going on. For example, one of the main characters, Huey, is a young righteous "intellectual". He may seem at first like a mouthpiece for the cartoonist, but read a few comics and you'll notice that he's still as naive as his age, and his moody, cynical attitude is as likely to backfire up on him as to be right. Riley, his younger brother, is always trying to cop an attitude, often the funniest part of the strip. I loved the sequence where he repaints all the streetsigns! The interaction between Huey and Riley is surprisingly believable, sometimes touching. The grandfather is just that, often unfoolable by the kids but just as often pathetically unable to remember where he put his hat. Without belaboring the point, Aaron shows multiple sides of any character or situation, while all the time keeping the humor the focus of the comic. UExpress keeps a generous four months of archive on hand for The Boondocks; go right to it and read the
earliest comic so that you don't miss any more than you have to! Aaron's own web
site, once beautiful and for a while the home of this comic before it was syndicated, seems to be having HTML problems
(I don't know why it always crashes my IE) as Aaron's production crew becomes busier with deadlines, interviews, and film
deals, but is nonetheless the source for the latest news about the comic when accessable.
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| Haul Trek | 11/25/99 | Now for something light... This color comic is updated very intermittantly, but I still check it often. It is
creatively produced entirely with computer tools, a little rough around the edges but still extremely attractive. A
"Star Trek" universe story, its main character is a "furry" named M'Iskiti, and the ship has a variety of wackily named officers.
M'Iskiti is a feline humanoid, and perhaps my favorite
female cartoon character on the Web :). Currently the comic seems to be on hiatus till January, but the archive is
still there for your enjoyment, and check out "Haul Trek"'s contribution to the big Halloween crossover of 1999, an
incredible number of panels containing not only plenty of the regular characters, but also renditions of dozens
of characters from other comics!
Update 3/5/01The hiatus seems permanent; enjoy the archive for now. Update 6/25/01Haul Trek is back! Or at least reborn... The authors have decided to rewrite the comic out of the Trek universe and make it a stand-alone story in order to increase their marketing rights. They're redoing each of the old comics with hopefully new ones to come. It's as beautifully rendered as ever, but I kind of liked M'Iskiti (now Mzzkiti) as a readhead! Update 1/5/02Trajedy has struck Frieghter Tails. One of the authors unexpectedly died last year, so this comic may be on hold from now on. |
| The Dark Hotel | 12/2/99 | Now for something really dark... I'm not sure what the update rate for this one is, but it doesn't matter because the archive is so gigantic that it's still unexhausted for me. "The Dark Hotel" is in color, and is basically a graphic novel. It consists of several distinct stories by various authors. The stories are broken into chapters related to how they were posted, so the organization of the index is not at first clear. Other than that, the site seems really well designed, with lots of nooks and corners for your exploring pleasure. When you read this comic, you will be plunged into a menacing, compelling world, each story the tale of a different resident of the hotel, ruined lives awash in obsession, crime, sex, and drugs. Reading the first story, The Manchurian Experiment will either intrige you or repulse you. In true nior fashion, it starts off: "There's a story. Sternelli, Room 37...." |
| Story Minute by Carol Lay | 12/9/99 | This comic is my other favorite comic from the Salon Comics offerings, all of which are good and some of which are in greater syndication. Story Minute is a complete and compelling new short short story every week; if it wasn't for the 55 word limit these would be ideal nanofictions. The thing that sets this comic apart is the fascinatingly good writing on the stories; each one is amazing. However, the addition of the stylish artwork helps a lot, if nothing else to set a clever and cynical mood. Story Minute's archives are a little disjointed; the above link is for the most recent, the 1999 and previous archives can be found here. |
| Never Never | 12/16/99 | Never Never is a comic strip about faeries! I love it because the fairies are always attempting grand conquests
of the world, and failing simply because nobody sees them, except for the one human character, a boy named Arthur.
Although it doesn't have the polished visual style some people expect in comics these days, I think the cartoonist, John
"The Gneech" Robey, has done a great job with the art and the concept. Inspired by Calvin and Hobbes, it never tumbles
into the schmaltz that plagued that comic, but is nonetheless full of charm (for example, the feline-mounted fairy
calvary). Sadly, in a story that seems to be repeating itself all over the Web, the author is getting pulled away by
other projects (not the least of which is Suburban Jungle, The Gneech's
other comic and probably the one he likes better -- *sniff!*), so read it while you can, and bookmark it for occasional
updates.
Update 3/5/01No updates since last year? This one is unlikely to ever be updated again, but the archive's still there Update 1/6/02Never Never is back! Yay! He started updating again a couple of months ago and has a new URL, the link here has now been updated. The story continues where it left off. Update 4/5/02D'oh! Dead again! |
| Bruno The Bandit | 12/23/99 | Oh Great, a comic about a medieval adventurer, with his comic companion a "microdragon". It sounded boring as hell when I first found it, but it turns out to be one of my favorite comics. The art on this one is accomplished, but what makes it for me is the writing. The story is set in a humorously anachronistic D&D/modern world which is played well for laughs without getting too silly (usually), and the main character is a delightfully amoral anti-hero. Although there is generally a punch-line in every comic, this one is best read in whole arcs at a time. Get thee to the archive (which is conveniently navigable) and just pick a story title and read it all the way through. Strongly recommended: "The Forbidden Game" story. |
| Mutts | 12/30/99 | Another syndicated comic, this one impressed me from the first day that I saw it in the newspapers. What a joy to find it on the Web. However, it was nearly a year after I first began reading it on the Web before I found it offered by its syndicate; I think they just didn't get on board for a long while. Fortunately, for me at least, "Mutts" seems to be the most pirated comic on the Web. It tends to generate the most dedicated and loving level of fans (and consequently, equally strong anti-fans), and for years there were folks out there who'd scan this thing in from the newspaper every day just to bring it to the world. Most of those sites have retired now that it's officially available, but the best is still hanging around and building up a giant archive of strips. After checking out the official site, bookmark MUTTS ONLINE, and on days when you feel overstressed or depressed, you can read a month's worth at a time to help put you back in a "Mutts" mood. There's also a ton of excellent fan sites out there; just begin following the links pages on each site. Start with MUTTS ONLINE or this other one which is also pretty comprehensive. |
| Dr Fun | 1/6/00 | Eeyore passes us this week's Webcomic link. "Dr Fun" is a near-daily single-panel format comic produced in color using a mix of computer tools, and has been going, on and off, since 1993! The sense of humor is a little whacked; some are brilliant, others a puzzlement. Nonetheless, there's endless amusement in the complete and easy-to-use archive. |
| Sabrina Online | 1/13/00 | This well drawn "furry" strip is produced at a really slow rate. It makes my list of comics I check the moment they're updated (in this case, monthly) on account of its nerdly computer humor. I don't even have a lot of experience with the background of this comic (connecting an Amiga to the Internet) and it makes me laugh anyway. Along the way, though, a good and likable set of characters has been developed, with lots of relationship stuff for you touchy-feely folks out there. Read the whole story from the start at The Unofficial Eric Schwartz Page's Sabrina Online Archive |
| Too Much Coffee Man | 1/20/00 | Too Much Coffee Man is a classic who's been around in one form or another for years. His web pages are continuously changing; sometimes there are plenty of comics for us to read, sometimes there's old stuff for a very long time, sometimes there's nothing and we're forced to search the web for pirate web sites. Currently, however, he seems to have a huge archive and is well organized. A pillar of hip cynicism, TMCM teaches us life's big lessons while making us wish our lives were as simple as having a big steaming cup on our heads and being cleverly drawn. Buy the books, too. |
| Penny Arcade | 1/27/00 | The computer gaming lifestyle shared by the main characters of this comic (and its authors) is not mine. However, I still find this comic to be hilarious; it is one of the ones I check every day it is updated. The passion for their subject gives the authors an excellent sense of comedic timing, and the art is particularly attractive. This comic, which I've only recently discovered, has been going for quite a while, and has a healthy archive. It also has a side comic, The Bench, which readers are encouraged to generate their own strips of. |
| Unlike Minerva | 2/3/00 | I haven't been able to decide if the gimmic behind this comic is for everyone. Even though I find it difficult to read sometimes, I really like it a lot, and have gotten endless hours of fun following all the links from this comic. The idea has been stated as "one comic, many artists." A creative writer, firm in his belief that he has insufficient artistic talent, has gotten a whole slew of friends to take turns drawing his strip for him. The story line is a strange combination of "Waiting For Godot" and "The Muppet Show", a fully thought out "furry" universe in which five characters inhabit the vaudeville "Minerva Theater". This solid framework has attracted a wide variety of guest artists, who switch in on a weekly to daily basis. This jumpiness can make it a little hard to follow at times. However, I enjoy seeing how each artist interprets the characters. It is also fun to follow the links to the artists' pages and learn more about them, from the astonishing Rina Cat to the charming Naraxa. Speaking of which, I have to applaud the webmaster of this site; there are daily and weekly pages available through the archives, and each one has thumbnails for the current artist's rendition of the five main characters. |
| When I Grow Up | 2/10/00 | This comic is a new favorite of mine. I was originally scared away by the
title, which sounded boring as hell. However, I discovered that it's really an adult
character-driven comic, and the cartoonist doesn't waste a lot of time milking or tidying
up a situation so the jokes are fast and loose. I like the characters in this one a lot.
They have a certain ordinary banality, despite some sillier background details, which
makes their reactions to various comedic situations hilariously natural. The main
character, Zoe Day, is a news anchor for a UHF station. She's eternally pissed off and
refreshingly free swearing. I'm not sure how "When I grow Up" relates to the story except
that WIGU is the call letters of Zoe's station; the "cast" page which shows the cast
both in the present and (chillingly) at 13 years old offers perhaps another clue.
The bottom of most of the pages contains a disclaimer reading: "New comic presented Monday - Saturday,
unless anything
bad happens or I give up hope."
Update 2/1/02After many attempts by the author to end the comic, it looks like it's finally over. He ended it on an upbeat note this time and switched to a new comic which is turning out pretty cool. The archive is still there, but I'm still going to miss Zoe, and of course Neal, who almost had his own comic. |
| The Parking Lot Is Full | 2/17/00 | Today's comic is courtesy of Diane Donaldson. "The Parking Lot Is Full" is frequently recommended on links pages along with a content warning of some kind. This single panel format comic aims to be disturbing, and when it succeeds it's amazing and unique. Sometimes it's merely sick, sometimes kind of stupid. Fortunately, it is much better drawn than the average Far Side knockoff. It's published at random intervals (about once a week), and has been going, amazingly, since 1995. The archive is fully thumbnailed and easy to use, and the web page has lots of toys on it, like the "random" button to complement the usual "archive" feature. As Diane says, "Usually odd, sometimes hilarious." |
| You Damn Kid | 2/24/00 | Black and White, 4-panel comic in a single panel space, published on average three times a week. This comic
featuring its author as a young kid is surprisingly funny considering the bulk of the stories are believably from his own
tragic youth. I really like the way the kid is drawn, too. My current favorites out of the archives are: "Luigi's Pizzaria" and "Dewey, Fleecem and Howe" (the latter
being on the subject of catholic school which is an endless source of comics no matter how you do it). The other two
cool things about this site are: He's done his own banner adds, which he serves randomly on his own pages and which are
all pretty clever, and the fact that he'll sometimes re-do a comic between when he first puts it up and when it goes
into the archive, so it's intersting to check back often. In conclusion, I was drawn to this site by the following
apt description of the comic from Freefall's links page: "There
are a lot of things about being a kid that no one talks about. Except this guy."
Update 6/5/03 Still Going. Every week there's a new plan for updates, but hey, whatever gets the comics on the net, I say. |
| Road Waffles | 3/2/00 | Another new favorite of mine, thank goodness it's published seven days a week. This comic requires you pretty
much to start at the beginning of the archive to get what's happening, if the weekly gun battles and characters getting
killed isn't enough simply to keep you amused. The comic starts with a convenience store robbery, a stolen car, and gets
crazy from there. I found the following quotes (from his own web site, admittedly) enough to get me interested, and very
accurate in retrospect:
"If Quentin Tarantino made a daily webcomic, this is what it would look like." - Josh Phillips, Avalon "Kind of like Natural Born Killers meets Pee-Wee's Big Adventure..." Aaron Holm, Joe Average Eight, the shadowy presence behind this nihilistic work, is a webpublishing powerhouse of comics; his "old comics" link to his old web site of discontinued work (one of
which will be next week's comic of the week) will keep you amazed and reading for days.
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| Max Panic | 3/9/00 | Max Panic is an earlier comic by Eight, and gets a recommendation of its own even though its original series is over. It is one of the first ones I've come across published on the web in "book" form, i.e. drawn and scanned in 8x10 pages with a front cover and back page. It turns out that there's a whole world of this format on the web, and later you'll see some recommendations for some of the ones I've found since. The succinct tag line for Max Panic is "The cure to boredom is to watch someone else suffering from boredom." It's essentially a (possibly autobiographical) story of a bunch of bored kids, watching TV or wandering around and blowing stuff up. Eventually they get ahold of a car and the fun really picks up. Look for the mushroom cloud in every issue! Watch as the comic slowly metamorphasises into "Road Waffles"! Thrill to every "Cammy London" story! He's doing new Max Panic now when he has time, but as those of you who have already scoured Eight's sites can attest, his style has matured impressively in the past few years. I think the fun and simplicity of the original Max Panic make it worth the several days it will take to read the entire archive. |
| Snail Dust | 3/16/00 | Napoleon, the author of this new comic, has a lot going on. You should read all her pages to get the full flavor. Snail Dust is published at random intervals, but is worth checking every once in a while. It's about three teens, and their real-life world. They hang around, have siblings and parents, play around on computers. The title is a pretty good metaphor for real life (as in "Caught in the.."), although a tiny glimmer of magic has begun to creep into the story for one of the characters. |
| Avalon | 3/23/00 | This comic has anime based art, anime situations (girl shows up at a party dressed too formally, academics and
romance, girl attempts to fight rumors of being a lesbian), and is set in... Canada? Avalon is the name of the Canadian
high school that this comic's characters all attend. If you find the setting counfusing at all, he explains it all in
his FAQ. My first rave for this comic is the art, which I think is superb. Secondly, the humor is original and unique.
Thirdly, I get the impression that the author is in touch with his subjects, which makes it honest, enjoyable reading.
And it's nice to know that somebody out there still listens to Rush. The site was really pretty nice looking for a
hand-maintained site...it's been moved to one of the big online comics' hosts recently, which gave it banner ads and
homogenized the layout and navigation somewhat, but it still has the orginal beautiful blue color and custom-imported
font.
Update 5/5/02I've been reading this one less and less; for some reason, I have had a hard time following the story line on a day-to-day basis thanks to the tangled relationships between the characters. However, when reading the story from beginning to end the clarity of the writing stands out; it's absolutely brilliant. What may seem like melodrama at first is actually character growth which unfolds with the gradualness of real life. So, my advice is to consider Avalon to be some kind of graphic novel. Any current strip will make no sense unless you've read the first, but it's very satisfying to become familiar with the characters and experience their growth over time, and try to untangle the "web of twistiness" yourself. Also, the guest strips, now a permanent feature of Sundays, add a whole new dimension by deconstructing the Avalon storyline, either through fanfics or original strips with the dialog humorously changed. |
| Cool Cat Studio | 3/30/00 | This amazing brand new comic has only been going a week or two. That's why the site is fast and there aren't any banner ads yet. I had to recommend it as quickly as possible so that you could track its progress from near-birth. The drawing on this one is unbelievable, and the concept seems fully developed. The humor seems pretty good too, but as the link which referred me to it the first time said (approximately): "Evil Cats! What more could you possibly want?" |
| Out Of Fika | 4/6/00 | Another one of the few, the proud, the 7-day comics, Out Of Fika has only been going since December but I'm quite
hooked. Based on the legend of an obscure (and possibly insane) Norse goddess, this comic is filled with
"Watchmen"-level mystique, cleverly camouflaged by a playful writing and drawing style. There's superheroes and mad
scientists running around, and Fika herself is charmingly short tempered and purple-haired. The artist used to publish
giant color comics on tuesdays before the burden became too great; maybe someday it will be able to resume. The
storyline has lots of directions it can go, but it's taking it's time doing it so that we have enough opportunities to
ponder the surreal and emotive events that unfold.
Update 3/5/01 Currently on sabbattical. Out Of Fika dropped off the web completely for about 6 months, and then one day reappeared with a new storyline and no hint of the earlier material. I am happy to report, however, that all known Out of Fika strips recently seem to have been posted to the archive to tide us over during the current hiatus. Read them now before they're taken down again! Update 1/8/02A couple of months ago this address went dead and cannot be reached. Fika's gone again, don't say you weren't warned! RIP. |
| Sinfest | 4/13/00 | The title says it all; this comic aims to offend anybody it can with it's hyper-sophisticated ("Pimpin'") attitude. The author's art is also quite slick, as steeped in pop cultural references as everything else in the strip. Despite all of this, this comic is occasionally surprizingly fresh. In between parodying just about every Calvin Clein advertisement ever done, and showing the characters of syndicated comics in various sexual positions, Tatsuya Ishida is on target with such mundane topics as dogs versus cats, women and men, and of course God. In most of the religion comics, my favorites, God is shown as a hand in the clouds, mocking the devil with hand puppets, or any humans that have the gall to whine. Sinfest is not for the weak of stomach, but it's quite a window on the follibles of humanity and it will be interesting to see where it goes. Amazingly, produced 7 days a week. |
| It's Gravy! | 4/20/00 | It's Gravy! is a nice simple comic, with a nice simple web site, and a loooong archive. I'm pretty happy that the author is able to crank these out reliably, because I find his sense of humor pretty funny, in a relaxed sort of way. The character page(Currently unaccessable 5/01) gives you a pretty good idea for the flavor of this comic. The main character is Andy, described as "pretty much a normal kid, he's imaginative but gullible.", while his best friend Paul "occasionally makes really bad comics about Andy and posts them on his homepage." You can kind of see the origin of It's Gravy! right there :) Actually, Paul strikes me as a more grownup character, sort of like the professor on Gilliagan's Island, only maybe not that mature. The drawing style is not fancy, but still pretty expressive, sort of like Sluggy in that regard, and the humor is cheap, funny, and just whacked enough to make it unique and worth reading every day. |
| LCD | 04/27/00 | I've been following this one for a while, and would have recommended it sooner if it were published more
frequently. But it's pretty cute; it's a comic about TV news, and LCD of course stands for Lowest Common Denominator. I
get the impression that this comic is written for the fun of it's author, full of jokes at the expense of the industry
and interesting (and well-drawn) characters; this is what makes it worth checking a couple of times a week. The
first-person perspective is LCD's strength: the characters are refreshingly "real" western (not just the usual
stereotypes), with fully thought-out backgrounds that make the three main women characters more than just
pretty faces.
Update 6/5/03 On Sabbatical. |
| Dragon Tails | 5/4/00 | Ok, I admit that I was skeptical of this one after hearing about it (I got a recommendation). But having checked it out, I have to wholeheartedly advertise it. As expected, it's a humorous look at the lives of a bunch of computer-rendered dragons. But, contrary to my expectations, I think it's pretty funny. Perhaps the best part is that it's a really sweet, G-rated humor which I find unique on the Net, without being too stupid (IMHO). The rendering is pretty good, but a bit dark on my computer -- a telltale sign of macintosh produced graphics. It's been going 7 days a week since last year, so it has an enormous archive. How does the author find the time to do this comic? |
| Minding My Own Business | 5/11/00 | It's another anime inspired comic. The art is amateur, but I really respect the way he tries something new all
the time. The unique aspect of this comic is its writing. In fact also in the style of a lot of anime (or perhaps more
accurately, magna), MMOB focuses on tangled relationships. There are long, dreamy sequences with melancholy song lyrics
woven in, or characters are represented by their emotions, or as projections of how they look to others. It's totally
angst-ridden, but so creative about it that I nonetheless keep checking it every once in a while to see what he's come up
with next. Published at semi-random intervals somehow adding up to most of the days of each week.
Update 1/30/03I checked this one recently and found it had moved. Along with the move, the author brought a new drawing style and new developments. The original archive appears to be gone. I like the new stuff, it's a little more polished while still holding onto the original contemplative style. My link to this comic has been changed to the new site. |
| Minimum Security | 5/18/00 | As the author states, the title of "Minimum Security" refers to a comment from someone just released from prison who was pointing out the repressiveness of American society: "I'm still not free; I'm just in minimum security." This folk-art-drawn comic is the leftist, feminist, political and social commentary you might see in weekly papers around the country, if you like that sort of thing. I do; this is a particularly good example, and I'm glad its available on the web. Be sure to check out the author's yummy paintings as well. |
| The Wandering Ones | 5/25/00 | The Wandering Ones is a type of comic you might be surprised to see me recommending, a "serious" daily serial. I can't stand seeing these in print, but I guess the pain of the slow refresh rate is somehow softened by the frequency of the same thing elsewhere on the web. The thing about this one that keeps me checking it every day is its classic science fiction plot, and it's successful "EC" vintage style art. This comic was just recently started (In fact, I read it on its first day), so it will be interesting to see where it goes. Tip: start at the first comic to get the benefit of the writing so far. |
| Everything Jake | 6/1/00 | I have a pretty big gripe about this comic. It's POV is painfully immature. It's the story of Jake, college
freshman, who is humiliated in this comic in just about every possible way. Women are portrayed as irrational sex
objects. Most of the characters are stupid. So why do I check it every single day (it's 7 days a week), causing me to
recommend it here? Strangely, it's entirely possible that all of this is intentional, and what we're seeing is
successfull POV writing. Embarassing or not, I kind of like Jake anyhow. But most of all, it's so nicely drawn. Keep
checking it; I think it's really going to turn into something.
Update 7/15/02Everything Jake is still around, which is a good reason to revisit my review. The author is struggling against the usual herculean odds of keeping a daily comic going. These days it's mostly MWF and a lot of text in between the drawings. I like the superhero mystery, which we still don't get to see more than a tiny bit of, and I still like the characters. But in between that there are some really rough parts that just can't reconcile. Monster points off for actually using technobabble like "Energy Signature". |
| The Bench | 6/8/00 | Remember when I told you about a little side project to Penny Arcade called "The Bench?" Well, those of you that
liked Penny Arcade probably know that The Bench has been fully developed into an independent organism by its original
authors. Now it has its own domain name, and all comics are submitted by the readers. There is even a highly automated
system for accepting submissions. The basic concept remains the same: A guy and a squirrel and a bench, develop it
however you want. It's a pretty rarified concept; how many submissions could there be? How about two thousand so far
and still growing rapidly? The sheer enormity of this collection is its surprising drawback, because you have to view it
a page at a time, which takes a while. There's a wide variety in the quality of the work. There's a lot of crap,
fawning references to the Penny Arcade universe or gags dependent on already-stale current events, but there's also a
good number of pieces of timeless genius, or at least creative uses of paintshop. With a T1 or better connection this
huge archive can be an entertaining project to complete.
Update 4/19/01Recently vanished off the net for lack of a human host (somebody to maintain the huge archive of strips, accept new submissions, and pay for the immense disk space and traffic required), I am not sure when this will be coming back. The Bench was a much beloved institution; I can't believe that there isn't somebody among its collective fans who won't pick it up! |
| Cruel Fate | 6/15/00 | Holy mushroom clouds, Batman! Another new comic by Eight! Cruel Fate is a so-called "mini-series" hosted by Keenspot, the current home of Road Waffles. It will run only for the month of June, and is promised to be a complete story within that time. The link I gave over on the left is to the first comic in the story; use this link to go to the daily current page. It's gotten off to a bang so far, rapidly shifting into the Eight trademark nihilism with a suicide attempt in the first week (you have been warned). But even so, the introspection present in much of his work aside from Road Waffles and the old Max Panic is here as well, making me excited every day to see where this story is going to go. |
| AM i DUMMY | 6/22/00 | This is one of the comic book style on-line comics that I mentioned a long time ago in comparison to Max Panic. I found this late one night and read as much as I could (it's
hosted by probably the world's slowest server) and found it visually and thematically disturbing. The story wanders
around a bit, starting with a pretty miserable main character, who hates his life so much that his own cat is compelled
to mention in english "You've gotta stop trying to think so much". If you're interested in something lighter, it turns
out that the author of AM i DUMMY has an archive of earlier discontinued works. I recommend the formative SUN SHiNE DAZE, which features such crowd pleasing elements as bright color computer rendering, big
anime eyes, a bunch of punks wandering around the country in a tour bus, a psycho killer, and a kid who may be crossing
over into a paranormal combat world. It's a great story until it basically imploded in the last issue and Tep wisely
decided to kill it.
Update 5/10/01One day I checked this comic, and it's gone! I guess he forgot to pay for his domain. This comic was something special. |
| Superstar Car Wash | 6/29/00 | It's Superstar Car Wash, the comic that makes Red Meat look drawn from scratch every day. Basically, the author has taken a bunch of high-contrast-xeroxed images of famous people or characters (and occasionally the author or his friends) and slapped them down in comic panels, which are then themselved xeroxed three or four times as required to make a full strip, and then dialog is added to imply that the characters are engaing in oral sex or masturbation or what-have-you. Not for kids, I guess. It's actually occasionally pretty funny, and fun to see the pop icons of our childhood get used for cheap laughs, but the best part is that you can read the entire archive without feeling too bad about it. Just crunch 'em down like popcorn. Actually, the best part is that the archive's background makes fun of "TAB" soda. No longer updated, but the archive is there. |
| Boat Anchor | 7/6/00 10/31/02 |
Well, last time I checked, this webcomic was DEAD. No updates since March, no clue as to what happened. Too
bad, because it was really on a roll. Well, just read the archive; there's plenty there. I find this comic to be unlike
any other on the web. The art may seem a little puzzling at first. It looks like it was drawn with a mouse, and the
characters are all drawn really tiny. This seems to fit right in with the subject of the strip, however, which is that
your computer at work hates you. Having toiled in this air-conditioned environment for most of my "career", I find the
humor in "Boat Anchor" to be roll-on-the-floor funny, and spot-on.
Update 3/5/01Sadly, it seems that Boat Anchor is no more. Updates suddenly stopped about a year ago, and now the site is totally off the Web. I still do web searches for it every once in a while but haven't come up with anything yet. If anybody knows what happened to this strip, let me know. I liked Boat Anchor so much that I would even find a home for its old archive on the web somewhere if it still exists. Update 10/31/02It's Back! Somehow, the author has managed to bring back this project and even got the URL. It's better than ever; as the author said in an e-mail alerting me, "same characters, but now it's drawn with a tablet". However, in an even more rare twist, all the hilarious old comics are still available in the archive. Check it all out now! |
| Diary Of A Crazed Mimbanite | 7/13/00 | I recently found this Star Wars parody on the web, recommended by a link on a very obscure comic page. Updated
irregularly, this is the work of a hard-core fan. It seems to be generally a post-"Phantom Menace" perspective, but
still covers the first three movies and contains references to backstory elements you wouldn't pick up except by total
immersion. The characters page helps somewhat in explaining
the chactactitures' odd points, although a lot of it is the author's own crazed perspective, which may be explained on the about the author page.
Update 10/31/02 There is no indication why this comic suddenly stopped updating, but the archive is still up and available. |
| Dizzy Dustbin | 7/20/00 | Just started this month, on the web page of the author of You Damn Kid, this comic is purported to be the work of "an old army buddy" of his grandfather's that he "found in the attic". As you can tell, I don't buy it. But these comics have been funny so far. The premise makes a great excuse for some pretty rude humor, as well. Update 5/10/01The URL changed a bit; update your bookmarks |
| explodingdog | 7/27/00 | Found this truly odd thing on the Web thanks to a link from Penny Arcade. Is it a web comic or some kind of web art? On a fairly regular basis, the artist will take 4 or 5 short phrases sent to him by readers and make a one-panel drawing based on each one. The drawing style is very basic and compelling, but what's really amazing is the "writing" that goes between the original phrase and the artist's finished scene. explodingdog will sometimes make you laugh, and sometimes make you cry; a mark of great skill. It's a fascinating zone of uber-creativity found between the borders of more commonplace art. It's has been happening since this January, so the archive is up to thousands of pictures already; I tend to like the more recent stuff over the first ones, although I've found a few of my favorite jems in January's pages nonetheless. |
| Modern Living | 8/10/00 | You might debate whether this qualifies as a web comic. But it was recommended to me as such and has some of the characteristics of my other picks, specifically regular updates, an archive, and a visual drawing style. Rather than a collection of static panels, however, Modern Living is an interactive flash animation, a medium found only on the Internet. You advance the "story" of the animation by interacting with it, either by clicking on certain parts or merely through mouse-overs. There's an audio component as well; he's done some really neat things with looped music -- I recommend examples number 67 and number 63 in particular. The character of this comic is a self portrait of the author himself, and is said to be an autobiography in progress. As such, it is occasionally depressing and self-loathing, but it is also occasionally tender. |
| Too Fat To Be A Rock Star | 12/7/00 | This comic has both the greatest name and the greatest URL. It's the adventures of a sort of "Young
Meatloaf"-like character, his band and friends. Later on he gets a girlfriend. You just know he's based on someone
real, someone probably a lot like someone we know. Perhaps this is what causes the humor to impress me as fresh and
funny; maybe it's simply weird enough to tickle my funny bone. The characters are obviously fully realized and there are
lots of "been there" inside music jokes. I also respect that the author is keeping up all his early work, especially
since it's pretty important to the continuity of the story and characters. Even though it's not as pretty at the start
as, say, Sluggy Freelance, it's some of the funniest stuff, and it's really neat to see how the artist's style has
evolved. Sadly, I've discovered just now that the strip is going on hiatus until January, but the archive, which my link
starts you at the front of, will provide you all the fun you need till then.
Update 3/25/01Too Fat To Be A Rock Star is back! Consequently, I have updated my main link for this comic to it's current comic. Updated approximately three times a week. Update 12/25/01It's gone! It's back! He lost his old URL so I've updated my link to the new one. Update 6/5/03 Given up for good, even the new URL is gone. Update 1/8/04 Remi's maintaining too-fat.com again! The sharp-looking site now contains recent non-fat work, although reposting of the old archives is promised in the hazy future. |
| Modern Tales: Odd Jobs | 12/14/00 | Totally the coolest thing on the web right now. A "private detective" story in formation, this stylishly drawn
black-and-white twice weekly comic is the noir adventures of David DiAngelo, making a living taking odd jobs where the
cutting edge of personal technology meets the dark underside of middle America. Only a couple of months old, it's first
story line has already knocked my socks off, with so many twists, turns and tensions, drawn out with savory anticipation,
that checking this comic is the first thing I do each tuesday and thursday. This comic is often compared to the best
episodes of "Twin Peaks", a fair if unimaginative comparision, so I'm sure you'll like it.
Update 5/25/02Odd Jobs has joined the mostly stellar webcomic collective Modern Tales, one of a few webcomic pay sites that is springing up in an effort to find monentary support for the bandwidth costs that web comics incur. Odd Jobs is generous enough to maintain the three most recent comics at the old site for free, but to see the archives you must be a member of the collective. Now, it doesn't cost much, and you get all the other comics on the site to go with it, as I understand, so why not bite the bullet and join? Update 7/17/03 Finally changed the Modern Tales link to the new story. Sorry for the delay. Update 1/21/04 The author has moved entiredly to Modern Tales so I removed the old link. |
| Diesel Sweeties | 12/21/00 | I've kinda cooled on this one since I first discovered it, but the stunning mix of fresh concepts that make up Diesel Sweeties will probably still have the same effect on you as it did on me. This comic was my first exposure to the surprisingly vast world of "pixel" art on the web. Although blown up to a large size, the visual medium here is how much expression can you fit into characters composed of the same number of pixels as the Mario Brothers or Pac-Man. Answer: it's darned respectable. As a PC-age dinosaur, I find that this art form really talks to me. Secondly, the characters are instantly lovable. There's Clango the robot, his girlfriend Maura a jaded ex-porn star, her wonton little sister, their friend "Indy Pete", and a growing phlanx of guest friend appearances who are increasingly dragging the strip down. Lastly, it's got "Diesel" in the title. I recommended this one excitedly to the WTS by e-mail before, but several months later it's still worth a look, and now updated a glorious 5 days a week. |
| Living In Greytown | 1/4/01 | Living In Greytown embodies everything that is great about what quaintly used to be called "underground comics".
It's an explosion of surreal and slightly disturbing characters, art, and stories made sense of by reading the character bios or just reading the entire archive from the start (the latter strongly
recommended). There's only one premise here. Greytown is a town from which there is no escape, thanks to a particular
devil, "Phil". Phil is too unimaginative to actually torture the people and talking animals who are unlucky enough to
enter or inhabit Greytown; fortunately they are all too willing to do that themselves. All the characters are
terrifically cute, which makes the drama of their wretched lives all that much more heartbreaking. In the story, Phil
recently faced down a much more evil demon for control of the town, so it's hard to say where this story will go, but I
check it every day in total anticipation that it will be great. Also, be sure to check out the author's other project,
Otaku Feh!. If you find Living In Greytown to be too burdened with plot,
Otaku Feh is just what's on the artist's mind this week. It recently ran a thorough a hilarious parody of Sinfest which ended in controversy, so you'd better check it out before it vanishes
for some reason.
Update 3/1/02LiG ended magnificantly recently. I was sad, until Dave started up Lizard |
| The Crater Kid | 1/11/01 | It gives me great pleasure to finally get the chance to recommend this comic. It's a little bit different than
most of the others I read, a colorful serial in 3-panel daily format. It's a mixture of eye-candy (a hip homage to
1950's design and science-fiction, so slick looking that I avoided it for a while thinking it to be a scam of some type)
and some pretty clever story lines. An energetic cowboy outfit-wearin' kid is zapped to an alien planet where everything
is patterned after meticulously studied drive-in movies, because the hipster Diz and floating, glass-bowl-covered
"Sponge" have a premonition that he is a "true hero". So far he has helped them solve two mysteries of their odd and
thematic world ("The Screaming Stones" and "Howling Mountain"), and now
faces simultaneous dangers in the new "The Whispering Well".
Although built on a solid kitch foundation, the stories turn out to be anything but cliche, touched with meloncholy and
requiring unusual thinking on the part of the Kid, but never straying out of "G" rating territory.
Update 5/5/02I don't know why, but this comic is now just re-running it's archives, so I'm putting it on the inactive list. |
| Puffy Cloud | 1/18/01 | With only a few comics published so far, "Puffy Cloud" assumes you know all about its characters without a whole lot of development. That's because it relies on the solid foundation of superhero parody, so it can leave behind all the overhead of explaining the situation and launch directly into the jokes. However, the humor is very laid back, using the superhero context as a flavor rather than a pretext. Puffy Cloud spends less time saving the city with his friend "Bottle Rocket" than hanging out with his lazy roommate or just doing laundry. He doesn't have a flashy costume, and his super power is as vauge as a "ground hugging fog". The art is subtly humorous too; like the humor the strength is in what is not shown. Sorry about all the broken links in his archive; these comics always seem to pick the week I post them for a disasterous site redesign. |
| Polymer City | 1/25/01 | Another comic born of video gaming culture, Polymer City also has the bonus influence of a "big chicks with
muscles" subculture and an attractive "furry" character thrown in as well. I think it's boffo and love the super-clean
line drawing style. I'll never be pleased with navigating the archives for this comic; the ones for this year have the
old system, only accessable from links on the front page, but while the year one archive finally has "previous/next"
links the hilarious titles which used to exist in those frustrating front page links are lost. Update 5/10/01 This comic wasn't updated for a long time, although the old site was still there. I figured it was dead, but it turns out that it moved without telling us! I finally found it; I've changed the link, update your bookmarks accordingly. Update 7/15/02Polymer City lost their URL recently, and man was I sad. I finally found its new home just as word was getting out via other artists' web sites, so I've updated my link according. It's weird how something can just suddenly disappear off the net sometimes, especially without the owner's permission. Update 1/30/03 Wow, this comic was going great with a suspenseful serial story and then the author just freakin pulled the plug. It's still updating, but these days I can't bear to even check it because of the memory of the heights it had achieved. Just my opinion. |
| Superosity | 2/1/01 | From the creator of Keenspot, this is one of the comics that I first hated, now can't live without. My initial negative feelings were from my first visual impressions; the author is one of those who enjoys drawing ugly characters for the humor of it. The situation is a little far out there too, although you'd think that would be no surprise in the webcomic world. Brothers Chris and Bobby wear superhero outfits, but don't do anything although they are apparently well-nigh indestructable. Chris has befriended a sentient ironing board, who has the ability to invent anything including time travel and acts as Chris' guardian. They are supported by a thoroughly unlikely cast of extras such as a cigarette smoking turtle with a mohawk, an alternate-timeline Kato Kaelin, a horrendous looking school janitor, etc. Fortunately, it all somehow hangs together with a cynical and consistently insane world view. Taking any nearly impossible situation, you usually get Chris's sweet-but-stupid perspective and Bobby's uncontainable rage. Hollywood producers, internet companies, politicians are mercilessly portrayed. It's all infinitely quotable. In general, the two best parts of this comic are Bobby, who always says exactly what's on his mind, and Chris' one true love Arcadia, who is a total babe, one of my favorite cartoon women on the internet! |
| The Bad Boys Of Computer Science | 2/08/01 | The typical autobiographical comic about a college student computer geek and his friends. BBOCC is endeared to
me mostly for its art, although its author so freely acknowledges the woodenness of his style as to make a "bench" file
for his strip available. Still, I like it, and the author's sense of humor is good for a surprise most of the time.
Part of the on-line gaming conspiracy, expect to see jokes about all the current games, although he's also got plenty of
original content on the subject so he's not just posing. Published whenever possible, with a nice long archive.
Update 1/30/03 The URL is gone. |
| Robot Stories: Real Tales of Retail | 2/22/01 | Part of the "Diesel Sweeties" robot empire, this comic uses the prism of the mechanical man to tell alternately
transcendently metaphorical or depressingly true-life stories of the retail grind. It's ingeniously coded to look like
it's been drawn on the back of a paper bag when the boss isn't looking (and in the early stages, was updated infrequently
enough to believe it). Although it's really well drawn, I'm a fan of "Robot Stories" for the writing. So far it hasn't
lost its originality in the first few strips, so I get the impression that Neil will be able to milk that crappy job for
ideas for a long while.
Update 6/5/03 Still going strong, after a frightening break around January 2003. Update 1/8/04 On Sabattical while the author reconsiders his motivation. |
| Shinku-tokimekisempukaku | 3/2/01 | This cartoonist should have no trouble getting the URL... Found this by accident just this week, I think it's
pretty funny. It's another example of the ubiquity and creativity of gaming culture on the Net, sort of a "SunShine
Daze" meets "Wendy the On-line comic". I enjoy the great art on this one, the fact that the artist is not afraid to draw
the hands Real Big to fit all four fingers on, Nichole's guest strips, and the way that the characters are all so
free-swearing.
Update 1/25/02Shinku has ended. There's a new comic, but I can't seem to get into it for some reason, I guess because it's a serial. But check it out. |
| Untitled Again | 3/09/01 | It's hard to believe that I've only found one link to this comic so far! Obviously the work of an art student similar to the main character, this comic revisits the old story of the artist whose works become real. This comic stands out for the modern and realistic development of the events which unfold, the art, and the occasional equally satisfying forays into the characters themselves. The characters (and apparently the author too) are young and horny, so the story has already gotten to the point where they attempt to create a female roommate. So far I've found this story line a little misogynistic, but it's only comedy after all, and it seems to be getting more tolerable again. Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Check out the other comics in the mini-network, "The Four Toontellers", of which Untitled Again is a part. |
| Life's So Rad | 3/29/01 | Well, I finally got around to recommending one of Corey Marie Kitley's webcomics. She's been publishing for years, a venerable old name on the 'net, but I just couldn't get into the art until recently. Something about the pencil shading, and those eyes. The current story has pulled me in, however. It features Corey and her boyfriend and their friends and their band, and is pretty polished looking. Web comics based on the author and friends are not so unusual, but this one is such a blurring of web comic and web journal that it's almost frightening. However, at the moment it's also one of the few that deals with happy characters, so it's kind of a lift to read. |
| Peep | 4/5/01 | This month's darling of the Internet, Peep may seem at first like a throwaway effort, nothing more than a
whimsical doodle, possibly one of those saccharine awful things. But it's not, fortunately; it's more like a parody of
all that. Often, the words are in the form of a poem, which is one of the great things about this comic, but instead of
the usual uplifting lesson there's a surprise ending, as in the first one. Sometimes it starts out weird and stays that
way, as in "hooker peep". Hopefully the author, Nichole Stabile, will be able to continue not taking this comic
seriously for a while.
Update 3/5/02Gone, after a period of inactivity. |
| 11 Will Die | 4/12/00 | Just found this one this week! I'm so excited that once again the awesome comic of the week I was going to recommend this week has been bumped back. First off, what a great name! Secondly, what a great setup for a story (although are those dice I hear rolling in the background?). Then I find out that the author has set it up as a great writing experiment, where who will die next is being fed to him by a panel of friends, and he writes it from there. Lastly, darn nice drawin'. Points off for not setting up the archive with serial links that allow us to read it like a book. |
| Ko Fight Club | 4/19/01 | I really should have mentioned this one a while ago, right after finding it through Too Fat To Be A Rock Star, especially since it's a comic about board games and I'm writing for Wunderland here! Russ seems to share the Looney's love of games; he is a great fan of Go, and knows about those "German-style board games", and has a parlor night of his own down in Austin, Texas. (Austin is also the source of Shinkutokimekisempukaku and other neat stuff I've coincidentally found recently, apparently apparently it's some kind of rising Net Culture Nexus.) I haven't had a chance to fully explore the riches of this site yet, but from when I started reading a few weeks ago the comic has been throughly entertaining, mostly due to its highly experimental approach. Some weeks it's job search jokes with the figure of a guy talking on the phone, then it's comics made with hand-carved stamps of bugs and snails, then it's a hand drawn extravaganza where he sets his favorite characters (and mine) from other comics against each other in a deathmatch ("Russ, you lazy bastard! Draw me in color! I've been in color for weeks!"). Somewhere in here too are strips for The Bench, Bench adaptions for the Watchmen, and lots of Go jokes I haven't gotten to yet. |
| Ancient Messages | 4/26/01 | The review that pointed me in the direction of this comic (from the author of Too Fat To Be A Rock Star) was just three letters, "WOW", but I tend to agree. It's
the story of a young woman (13 years old? Younger?) who has to go live with her creepy uncle in the country while her
hateful parents get a divorce. She eventually realizes that he's not so bad, but we soon learn that dark forces are
afoot, and an epic story is just beginning to unfold, and she's caught in the middle of it. As Remi also points out, the
art on this comic is just right; a simple line style which is really quite expressive and appropriate to the POV of the
heroine. Update 5/5/02The author is ending the comic, having had a good run. Although it is going at the moment, it will soon join the ranks of "static with archive". |
| Call Me Julius Caesar | 5/10/01 | Wow! Just found this last night and I'm flipping over it! To those familiar with the mystique of Magna, it may
not seem so different, but right now there's nothing like it on Keenspace. Apparently produced by a Thailander, the
disclaimer reads (suspiciously I might add) "WARNING::my english is so poor,i mean,real bad-_-dont forget to ignore my
gramma as well & Nothing here is really about Roman history,most are from my own imagination.so if u saw sth weird in my
comix,just ignore it,okay?". I'm really grooving on the crazy words - teen angst - - SF - magna layout mix, and the art
is just totally fabulous. I apologize in advance, however, for the hours you will spend downloading each strip; it's
either the world's slowest server or the world's farthest away. It will be worth it.
Update 8/5/01Ha, the joke's on me. I recommended this comic and it was already dead! No updates since March, but for some reason it's address is still accessable, so check out the limited archive if you wish. |
| Nukees | 05/17/01 | Nukees has been published on the web for a long time. I've had some issues with it (King Lucia), but it won me over with it's recent Gav gets an afterlife story, so here it is. Published out of Berkely, with lots of local in-jokes, it's main character based on the author started off as a perpetual student, now is described more often as a mad scientist. He and his friends in the same department build improbable nuclear powered devices and basically live the physics/engineering college wet dream. Both physics and college jokes have gotten a little too old for me, but despite the fantasy setting the characters have a lot of hidden depth. The character of "Suzy Gee", at first a triumph of drawing, has now become a very interesting and sympathetic bridge to the real world. Other characters, although less complex, are still pretty likeable. Nukees has evolved nicely over the years and I now check it frequently. |
| Celly's Wings | 05/24/01 | With six issues posted it's time to recommend this "book form" comic; I've been following it since its early days. It's a cute "anime style" by a talented high-school (now college) artist who loves to render herself and her friends, and write a melodramatic fantasy universe to put them in. One of the most exciting things about the comic is being able to learn a little bit about the author. She's got so much self confidence that it's really inspiring ("Multiracial, baby! Yeah!"), and it's impossible not to love such a bold expression. The art just keeps getting better and better, and has a good mastery of manga principles in both form and content, so I hope Starline doesn't quit soon. |
| Exploitation Now | 6/7/01 | Exploitation Now is a fun comic because it doesn't get too hung up on what genre it is or type of plot you should expect. This is an anime-influenced sexy- main- character- with- an- odd- "furry"- roommate- and- a- megalomaniacal- teenaged- girl- landlord- with- a- basement- full- of- high- tech- weapons,- a- lazer- blasting- arm- prosthetic- and- a- "Dark Angel"- backstory type of comic. The archive is long and there's lots of links to related precursor material by the same artist. The comic may have recently aquired a direction with the recent suspenseful "Jordon" backstory, but I'm not holding my breath. This is a relatively young comic, so catch it while its still fresh. |
| Look What I Brought Home | 6/14/01 | Since the WWN's on vacation this week, it's a perfect opportunity to sneak in a recommendation for Look What I Brought Home. This is probably the most digusting comic on the Internet, not necessarily for the crude, sexually deviant, taboo-squishing subject matter, but for the casual way it pulls it off. The authors (Yeah, right, like anybody's wife would ever be caught dead associated with something like this) don't seem to be working too hard to be this gross. Consequently it's often shockingly funny. The drawing style is deceivingly simple, and the unwashed characters seem so natural that it's easy to get the impression that, maybe somewhere, life is like this. Serious recalibration will be required after reading this comic, and you may need to shower repeatedly after logging off, but it's funny enough that I would be remiss in not listing it among my top comics. |
| Not Gonna Take It | 6/21/01 | Another great high-school furry comic. This one has knocked me off my chair for the clarity of its writing and
its excellent drawing. The main characters are all anthropromorphic cats. In a surpisingly refreshing twist, the main
character is a popular and handsome athelete, his girlfriend is the popular cheerleeder. There's no hint of irony,
however their friends are a little rougher, a shy kid covering it up with swagger and a young girl who happens to be a
witch and has an adorable bird for a best friend. The recent Kiwi story was so full of pleasant surprises that I'm
surprised I never found this comic until just recently. Points off for having a title that gets that stupid song stuck
in my head every time. Will the author continue to write NGTI after she graduates?
Update 8/8/02The answer was no. I wonder what happened? Update 6/5/03 Still sputtering along with occasional updates. The author continues to experiment with drawing styles and plot directions, most of which are interesting. but she's too busy with RL to keep up and the new site design is incredibly slow to download. |
| Journey To The West | 6/28/01 | Oh my. Journey To The West is a rare find, something that can truly be called Internet Art. I haven't stumbled across work of this caliber since my earliest days hunting for webcomics. It's insanely beautiful, deep, compelling, experimental and bold. Making use of the full palatte of computer generated visual textures, as well as linkage and animation that you almost never see anymore, every panel is a visual feast unrestricted to any single artistic style. The characters are amazingly multi-dimensional given the number of pages and amount of dialog that have been published so far. The story is complex while at the same time unhurried, and involves many modern myths including one of my favorites, the Men In Black. But more than just the story, the author is packing Journey To The West with massive doses of philosophy with no fear of educational presentation. Zen anecdotes and principles are frequently explored, as is the mystery of the Sonoran west. |
| The List Of The Day | 7/5/01 | Ok, the LOTD, part of the Dilbert page, is not really a web comic. It is,
however, a enormously entertaining comic-related site that I read whenever at all possible and which can eat up hours of
web surfing time. Contrary to my expectations, the comic itself has not lost any of its edge and remains funny on a
daily basis. I mean, how much can you say about your dumb boss, and besides Scott did that whole animated series thing.
You'd think the well would be tapped dry, but he always comes up with something new and interesting. But that's just the
icing on the cake. The real pleasure is the LOTD, a forum where readers submit entries to categories like "Best things
to say on the phone when you know your office mates are evesdropping" or "Worst reasons for denying training requests".
I love reading the often real-life horror stories of these tourtured twisting drones, sprinkled with occasionally innane
references to current events or politics. It's also interesting that the best stories come not only from the white
collar workers, but also members of the armed forces and the fast-food sector, making the LOTD a visceral and sympathetic
window on the world. The number of entries is often 20 or so pages long, sorted by popularity due to the use of a
"voting" option, and there's also a sadly weekly "short list" which is the condensed top 20 entries from some earlier
category. The archive is only 5 days deep, so you have to check it often.
Update 4/8/02The sellout of Dilbert continues, as the LOTD was cut for failing to generate internet revenue. Well, it was getting repetitive, but I'll still miss it. |
| Lynda Barry's One Hundred Demons | 7/12/01 | This comic is not active, but it's so good that I have to mention it anyways. We all know and love Lynda Barry,
and there's probably even outlets for "Ernie Pook's Comeek" out there, although I haven't found them. This is not that
one, but one which claims to be more autobiographical. True or not, the stories in this comic are compelling, and
interesting, and from a "looking back" perspective that an oldster such as myself can really identify with. It is very
interesting to read these and feel like you're getting a glimpse into the famous artist's past and present life.
Update 1/8/01One Hundred Demons is over, but you can now get Ernie Pook at this address, so everything is good. |
| And Then There Was Fred | 7/26/01 | I am not running out of web comics, I just happen to like this one even though it is over. My link starts you at the front of the archive. There's no "calendar" table for the archive, so you'll just have to read it like a book. It doesn't look like much, a quickly dashed off stick figure comic similar on the surface to "Cynicalman". The humor is a lot quirkier though, very charming in a "Mutts" sort of way, with enough of a storyline to pull you through to it's end last February. Plus, it has one of the best animated link buttons EVER on the last page. |
| Toonbots | 08/02/01 | Hard on the eyes, lame, but a hilarious concept to the geeks among us. The comic is not written, it is defined using XML, a universal data definition language, and then generated using the Toon-o-Matic program. He gives the source code for each comic! Haw (snort!). The author writes: To me, the Toon-o-Matic itself is the work of art. The strip is a by-product. Like hot dogs." |
| Ashfield Online | 08/10/01 | I might as well jump on the bandwagon for this comic; I wasn't sure what to think of it when it first came out but it's been around long enough to be taken seriously. Also titled "?", a name that cannot be bookmarked in IE, this comic has only been drawn once. The captions change, and usually the background or some props, and sometimes color is added, and sometimes the unchanging Professor Ashfield himself is cut up and mutilated in entertaining ways. Sometimes his eyeballs move. But usually the best jokes are the most minimal ones; it's a little like The Angriest Dog In The World. |
| When I Am King | 08/16/01 | This comic is Weird with a capital W. I'm not the only one who thinks so; it's been getting a lot of press recently. I'm a trend whore! Anyhow, this is a comic where the King and his countrymen are drawn from geometric shapes so the people resemble curved-cornered refridgerators with heads, the King's sarong gets eaten by a camel pretty early in the series, and he spends most of the strip running around naked, trying to find underwear and keep from getting his pecker stung by bees. All the while pursued by the camel, who wants oral sex. The author's bio indicates he's from Switzerland. Ah -- it's european. |
| Gene Catlow | 9/06/01 | Okay, let's pick something up out of the back bin and dust it off. Hmmm... Gene Catlow. This is a pretty good comic, one I followed avidly for a while. It's pretty unique, well drawn, from the furry genre. In this world, all the animals live in an upright-walking clothes-wearing society, and have to deal with the problem of getting along together. They also have to deal with the problem of getting along with humankind. It's a great setup, seriously explored in order to make parallels to our own world, but I've found the main characters to be far too preachy and righteous. For maximum entertainment value, start at the first strip or try the rather interesting Synopsis Page |
| Indie Rock Pete hits Indie Rock Bottom | 4/18/02 | I'm sorry I was too busy to recommend this series while it was running, but it's done now and you can read the entire story from start to finish. I recommend trying to read it one page a day as it was originally delivered; the artwork was the aspect of this story I found most amazing and it is most effective savored slowly. Of all the characters to originate in Diesel Sweeties, Indie Rock Pete seems to have the greatest inspiration for readers and other artists; he's the favorite topic of guest strips and crossovers. In this entire Keenspot mini-series devoted to him, we get to hear a little bit of what goes on inside his head, but as the art makes clear, it is one of the more loving tributes to the fool everybody loves to hate. |
| Norman P. Function | 4/18/02 | Ok, Eric Dunne keeps trying new comic ideas, which is why there are so many pointers in my web picks to his
pages. There's the original, still-running "You Damn Kid", followed by the currently quiescent historical fake-out
"Dizzy Dustbin", and now two new comics that I really like a lot, "Norman P. Function" and "The Beevnics" (reviewed
below). Norman has to be my favorite of all, a twisted tale unique on the Internet, with a style and pacing that puts it
above your ordinary non-squitior or looney-bin comic styles. So far, this has been my favorite Dunne comic, but it's
updated infrequently.
Update 7/15/02Recently moved behind a "club" wall. The price is not bad, but mysteriously, membership is closed. |
| The Beevnicks | 4/18/02 | Eric was rapidly approaching burnout when this clip-art style comic originally appeared, but rather than being a
cop-out vehicle this comic has matured into a full work in its own right. Not just using the same cutouts all the time,
Mr. Dunne has fun with them, changing the expressions or other details for a plot device, or flashing back to show us the
same characters in the past or interacting with the new character of the week. The comic really hit its stride with the
long serial clown story recently, which often had me on the edge of my seat for the next plot turn. Of course, there's
plenty of that trademark raunchy humor that in this case leads to plenty of cutout nudity.
Update 7/15/02Same as Norman, above. |
| Jackie's Fridge | 4/18/02 | With 500 comics in Keenspace, how can you tell which ones are amazing? It's hard, but every once in a while I follow a link from one of the more established comics and find a gem like this one. Fabulous art is coupled with a soap-opera story line lightened by the core conceit of a young woman moving into a new appartment inhabited by an evil refridgerator. Except it's not that evil any more, and there's an annoying evil Guinea pig instead. This comic is also blessed with lots of commentatry from the artist, always a bonus in my opinion, and has the unusual policy that if a comic is not finished in time for whatever reason, we get the unfinished version in whatever state it got to and the author moves on. |
| Hole in the Wall | 4/18/02 | A "life in college" strip with an undisguised "anime" influence. It's confidently drawn and seems relatively stable, apparently anchored to a college paper's publishing schedule. "Hole In The Wall" refers to the dormitory lifestyle. There's an "everyman" guy, his crazy roommate, and the fabulous girl he'd like to go out with who hangs around. Like most reviewers on the web, my reaction to this comic is: "Sigh... It's just like my life when I was in school." |
| BloodLark | 4/18/02 | EIGHT is finally doing another comic. Brilliant as ever, this one was updated on time for three
months before I found it, whereafter it started getting spotty. Eight is taking the worn fantasy and adventuring
genere and giving it his usual fresh and entertaining spin. Despite the darkness and real-life misery of his
characters, it's cool that each comic ends on some kind of joke.
Update 5/5/02 Totally dead. Too bad he's keeping that depressing final page up. Update 1/30/03 The URL is gone. |
| Cat And Girl | 4/25/02 | The confidence of both art and writing in this comic gives away the author as a master. Cat and Girl are bohemian companions. Cat is a tall, adventuresome beat, Girl is a cute, savy bookworm. Together they argue about culture and smash stuff. I love the characters, their friendship, and their commentary. |
| Intelligent Humor | 5/2/02 | A highly entertaining non-sequitor comic of the same style and format as Bob The Angry Flower. this comic was published from 1988 to sometime in the 90's. The site is a fan collection of all the old comics they could find and scan; read it slowly; it's a limited supply. For me, the distinguishing lure of this comic is its lovable characers; the big and gentle Gummy Nummy, the firey Rusty the cat, Honda Civic Boy, Seth and Gregg. Many installations poke at the superhero basis of comics with hilarious "vs" battles between odd characters, and rarely does a plot last for more than about half of the panels. |
| WIGU | 5/9/02 | Last in my recent "Thank God It's Back" entries, the creator of the brilliant When I Grow Up is trying a new direction with a comic about a kid. I was a little worried at first, but Jeffery Roland has left the safety of the original conceits of his characters and they're flying on their own now, lost in the unfairly stupid world bearing a strong resemblance to our own. |
| Lizard | 5/16/02 | The hole left in my day when "Living In Greytown" ended has been filled again. This story has many of the same characters, now set entertainingly in the greater world, with the same meloncholy touches and personal joys that characterized the original comic. For those of you not as hung up on the past, the title character is a good humored little family guy, but no fool either, just trying to get through each day like the rest of us. He has a lovable family and friends all with their own stories. The comic is amazingly enough PG rated, and is published every single damn day in color. |
| 6:35 | 5/23/02 | Wow! I just found this one and it is something special. With a compelling drawing style, it has a
post-high-school perspective, and tells the small, private stories of everyday life and friendship. I haven't finished
reading the archive yet, it's only 16 entries long and I'm trying to spread it out over as much time as possible.
However, to get the best flavor of what 6:35 is all about, I think this one and this one sum it up best. If you want to experience that
feeling of being young and clever again, you will get your wish in this budding masterpiece.
Update 2/1/06Link updated to 6:35's new home on the Web. |
| Eversummer Eve | 5/30/02 | Another entry in the "Why is this free?" category. This is an american magna-inspired magic-and-alternate-universe story in a comic book format, not too much different from others except that's so well drawn! Amazingly finished, totally clean lines, nice looking characters, and a good story too. I haven't read more than the first issue, but I'm looking forward to savoring the whole archive. |
| Leisure Town | 6/6/02 | How do insanely great works like this go on for years before I find out about them? "Liesure Town" is probably
the most amazing thing I've seen on the Internet since exploding dog. It's visually
incredible, thematicly disturbing, and utterly funny. The author constructs stories using photography of some kind of
plastic toys set in astounding real-world sets. The sequence of panels is often occompanied by text containing the
innner dialog of one of the characters. Those familiar with the work will notice that there are a couple different
themes to be found in the huge archive. The first is the stories of pathetic losers, specifically the kind found associated with
the internet. In fact, the web site is currently organized as a fake "webzine", with "articles" and "message boards" each of
which is really a not-very-disguised story. The characters' delusions are broken down bit by bit throughout their
internal rambling dialogs until even they cannot avoid facing terrible reality. Earlier stories focused on a more
straightforward chaos, in which these same adorable creatures (there seems to be only about 20, reused and reused for
each story) undergo extremely physical misadventures of building hilarity. Examples of the latter type of story are "Extreme Cyclist Lexiconology", in which the relatively
triumphant terms such as "sparkler" and "whirligig" give way to the more unfortunate illustrations for "balance blackout"
and "wang chung", and "Umbrella Patrol", in which a
character asked to watch a friend's umbrella instead takes it on a series of ever more irresponsible adventures.
Sterling examples of the former story are the "Manage Your Web Dollars!" article,
in which the "successful" .com consultant simply wanders around town searching for his lost ATM card, oscillating wildly
between self importance and the realization of what a joke his life is, and "Nobody Came To My Winter Solstice Party, a
message board rant in which a thoughly adorable character pleads for any response to his description of the great but
snubbed party he threw and sent out e-vites for, and then concludes with an excited invitation to his next shindig. The
LiesureTown archive is unbelivably huge, dating back to 1997, and with some stories exceeding 100 pages! I'll be reading
this one for a while.
Update 1/8/04 So sad! It appears that LT is no longer. The site is up, but shows only a goodbye message Update 2/1/06It's back! No new material, but it looks like the whole archive has been reposted. |
| The Smallest Sound | 6/13/02 | Updated very infrequently, The Smallest Sound is more of a personal visual media outlet for the
author, who is one of those "Jim Reardon" types of people who produces only rare and intermittant works of such incredible
genius that they eclipse other artists' lifetimes of work. So, enjoy "Printer" and other comic stories, then check it
out every once in a while and keep your eye on it for new stuff.
Update 4/3/03 Checked this one recently and the URL seems to be the unused property of some band now. Guess it's gone. |
| Mike The Atomic Triangle | 7/18/02 | Not really the name of this strip, which is renamed and reinvented every week. This comic is one of those that the Internet is for, experimenting with format, shape, the concept of narrative, browser tricks, whatever. Mike himself is a recent addition the comic, and there's no guarantee that he'll be around by the time you read this, but it's kind of cool that he looks like a character from Iceland. Oh yeah, there's no "archive" as such, but usually you can find a link somewhere in any day's comic that will lead back to the previous one, up to a point. Who is the mysterious "Jack Masters?". |
| Comic Journals!
The Journal Comic Life with Leslie Toddbot's Comic Journal |
7/25/02 8/1/02 |
Wow! What an amazingly simple idea, I'm stunned that I haven't seen it until just now. I found these three within short order of each other, and they are all amazing, each with it's own unique flavor. What they have in common is what happens when an artist is forced to come up with a panel strip about something that happened that day, and make it interesting or funny. Leslie's life seems the most real, or perhaps I find his drawing style to be realistic. He works at a sucky job at a video store, and wastes hours a day like me reading webcomics. He also takes the rare step of putting links in his comics themselves. Drew Weing's boldly named "The Journal Comic" is more prolific, and stretches the extra inch to make each story a complete joke a day. Of course, many days the joke is how much time was wasted on the internet. His comic is more about his relationships with his friends. I totally love the brutal self portraiture of his character; that nose is usually the first laugh of every installment I view. Todd Webb's Comic Journal is vastly different artistically. It has a much simpler, block-print look, with the author's self portrait accurately described by him as "lemon headed". In a sense though, this makes it much more compelling. The stories may not be all that, but an entry will summarize a day's worth of shopping by focusing simply on a pair of shoes. It goes without saying that the rest of these authors' web sites are filled with fascinating material that you should read. I'm leaving the navigation of that to you though. |
| Something Positive | 8/15/02 | Lesbian Sex. D&D. Bad Theater. Anime Cons. Bad language. It's basically a comic about Boston fandom.
Cynical, foul tempered guy hangs out in Boston with two oriental chicks and has a bunch of equally cynical friends, all
fairly self absorbed. Like they make the Seinfeld cast look like Mother Tehresa. Also I'm not kidding about the
language. Redeemed by the adorable boneless cat and the art, which is as excellent as Penny Arcade.
Favorite quotes: "Don't you dare blame this on my taste buds! I could menstrate a better cup of coffee than this!", and "What is that God awful stench! We always seem to get the train car that smells like somebody gutted a hobo!". Basically, if you can get past the first comic in the archive, it gets mellower and more likable from there on. |
| Cheese-N-Rice | 8/22/02 | For every comic there is an equal but opposite comic. For "Something Positive" it is "Cheese-N-Rice". I have been reading them simultaneously these days. Cheese-N-Rice is utterly wholesome, inspired by the doodles in the artist's high-school notebook and documenting the adventures of characters you can take home to meet Mom. It is set in the real world, and the relationships between people are on an ordinary, everyday level, and funny in that way. Two women, a "geek" and a "blonde" are best friends, try to meet better-than-moronic guys at the local bars, share an apartment, etc. Nicely done and ready for syndication. Warning: Links to "Cathy" and pop-up ads. |
| Scary Go Round | 9/5/02 | Yay! John Allison is making a comic again! Yay! Focusing now on two college students who appeared briefly in the epic Bobbins and utilizing the trademark color cutout style he uses to avoid having to draw with pen and ink despite his obvious raw talent, SGR has the same killer wit that makes John's work a pleasure in whatever medium. Now it's a spooky mystery, so get your Halloween on and wait every Tuesday and Thursday for this comic to be updated. |
| Kung Fool/Crazy Kimchi | 9/12/02 | It's a web comic that's fashionably late :) No, really, Kung Fool is more of an experience than just a comic. It's
got some entertaining non-static components, such as the "?" balloon that you can click for each comic tobget the story so
far, or sometimes flash components. The art and characters are fabulous, and the story riveting. However, Kung Fool is also
a directory of the author's recently found internet treasures, an excellent guide to the internet in itself.
Update 6/5/03 Still going. The current Kung Fool story line seems to have sputtered out, but in it's place a new daily comic has arisen, along with a correspondingly updated links page that KICKS ASS!!! This is positively the first comic I check every day now (when I can, generally Not Safe For Work); "crazy kimchi" is a forehead beadingly high-production-value comic about whatever's on the author's mind, and his links are guided by the outrage we all feel about the recent takeover of our country by anti-american elements. |
| Piggy Hunter | 9/19/02 | A very well-done comic of the parody-of-magna genre, obviously written for the author's own pleasure but stilly very funny. In this comic, the heroine's familiar is a tiny cartoon pig. They spend the first few comics of the series humorously making 4th wall references and trying to figure out where to go with it, then poke fun at cop, mech, fantasy, and romantic plot devices simultaneously before falling into a long period of inactivity. Enjoy the archive and hope for resumption of regular updates soon! |
| Big Nate | 9/26/02 | Another of the few syndicated comics worth reading on the Internet. It's true that the plotting and art are the same mind-numbing syndication formula that never changes. However, Big Nate is a comic within a comic, and the inner comics, which are "drawn" by the main character are hilarious and edgy. I can also respect this comic because the main character is kind of a jerk; I always find anti-heroes more interesting and sympathetic. |
| Elftor | 10/3/02 | Prepare to be offended! Elftor is near and dear to my heart because it is made with MS Paint, which I haven't seen since Boat Anchor. But it's also pretty funny if you like sophomoric humor, such as Jesus machine-gunning pagans, or anything with Osama Bin Laden, abortion, murder, etc. What can I say, it's just so rude it's funny. Sort of the Beastie Boys of web comics. My favorite character: "Cheezetor". Also entertaining is the fact that the author's gone to the trouble to make an icon for his page with will appear in the title bar of your browser or the bookmark. |
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