First of THREE updates this week. There will be another one by myself (already finished) tomorrow, and a third (also already finished) by Neil on Thursday.
Part of the fun of doing this comic is that the dimensional “crossover” idea is that it allows us to spotlight the breadth and diversity of the visions many individual webcomic authors are doing. Earlier in this series we showed GIRL GENIUS' Mechanicsburg.
This is something similar. I want to think Tom Slidell for permission to have GUNNERKRIGG COURT show up in a brief cameo. Readers familiar with that strip will know of the spooky Gillitie Woods, across the bridge from the Court, and its many strange inhabitants–especially Coyote and Muut of Native American myths. (Nevertheless, the Court appears to be in Europe.) GUNNERKRIGG COURT is a webcomic about a school that straddles the mystical and the super-scientific, with a moody atmosphere that is very appealing. It's the story of Antimony Carver and her many classmates and teachers and the entities they encounter. It's Neil Gaiman's favorite webcomic, with reason.
Mindmistress is being taken on a brief tour of some of more irrational and frightening places in the multiverse. Perhaps most scary to her is that there are places where rationality is NOT the wisest course. This is just the first place she ended up—briefly. The Smiling Man is giving her a progressive dip into the mystical and irrational.
Tomorrow, you'll see the last, most frightening place.
As long as you are providing a VERY interesting rollcoaster-tour through the multiverse, I am too distracted to be bothered by omniscience of authors at all ;-)
Thanks, RedDeath. Sometimes it comes in handy to have someone in reflective armor.
Realistically, I should have had that image somewhat curved the way the head curves, but if I had it would have been harder to capture the anger in his face. So I sacrificed realism for emotion.
That's part of the idea. There is an immense number of really talented webcomics creators out there, but there's no WAY you can fit them into a consistent "universe". But using the dimensional "crossover"/multiverse concept, we can spotlight some extremely deserving comics out there.
The fantastic thing about this series are the multiple cameos from various webcomics.(many I have never heard of). I'm discovering so many great creators out there, through this series!
By the way, the reason that this is a three-page week is due to a lack of foresight on my part. I had edited this entire sequence down to one page, merging sequences that both Al and I had written. Somehow...foolishly...I believed that I could do this all as one page.
In the end, Al took back the part that he wanted to do, and he ended up making it even longer than his original presentation. Meanwhile, I had a short bit at the end which I've now extended into a full page.
I do not know how I ever have thought that I could possibly make one coherent page out of all of this, and I'm glad I didn't have to. I'd have been pulling my hair out.
And with that, you better be here tomorrow and Thursday. Because if you don't, we'll find out. We webcomic authors see EEEEVERYTHING.
Ozmandious at 1:15PM, Dec. 23, 2010
that's a fun comic
CartoonistWill at 4:20PM, Nov. 10, 2009
I like this page, especially panel 1.
TuuronTour at 2:26PM, Nov. 10, 2009
As long as you are providing a VERY interesting rollcoaster-tour through the multiverse, I am too distracted to be bothered by omniscience of authors at all ;-)
alschroeder at 2:16PM, Nov. 10, 2009
Thanks, RedDeath. Sometimes it comes in handy to have someone in reflective armor. Realistically, I should have had that image somewhat curved the way the head curves, but if I had it would have been harder to capture the anger in his face. So I sacrificed realism for emotion.
theRedDeath at 1:32PM, Nov. 10, 2009
I REALLY like that first panel of Lightbringer reflecting in Mindmistress's helmet.
fukujinzuke at 1:15PM, Nov. 10, 2009
Great page! I loved your shot/angle choices!
Neilsama at 9:07AM, Nov. 10, 2009
[quote]Tomorrow, you'll see the last, most frightening place.[/quote] The Family Circus?
alschroeder at 7:39AM, Nov. 10, 2009
That's part of the idea. There is an immense number of really talented webcomics creators out there, but there's no WAY you can fit them into a consistent "universe". But using the dimensional "crossover"/multiverse concept, we can spotlight some extremely deserving comics out there.
legacyhero at 7:24AM, Nov. 10, 2009
The fantastic thing about this series are the multiple cameos from various webcomics.(many I have never heard of). I'm discovering so many great creators out there, through this series!
Neilsama at 5:18AM, Nov. 10, 2009
By the way, the reason that this is a three-page week is due to a lack of foresight on my part. I had edited this entire sequence down to one page, merging sequences that both Al and I had written. Somehow...foolishly...I believed that I could do this all as one page. In the end, Al took back the part that he wanted to do, and he ended up making it even longer than his original presentation. Meanwhile, I had a short bit at the end which I've now extended into a full page. I do not know how I ever have thought that I could possibly make one coherent page out of all of this, and I'm glad I didn't have to. I'd have been pulling my hair out. And with that, you better be here tomorrow and Thursday. Because if you don't, we'll find out. We webcomic authors see EEEEVERYTHING.
AzuJOD at 1:24AM, Nov. 10, 2009
Awesome-sauce, Gunnerkrigg Court!