Author Topic: Comic of the Month  (Read 59854 times)

Lenny

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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #495 on: September 09, 2024, 01:34:57 PM »
Oooh loads of comics to try out, I'm going to have fun catching up on this.

Also, Linebyline, I'm always up for finding new good furry comics, so don't hesitate to recommend those, haha.
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Linebyline

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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #496 on: September 16, 2024, 11:00:34 PM »
Good to know! I have a few more I haven't recommended yet.

Speaking of which, anyone have anything for September?
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midwestmutt

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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #497 on: September 17, 2024, 09:26:00 AM »
I can recommend Leaving the Cradle, a First Contact comic by Russian artist Demim Egor, AKA Darth Biotech. https://leavingthecradle.com/about
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #498 on: September 17, 2024, 03:59:06 PM »
Interesting! Thank you midwestmutt!

And thank you linebyline and lenny for giving this thread a leg up. I grow forgetful, and I’m sorry about that.

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dmeck7755

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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #499 on: September 18, 2024, 07:37:11 AM »
I looked quickly at Leaving the Cradle.  This looks interesting!  Thank you
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #500 on: September 21, 2024, 02:51:54 PM »
Got through the first chapter of Leaving the Cradle and I'm quite enjoying it so far. Thanks for the rec, Midwestmutt!
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #501 on: September 22, 2024, 11:43:03 AM »
As we don’t have a thread for Tiger, Tiger, I’ll comment here

Spoiler: show
OMG Arlo! That’s one way to approach the issue I guess.
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #502 on: October 11, 2024, 06:06:02 PM »
No takers for October? Hope nobody minds if I go ahead and volunteer, then:

Okay, SSSSports fans, if there's one thing you need to know about me it's not that I don't know or care that much about athletic endeavors, but that is still a true statement about me. I have nothing against sports (though much against sports culture that I shan't get into right now) but it just isn't my thing. Unless you stretch your definition of sports enough to include video game speedrunning, which... I guess technically you have to move your hands?

Anyway I'm recommending a basketball comic.

Ventura City Drifters is written and drawn by Sonokido. Page 1 on Tumblr, Webtoon, and Tapas if you're into that sort of thing. Not sure why, but Webtoons is quite a few pages ahead of Tumblr when last I checked.

If you know and love the sport as much as I do, don't worry, you won't be lost. In the auteur's own words:
Quote
I’ve heard a lot of readers say they weren’t particularly interested in basketball but still read all the way through it!

I think I try my best not to bore everyone with basketball jargon, but still explain just enough so that you know what’s going on on the court. The sport being a vehicle for moving the plot along is how I like to think of it! Character development & interactions first, and the action scenes are just a bonus.

For my money, it works.

Our protagonist is Alina Scratch, a cat (I told you I had more furry comics![/i]) who makes up for her short stature with an incredible jump. We meet her when she's shooting hoops by herself for fun and gets accosted by bullies, makes fools of their leader in a 1-on-1 "loser leaves the court forever" game only to get her butt kicked in a game of "we're just going to beat you up now," and finally gets rescued by Marie, a very tall bird with a very commanding presence. After running the bullies off, Marie invites Alina to join their university's basketball club, and gives her the option of trying out for the team. Of which, oh, hey, forgot to mention, Marie is the captain. Any notion of focusing on the club and not the team is quickly dispensed with, but you probably gathered that from the comic being called "Ventura City Drifters" and not "Ventura City Basketball Club."

The first major character conflict that's set up is between Alina and Emily, the team's very tall (though not quite as tall as Marie) ace (is that a basketball term?) who's pretty much the star of the team right up until everyone is wowed by Alina's incredible jump. It's never fully clear just how much of her digs at Alena are friendly teasing and how much are born of resentment from Alina stealing the attention not just of fans but also of her teammates. Personality-wise, she reminds me a lot of Sigrun Eide, if Sigrun were insecure about her reputation and position, and also a rabbit.

What's shaping up to be the biggest confrontation, though, is between Alina and a character who's only appeared a couple times so far: Her former friend and mentor, whose disapproval is one of the reasons Alina gave up basketball in high school. She fully expected that she and Alina would both attend the same university known for its hugely successful basketball team with a brutal training regimen, and took it as a betrayal when Alina didn't want to move away from all her other friends.

Well, maybe the second biggest. There's also Clover Haynes, who hasn't actually shown up in the story but casts a long shadow over it, despite being pretty short—exactly the same height as Alina, actually. Surely that's a coincidence, as is the fact that the last time Clover was on the team, back in the 90s, is also the last time they made it to nationals. Does Alina have some connection to Clover? I'm not being coy; the comic hasn't told us yet, but the strong possibility is there.

But there are plenty more conflicts where that came from. Every team the Drifters face has its own sort of team personality, and each member is treated as a three-dimensional person. Now, there's not enough page time for every single person to be as fleshed out as the Drifters. (Heck, even a few of them get so little focus that I legit don't remember if they're actually team members or just club members, and as of this writing that's just days after reading the whole thing.) But you never get the feeling that even these minor characters just exist to perform a role, speak their lines, move the plot, and then go away. They might be people you don't know, but they're people.

And the comic gives equal weight to understanding the opposing players as people and to understanding how they play the game. Often, these tie into each other. For instance, the player (a borzoi, I think) who's over seven feet tall looks down on others both literally and figuratively, not just underestimating them because they don't have her particular super-power but also literally not being able to see past her own nose sometimes.

One thing to note about the art: In the first few chapters, characters tended to be stark white, whereas later on they're shaded in grayscale that more or less matches their actual fur (or skin/feather/scale/etc.) color. Threw me for a loop for a bit; I was left wondering "Who are all these new characters that look like darker versions of... wait a second." (Of course it takes me a while to get used to who's who in comics overall anyway, so this might be a me problem.)

The art in general is pretty good. It may not be among the best-looking comics, to rival Phantomarine or Lackadaisy or SSSS, but just because we're spoiled doesn't mean this doesn't look amazing.

Honestly, the early chapters aren't bad if you ask me, but the visuals improve by miles as the story goes on. Panel layouts become more readable. Character modeling improves, and faces and body language grow more expressive. Actions, especially on the court, become clearer. Composition and framing become integral parts of how the games are brought to life on the page. But if you should have trouble (especially early on) telling what's happening in a game, don't worry, the comic provides plenty of additional context. If the art is unclear or you're even more basketball-impaired than I am (which would be a feat), the comic always makes sure there are other ways for you to know what's going on. Most major games have color commentators narrating, for instance.

That said, what may be make-or-break for some readers (other than the furry thing) is the manga style. It's still read left-to-right like a normal English-language comic, but it makes no apologies for taking its stylistic cues from manga, right down to onomatopoeia for non-diegetic stinger soud effects (DUNN!). Apart from full-color chapter covers, the characters are grayscale and the backgrounds are either that or shaded with a single color. Sometimes the color changes on-page to signal a scene change, though that doesn't seem to be happening as often in later chapters.

Content warnings? Very little to speak of. The banner at the top says "This series is rated Young Adult" but that's probably in the bookstore sense of the term; I'd say it mostly tops out at TV-Y7. There are some minor injuries, little or no blood. The most actual peril I remember is at the beginning when one of the bullies pulls a knife on Alina...to cut off her ponytail. Otherwise, most of the violence occurs on the court, where there are fouls (sometimes intentional). There's no sexual content to speak of, unless you count the preponderance of conventionally attractive women in form-fitting athletic wear and the very occasional conventionally attractive shirtless dude.

Honestly, the only thing you'd want to watch out for is the bullying. In addition to the bullies at the beginning, some players of the opposing teams also come off as bullies. One team in particular (the one they're playing as I write this, in Chapter 20) plays dirty, employing trash talk, mind games, intentional fouls, and even (possible spoiler?) to win at any cost. If you've been a bullying victim, this might hit close to home for you. But I was bullied as a kid—even pulled out of school because of it—and I have no trouble reading it. Just makes me love to hate the villains even more. But trauma being trauma, actual mileage will vary.

If you can read SSSS (which I'm assuming most of you can)—heck, if you can read the scenes with the miniature Vasterstroms—then most likely nothing in this comic will faze you. (Though there's probably a character or two you'll wish would get eaten by a Troll.)
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #503 on: October 12, 2024, 08:19:15 AM »
Ooh, this looks interesting! Thanks for the recommendation. I think I actually quite like the art at first look - it's definitely sketchy, but it's easy to follow and to read facial expressions plus what's going on (I struggle with some sketchier artstyles when they're hard to follow). I've enjoyed one or two sports comics before (well, mostly just Check, Please, which is a gay college hockey webcomic a friend recommended to me back in high school. The game and team dynamics were fun to read, even though I'm not particularly into sports. So I think I might enjoy this one too!)
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #504 on: November 22, 2024, 12:09:20 PM »
No takers for November either? No worries, I've got you covered!

You know that spooky dark-haired ghost lady that comes out of the TV to kill you in that horror movie? (I forget what it's called, like Saw or Blair Witch Project or The Tigger Movie or something.) Well imagine if a similar but legally distinct ghost settled down with a kindly novelist and had an adorably wholesome daughter who takes after her mom. That's Erma, by Brandon J. Santiago, available on Webtoon.

Erma is the title character and silent protagonist. She starts out as the weirdest thing in the comic, except for maybe her mom, but as time goes on more and more oddness is revealed to exist and even be pretty normal. Which is probably one of several reasons that most people are perfectly chill with Erma, at least once they get used to her. Other reasons include "She's just so gosh darn cute" and her insatiable desire to be a friend to everyone.

It starts out as a gag strip with some short arcs. Later on the arcs get a little more plot to them, with Cerebus Syndrome finally kicking in just a couple arcs ago as Erma and the readers learn about her mom's side of the family. The heavier tone is broken up by some old-fashioned wholesome gag strips posted as filler as the family reunion arc took a long time to produce.

The art is charming, starting out in a newspaper comic style before evolving to a neater and more detailed version of itself. The family reunion arc shows a lot of manga influence, which is fitting since it's set in Japan. But in all cases, it's both charming and readable.

Some caveats: First, some content warnings. There's little violence before the family reunion arc, but there's definitely violence there. Like, a dude gets frozen solid and then shattered, on-panel. There's also animal harm, though not deliberate abuse or cruelty.* The comic's approach to horror is usually to twist it into something cute or wholesome (like Erma herself), but there's some genuinely scary stuff, and the arc after the family reunion arc is called "aftermath" for a reason as the body/psychological horror Erma goes through is seriously traumatizing. There are themes of prejudice, as not only does not everyone accept Erma but a lot of other spooky/paranormal types aren't as lucky as she is. There's also serious psychological/emotional and sometimes physical abuse (guess which arc) that's mostly in the past and off-panel but is very explicitly talked about.

Spoiler: * • show
Look, it's fine. The dog was already (un)dead, so being shot repeatedly by Erma's uncle didn't faze him. He got hit by a bus the next day and walked that off too, and none of Erma's playmates seemed bothered by the tire tread bifurcating his torso.

But still, there's an "oh no I accidentally shot your dog" moment, and then a "stop shooting my dog (who is apparently undead)!" moment after Uncle Bad Trigger Discipline panics when he sees the dog get back up. Fortunately Erma was not there to see this part.


The treatment of some of those issues, uh, feels kinda iffy to me? Like, mostly I'm not seeing a problem but in one case:
Spoiler: show
One of the earlier plot-heavy arcs is about a rat infestation at Erma's school that's being covered up by the administration, and turns out to be due to a whole rat-person civilization living beneath the school, which was built on top of their subterranean home. They (or at least some of them) have this Aquaman thing going on with non-anthro rats.

Part of the resolution of this arc is the standoffish, authoritarian, seemingly-human hall monitor Sydney being revealed as one of the rat-people (actually a hybrid, like Erma) and having the ability to transform (or at least having a magical disguise she can shed); ever since then, she and Erma's social circle have been friends, and she's appeared in rat-kid form. Another part is the rat-people at large being convinced by Erma's kindness and Sydney's bravery to stop hiding from humans.

The part that strikes me as iffy is that the whole rat city is moving away from the school to avoid disruption to the humans. That's your happy ending? People moving out of their ancestral homeland to avoid bothering the people who moved in after they were forced out? Kinda reminds me of that "history" textbook that went viral a while back for saying that First Nations/Native Americans (I forget offhand whether this was US or Canada) left their homes to "make room" for European colonists.


IDK, maybe it's just tone-deaf. I don't think that reflects the overall position of the story or its author toward issues of racism/colonialism/etc.; it just seemed like a red flag to me.

Last warning is, there's a lot of filler. Early on, it seems like it's going for a newspaper setup with weekly strips and Sunday strips, but the Sunday strips at the time are all single-panel fan art crossovers of Erma with pop culture characters (often but not necessarily horror). Later on these mostly get moved to the October "Ermaween" strips. But shortly after that happens, you see more and more "Sorry for the lack of updates, here's some art" posts as well as ads for merch and spinoff prose novels (at least one of which is written in-universe by Erma's dad). Finally, as mentioned above, regular one-off strips get posted as filler between installments of the family reunion arc. It's a bit of a pain (I've complained here about less intrusive filler in The Sword Interval) but the comic is still good enough that I can't be too mad about it.

So if you're sad that Spooky Month ended almost a month ago and you've run out of Halloween candy, check out Erma for an extremely sweet take on horror! (And if you're annoyed that it's not even (American) Thanksgiving yet and we've already spent weeks getting blasted with Christmas music, take heart, as Erma doesn't get along with Santa Claus either.)
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #505 on: November 23, 2024, 06:56:46 AM »
As soon as I clicked on the link for Erma, I thought... oh! I HAVE seen this comic before! It must have been years ago, and I definitely haven't read through any of the actual arcs, but it looks so familiar! I'm looking forwards to reading it again.

And thanks for keeping comic of the month alive, Linebyline! Your recommendations are always great.
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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #506 on: November 23, 2024, 05:44:31 PM »
Aw, thanks!
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wavewright62

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Re: Comic of the Month
« Reply #507 on: November 24, 2024, 02:48:53 PM »
One of these days I need to devote some time to check out these comics.  I do appreciate the summaries, Linebyline, they really help make it enticing (even the furry comix!). 
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