| Comic: Ugly Hill |
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| This has become my new favorite online comic. Southworth has hit the mark in every direction. |
| Comic: Penny Arcade |
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| I think what Quinlan RB said about PA being less about the characters and more about the gaming industry nowadays is interesting. Maintaining a comic strip for years is hard work, and in order to do that, it has to evolve into something. What it becomes may or may not be as interesting to its original readers and may or may not pick up new readers who find the new content an improvement. "PVP", on the other hand, has sort of done the opposite; become less about the gaming world and more about the lives of its characters. I guess its all relative... |
| Comic: Chippy and Loopus |
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| Fucking hilarious |
| Comic: PVP Online |
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| Of course, webcomics should be clever. Every well-received strip in history is either politically or socially relevant. The term "Funny pages" is a wonderful example of the lack of respect that comic strip creators have always had to put up with. |
| Comic: Penny Arcade |
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| I'm simply stating that I get the humor of the creators through the strip's content, even though it may not be my own. If you don't like obscenities, or rants or the word "wang". Go. Read. Something. Else. |
| Comic: Penny Arcade |
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| A good alternative comic strip should feel like a reflection of it's author(s). Penny Arcade is one of those strips. If you have such a big problem with obscenities go read Beetle Bailey. |
| Comic: PVP Online |
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| It doesn't matter how you try to classify it, this is one of the best webcomics in existence. The artwork is better than most mainstream dailies, the characters are well thought out and it is consistently funny. Who cares what level of gaming content it has, Kurtz's success rests on the fact that he opened it up to a larger audience. It's longevity is a testament to its quality. (It's the only strip I actually went back and read the ENTIRE archive for.) |