Ten Pages!
Can you believe this is Gennifer's tenth page as a Mysteries of the Arcana artist? She's doing a fantastic job and I'm looking forward to more. I've recently been reading some classic webcomics. In many ways, I wish I had hopped on the bandwagon back then. I sometimes feel like, with the bar already set, you have to enter the field polished and prepared where those early webcomics, from 'Fans' to 'Its Walky' to 'El Goonish Shiv' had room to grow and develop. Don't get me wrong, though. I am pleased as punch with my audience. You guys are fantastic. You're active, you comment, and you read every page. I couldn't ask for better. So, thank you. Without you, this comic wouldn't be anything. It takes two groups of people to make a webcomic: the creators and the readers. I need you much more than you guys need me. :) |
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Guest post by "Fairportfan"
Okay; it's not just here, it's all over movies, comics, etc.
The horrors were, before they did what they did. basically human, yes.
And the truck looks mostly like a truck in our world.
But why would people in another world entirely have developed a set of driving controls that Theresa could use? I mean, what we have is not the most efficient way of doing things - it's just what has evolved over time.
But that's not the most annoying thing that some authors do - they create a completely alien world, where the people, no matter how human they are, are not gonna be speaking English ...
And then the characters make English-based word play.
An example i just hit yesterday: A somewhat important family in a feudal society is named "Mindrear".
Someone from a house they're not quite feuding with calls one of them "Mind rear".
English play on words - made by someone who could not possibly be speaking English.