Q.: I LOVE this chapter cover!
A. (0:08:36): It wonāt really be a chapter cover. Itās going to be the picture on the main website, so itās going to be a cover for the whole next arc. So itās a big cover.
Q.: Good to know you take care of your health.
A. (0:09:05): Itās always really important! Even though I just want to draw all day long and produce as much as possible, you have to always remember that if you cash out time on your health now, you have to pay it back later, and I want to be able to draw for many, many years and not wear out my hands. I obviously do ā and most artists already have ā a little bit of repetitive stress syndrome on my hands, and I always make sure that I donāt make it worse. When the pain starts surfacing, I know I need to add a little bit of extra rest into my schedule.
Q.: Can you tell us a little more about Adventure 2 now that you're working on the cover? ^^,?
A. (0:10:11): Yes! Actually what youāre going to be able to see is...itās going to be taking place in Finland this time. It will be fairly apparent from the cover, itās gonna have a lot of the Finnish kind of nature, itās going to have mutated bears and something scary. Thatās all I can tell, Iām not going to tell more about what the main plot of the story is gonna be. Youāre going to find the purpose of them having to go there in the first one or two chapters, but I donāt want to spoil it until we get there. In particular, itās going to be looking a lot like A Redtailās Dream again; same kind of scenery.
Q.: o.O.... mutated bears!
A. (0:11:46): Yes! Theyāre gonna be scary. And thereās going to be mutated moose and such. Donāt know if itās going to make it into the cover, though.
Q.: How much time passes between the end of the first story and the start of the second?
A. (0:12:25): Weāre going to only have a week, I think, before we get to see them. Weāre going to start in the quarantine.
Q.: Are you going to re-print the first book sometime?
A. (0:14:20): By that do you mean a Redtailās Dream? Because the first book of SSSS is reprinted. If you mean the Redtailās Dream book, then yes. Itās the next one planned with Hiveworks, but itās going to be some time next year, once we have finished everything with the second book and Iāve gotten a little bit of a mental break from that.
Q.: A few weeks ago we were talking about being bothered by crazy people, this morning my neighbor from across the street woke me up by pounding on my door and accusing me of taking a picture of his truck. When I said I hadn't, he cussed me out and talked about how he was born and raised here.
A. (0:17:37): Crazy people. Do you live in a city or something? Because Iām really glad I live in a small town, because from the fact that thereās fewer people you have fewer crazy people. Thereās only really one person whoās weird, and heās a developmentally challenged man, so heās allowed to be weird, thereās nothing weird about it. Thereās no crazy neighbors to worry about. But yeah, when you live in a city or in suburbs, youāre going to be dealing with all the crazies, and Iām glad I donāt have to do that.
Q.: I live on the outskirts of a large city haha.
A. (0:19:57): Eh. I mean, thatās how youāre gonna get the crazies, they wonder out from the cities and find you. I mean, isnāt it likeā¦I think Iāve read some sort of studies that living in cities and places where thereās a lot of people creates a lot of social problems in people and mental illness, because humans arenāt involved in large groups, theyāre supposed to live in small tribes of 20-a few hundred people, so a lot of people become kind of maladjusted living in big cities or even nearby, so not onl do you get more crazy people, living in a place where thereās a lot of people, but you also get a larger percentage of people becoming weird, because itās unnatural to live in such crowded places or places where there isnāt a kind of small village, small tribe kohesion.
Q.: That wouldn't surprise me, I think living somewhere where you know everyone makes you mind your manners a bit more.
A. (0:23:25): Yeah, and also humans have all sorts of primal instincts to assert their social stages and knowing what rank they have in a small group. And when you donāt have those groups, villages, tribes, people get problems with aggression and overreacting to things where normally they wouldnāt have to try, freak out at someone, because in a small group they would be secure in their position. So thatās why living in cities causes low-level anxiety for people, and that anxiety can come out as aggression or flashing out at neighbours and strangers just from tiny little annoyances.
Q.: Tbh living in cities is pretty lonely. Or can be.
A. (0:24:53): Yeah, that too. Even though you can have tons of people around, that creates a problem that itās harder; itās the paradox that the more people you have around the more invisible you become. The internet is a really good invention that kinda helps with that, because people can find communities and like-minded people, smaller groups online and donāt have to be so isolated in cities.
Q.: I find that most of what people talk about as "crazy person" is people who are upfront and open to complete strangers on the street, in ways that can be seen as either a criminal or a weirdo.
A. (0:26:41): Yeah, that sometimes true, but sometimes also...you say ācrazy personā when you really just mean someone who just overreacted. If you speak to someone whoās a stranger the same way you would speak to a family-member in the way that you say something rude or mutter something mean under your breath, that wouldnāt be a big deal among friends or family, that is a sign that you have a social inability to adjust to the different situations that you have. Because in order to be able to function properly in large groups of humans you need to learn to act properly. You canāt act the same way, as upfront and rude or kind to strangers as you can with family members or friends. So ācrazyā is a weirdly, a little bit hyperbolic, but itās a sign that the person hasnāt gotten the social interaction part completely, because they donāt understand the boundaries of how you act among family and friends and how you are supposed to act among complete strangers, especially in situations where things are tense, you can start insulting people because they annoy you.
Q.: Well, thatās still quite a Finnish way to look at this

, over here in the Warm warmlands people are much more open in that way.
A. (0:30:26): That could be possible. In Finland, itās extremely rude and kinda.. You would be considered crazy if you approach people who are strangers, because you are supposed to leave people alone. People do want to be left alone generally if they are in public. Sometimes itās okay; itās more socially acceptable for old people to start talking with people on the bus and stuff, people go āOh old people, theyāre lonely and harmless and you can talk to them.ā Thereās even this joke about Finnish people, how you treat people who look you in the eye on the bus. āIf you accidentally look someone in the eyes whoās a stranger on the bus, first you have to quickly look away and make sure it doesnāt happen again. If it happens a second time, you need to be really careful and ready to run away, because the other person is clearly crazy because they looked you in the eyes two times. And if it happens three times, you call the police.ā Obviously a joke, but the thing is - you donāt look strangers in the eye, you donāt smile at them, you donāt try to start talking to them unless thereās a reason. Like, if something crazy happens, youāre on the bus and a car in front of you has an accident, then youāre allowed to talk to each other about it, but if you start talking to people on the bus, then the assumption is that youāre a mental patient on the run.
Q.: I found that I could quite easily ask my way in Helsinki, is it more accepted because I had a reason for asking something to strangers?
A. (0:35:02): Yeah, itās totally socially acceptable to ask for help. And if youāre a tourist, especially if people realise that youāre a tourist, even if you start talking to them people understand that there are cultural differences and foreigners might be more upfront. But, yeah, if you need help, like directions, people are always happy to help. And if you have a car accident or have a flat tire, a lot of people will stop and help you. People will break the ādonāt speak with strangersā when thereās a reason to do it.
Q.: Who's that in the lower left?
A. (0:21:37): Eh, whatās left?... This is right, this is left. Emil is falling over, as would be typical. I always have to think which side is left and which one is right. Same with east and west, I always have big trouble if someone says āfrom the eastā or āfrom the west,ā itās always like āoh no, what direction is that?ā Like that game that I keep mentioning all the time, because itās the last one that Iāve played a lot, They Are Billions. You get zombie raids, gigantic masses of zombies coming in from the map every few days that you have to defend against. They can come from the south, the north, east or west, and itās always announced a day ahead: āOh no, thereās a horde of zombies coming from... the west!ā Iām always like āOh no, which side is the west?ā and then I always confuse myself, and half the time I will move all of my troops to the wrong side, to the east. And then I lose, because I couldnāt figure out which direction was west. Itās a real problem! And itās affecting my life.
Q.: Are there any Devil-like figures in the mythology of the Scandinavian countries?
A. (0:28:43): Thereās not really a devil, but thereās people, like...Finnish mythology has the lord of the underworld kinda in the same way that Greek mythology has thee guy, Hades (was it Hades?) who was Tuoni, and then thereās kind of an evil gnome-creatures in both Finnish and Norse mythology, but thereās not really the kind of evil, devil person. If someone does know better that there is, let me know, but as far as I know, there isnāt one that would be that would be the personification of evil or Hell.
Q.: Well I mean in norse mythology there is the goddess Hel.
A. (0:32:43): Oh yeah. I donāt remember how close that goddess is to a sort of devil-like creature. Iāll have to brush up on that.
Q.: So with the piece you're working on replacing the old ones on the website, what are you going to do with the old cover page/character sheet?
A. (0:40:36): Well, the color page I think is already in the gallery section. If it isnāt, Iām gonna move it over there. So itās not gonna be discarded forever. Itās archived! And...you mean the character page? That one I think Iām going to actually split into two sections, because thereās gonna be new people finding the comic who are going to be reading the first adventure, so Iām going to split in into two sections where you can choose the characters for the first adventure or the character for the adventure. So Iām going to keep the current character page and then also make the new one with the updated infos.
Q.: Wonāt new readers know something's up when they notice Tuuri's only in the first one but not in the second one?
A. (0:42:24): Well, when you open the charactersā page, itās gonna default to the first adventure characters, and then thereās gonna be like a tab for the second adventure. You know that if you tab over to the characters of a future story you are going to get some sort of spoilers, so at that you choose to do that yourself. At least I understand that if Iām reading Harry Potter or something and thereās character information for the first book and then for the second book and third book ā I know that if I check the character list for the third book before Iāve gotten into it, thereās gonna be spoilers for me. Iām counting on people having the ability to not spoil it for themselves if they have the option.
Q.: All of autumn is Halloween (if you want it to be). [Minna mentioned that itās Halloween soon]
A. (1:03:05): Halloween over here isnāt the same as in America, itās All Hallowsā Eve, it is one evening and youāre supposed to go to the graves of people and light some candles and then you go home. And everyone gets a day off of work, itās like a national holiday.
Q.: On the second to last page we see everyone walking into the side of the ship. What I was wondering about is when you'd find out that isn't actually a question.
A. (1:03:54): [reads question a few times] Ah! You tricked me into having my brain short-cutting! [laughs]
Q.: Iām so sorry for that.
A. (1:04:28): You wonāt be forgiven. My trust has been broken. I thought is was a question and it wasnāt!
Q.: Will you have the website redesign up when the new adventure starts?
A. (1:38:17): Yes! Iām actually going to need to have it up in a couple weeks because Iām going to want to upload the first couple of pages before-hand during the break and I need to have the website redesigned before that. So the website design is my priority the next two weeks, and then I want to have it finished.
Q.: If SSSS had ended there, would you have had a plan what to work on next?
A. (1:39:55): Yeah, I would have...I have a lot of ideas all the time, and I do know what I would want to work on next if I had to stop SSSS or if for some reason I couldnāt work on SSSS for some catastrophic reason. You never know, but... I have more stories in my head, and I know which one I would pick for my next big adventure. Iām keeping that one in mind, Iām going to be working for at least a few more years on SSSS, so you never know, I might completely get bored of the idea I have right now and choose to work on something else when the time comes. I make sure not to reveal any of my ideas because if anyone gets excited about them and I change my mind, people would be like āOooh, why would you get rid of that idea you told us about and instead do this really stupid thing?ā
Q.: Is the website of your own design + programming?
A. (1:41:13): Yup! I learned the basics of how to make a website on my own really early. And since then Iāve always wanted to design my own websites because Iām always picky about how it works and looks. I donāt want to use the basic comicpress, blogpress templates that the most people use, theyāre kinda limited in how the websites look. For the actual reading page of the comic, they would be fine, so I kinda designed that part to look similar, because the functionality is important, but I want to have a flashy entrance page where I can keep all of the additional information.
Q.: How did you learn how to design/program your own websites? Like any particular websites or resources?
A. (1:44:08): Not really, I kinda started slowly learning when I was 13 years old or something, so I guess I was learning from some sort of Finnish ālearn basic HTML codingā and I started with a program that was called Microsoft some-sort of front page or something. It was a program meant for making websites. In the beginning I was just making copy-paste code that wasnāt even code, you could just pick from menus that āOh, I want a thing here and I want a link hereā and stuff like that. And I kinda slowly learned how to actually do it in markup rather than just adding things in from menus. And I really really late learned how to do actual coding, basic interactive stuff, so that everything wasnāt hard-coded in markup; like, I learned some basic PHP when I made the website for A Redtailās Dream, so that every time I had to change something, I didnāt have to go through everything and recode it by hand.
Q.: How is working with Hiveworks?
A. (1:46:32): My publisher? Things are going good. The kickstarter rewards, all of them have been sent out now, I know people have been receiving their stuff, and weāre going to launch the store ā well, not the store ā Book 2 officially in the store next week, well, no, Monday the 8th, so we are busy working on that. Thankfully, they are doing the work for actually setting up the pre-order website and stuff, I just need to...I still need to do some promotional artwork for the plush and the book, and just boring things are on my plate. Thatās what I need to do this week. Ugh, I donāt want to do it because itās just annoying, boring work! But I donāt want to ask someone else to do it for me because then I wonāt be happy with the promotional images, Iām a perfectionist when it comes to that.
Q.: Are there going to be trolls hiding in the dark background?
A. (2:21:54): Yeah, weāre going to have several different scenes. [starts pointing] Over here, weāre going to have a dark forest and ancient cars with trees growing through them and maybe some sort of critters over here. And there weāre going to have mutated bears, three bears, against a very ominous red moon, and then weāre going to have something over here. Some sort of crazy creature. So yeah, weāre going to have dangerous things in the background. Iām going to have to make the sketches for the background better before I start working on those on stream. Theyāre very loose right now, I wouldnāt be able to draw them properly without putting thought into it. I just kind of indicated what I want composition-wise.
Q.: "Bears howling at moon" shirt.
A. (2:25:13): Yeah [laughs]. Oh, I might have to do that in the future. Mutated monster bears.
Q.: Just wondering, but have you heard of/seen the work of the webcomic artist Leppu? (one of her most popular webcomics is "Prague Race")
A. (2:49:36): Yeah, I have. Sheās another person from Finland whoās making webcomics. Thatās not actually how I found her work, I only found her a few years ago when she joined Hiveworks. Thatās how I found out about it. Itās another one of webcomics that I havenāt actually read, but that I used to check in on every few weeks to see if thereās a new page, see how the artist is doing, because thatās what Iām interested in. I like to see other artistsā work and just know what theyāre up to. I donāt really have time to read everyoneās comics anymore. But yes, I do know it, and every time I see her art posted anywhere I recognise it ā she has a style that you recognise as hers, and she does almost all of her work in black and white and traditionally, so that gives it a very recognizable flare to begin with. I guess she recently started a new comic. Like, Prague Race hasnāt been updated in half a year or something. I havenāt checked out the new comic yet. Q.: The new comic is Tiger Tiger, it's really funny.
A. (2:52:17): Yup, I follow her on Twitter, so I see her post update pictures, they look really pretty. Iāll probably try to read it if I have time, when thereās a hundred pages or something. A hundred pages is a really good amount of comic to read. Itās really fast and you always get somewhere in the story. Like, 20 pages in a webcomic, thatās not a lot to read. So I always wait a little bit before I even attempt to get into something.
Q.: lmao my wrist is constantly twinging yet I just ignore it.
A. (2:54:10): Oooh, donāt ignore it! If you start feeling pain, you need to change something, because itās gonna get worse if you just ignore it. You need to start doing stretches, you need to exercise every day, just generally, you need to get your blood flowing so that your body can fix whatever is wrong. And if you can, try to find the reason that is causing you the overwork of your wrist and try to find some position where youāre not doing the exact same motion that is causing it. When I start getting pain in some part of my hand, I try to change my grip a little bit, the way I hold my pen or the way Iām sitting, so that Iām doing a different sort of arcing motion with my arm. So I have a few different positions that I use when I start having pain somewhere, that I change until I get rid of the pain for at least a little bit of the time. I have this thing where my wrist isnāt actually the one thatās usually hurting, the pain in my hand travels around, or I force it to travel around, so that I donāt have the one place that is constantly getting worn down, because then youāre eventually going to hit this spot where that part of your body becomes unusable. So Iām evening out the burden by making sure itās different parts of my hand that get most of the work put on it. But donāt ignore it, definitely donāt ignore it! Stretching and resting and exercising are the most important things you need to do. You might not be able to heal it, but itās important to make sure it doesnāt get worse, because if you get some sort of pain that is tolerable and it never goes away, you can live with that. The human condition is to live with pain. Everyone has some part that always keeps hurting. But you donāt want that to get to the point where the thing is always hurting so bad that you canāt concentrate and you forget about it now and then, you donāt want to let it get worse as time goes on.
Q.: Does your mom watch your livestream?
A. (2:58:08): She said that she watches sometimes, but sheās a teacher, so she canāt stay up to two in the morning. But Iāve heard that she does watch them sometimes, in retrospect at least.
Q.: Tell her to join our chat.
A. (2:58:43): Oh no. My parents are pretty good at letting me do my own thing. I know that both my mom and dad kinda keep up with my work, but they also know that I like my privacy, so they promised that they wonāt call all the time and ask me how Iām doing and they wonāt be constantly showing up in my work stuff and my social media, and I promised on my part that I will always be diligent in making updates in social media, because my mom says that if sheās worried about me, she will check my Twitter to make sure Iāve posted something, that Iām okay, so I promised that if Iām not uploading the comic for some while that I will make a Twitter post about anything at least once a day, so that she can make sure that Iām okay. And also I promised that I will always answer the phone when they call. I hate talking on the phone, but thatās completely reasonable. We have good, balanced relationship there. Parents really want to constantly be kinda keeping in touch and Iām so antisocial that I get really tired of that, so we have reached a good balance.
Q.: Tweets as substitute for phone calls are perfectly fine in our modern age.
A. (3:01:01): Yes they are. Especially since my mom doesnāt actually need to make a Twitter account, she doesnāt like social media and refuses to make a Facebook page, which I understand, I also donāt like using Facebook for anything other than having comic updates for people who do want it. So I understand my mom, but she can at least utilize the free window into my life that is Twitter, and she obviously enjoys the cat pictures.
Q.: Yee lol itās always fun to figure time zones when I talk to my international friends.
A. (3:04:50): I hate time zones, since the comicās readership is kinda split between people who read on the European continent from Russia to the UK, and thatās a lot of time zones, and then the other half is over in the Americas ā Canada, Latin America, and the United States ā and then that continent is split into a several time zones, so I have a really hard time figuring out times when everyone or the majority of my readers are able to join in on anything. So I guess this time in Americas itās middle-day, maybe afternoon in some parts, and itās around midnight in Europe. Why canāt the whole globe be on the same time?! Why canāt the earth be flat?! Like a big old disc that just has some sort of dimming, you know, it gets night because the moon moves in front of the disc or something. But even then, we wouldnāt have the same times because the moon would be entering in front of the moon at different times. Hmm. Maybe if the night worked so that the sun would turn off at different times, and that way we would be living at the same time of the day on the whole globe. And it wouldnāt be a globe, it would be a disc that constantly faces the sun. Thatās my solution to this nonsense problem.
Q.: We should live on Discworld *nods*
A. (3:07:56): Isnāt there a book named Discworld? I feel like that sounds familiar. A sci-fi book series.
Q.: Force everyone to live by the same timezone and give them flashlights!?
A. (3:09:03): Or maybe we should just force everyone to live on the same strip of land on the globe and the rest of the globe would just be used for robots to farm food for us, and all of humanity lives on this one narrow strip, one time-zone strip with gigantic skyscrapers to make us all fit. And if you go to work for some reason into the other time-zones, then you need to use the flashlight and live by the human time-zone.
Q.: Yeah Discworld is one of the longest running book series in the world I think?
A. (3:09:55): Oh, okay! I know I wonāt be reading it then. I get really easily burnt out on long book series. The longest one I tried to get through was I think fourteen parts, some sort of fantasy epic. It got a little bit too much, I got to the point where I couldnāt remember any of the characters because there were so many, and all of the little plot points. Actually, I did read one really long series. I read the Redwall Series up to book 12 or something, after that I think they stopped translating them into Finnish. So I lied! I have been able to read one decently long series.
Q.: You mean The Wheel of Time?
A. (3:11:06): Yes! Thatās the horribly long fantasy series. You guessed it from my description! Yeah, I think I even own the books in pocket format. I think theyāre not really in English, in either Swedish or Finnish, I donāt remember. [a name of some author]? Maybe. But yeah, I had a lot of those books, and at some point I just couldnāt keep up with anything anymore. But I read at least ten of them.
Q.: I feel like Redwall was really great but each book just felt the same after awhile.
A. (3:12:02): Yeah, it definitely had that problem, but I read them when I was really young, I think about sixth grade, fifth, sixth grade, so I would have been 12 years old or something, and I didnāt mind that the books were basically the same after some time, I loved it. I just wanted the same thing over and over again with slightly different animals and setup.
Q.: Is the duck foreshadowing for Adventure 2 because ducks have two legs?
A. (3:08:39): Come on! No, itās foreshadowing for Adventure 2 because ducks have two wings and two eyes! The legs have nothing to do with it.
Q.: If the crew is going to Finland I have high hopes for the second story.
A. (3:15:27): Yeah, itās gonna be pretty good. Iām gonna get to revisit the same kind of scenery that I did in A Redtailās Dream except with the addition of ruins from old times and scarier monsters.
Q.: I'm super excited about that~ Secrets and all that~
A. (3:16:37): Yeah, I like sprinkling around little secrets in the comic and then making you guys wait five years to find out about it. Thatās kind of how it works even in books series: you get something interesting in book 1 and then you have to wait three years for the person whoās writing the series to get to the part in the story where it actually becomes something. And itās always fun when you get to that point except for the times if itās a really disappointing revelation. Then itās not as fun.
Q.: Are you opposed to fans sending you physical mail, post cards or fanart? Or would you rather not?
A. (3:37:06): I would rather not, because I donāt have a (whatās it called) PO box? Most people who do accept stuff from people who want to send over have PO box. I donāt have one, I donāt live in a place where you can really get one. So yeah, I donāt want to have strangers sending me things to my real mail. I donāt want to go to my mailbox and be like āHm, did I get a nice postcard today or did someone send a jar of poop.ā You never know with people on the internet.
Q.: Chickens r my fave farm animal, it's fun collecting eggs and u can pet them. [see question time-stamped (3:43:26) in Characters]
A. (3:45:02): Yeah, Iāve heard chickens can be really cute. But Iāve also heard that they can poop a lot and the poop can be dangerous, like it can get dusty in their coop, and thereās something in their poop that is dangerous when you breathe it in, so you have to keep cleaning it every day. I read some sort of guide on why you should not have chickens unless you live on some sort of farm, and it was basically that itās a lot of work to take care of chickens and you shouldnāt just get them for the fun of it if youāre not prepared to suffer the cleaning.
Q.: Can't you make gunpowder out of chicken poop?
A. (3:46:35): Well, I would not doubt that if someone claimed that. Yeah, I think it is, because another thing that I read was that youāre not allowed to have certain kinds of heaters in the chicken coops during winter, because thereās something also in the poop or pee or something that is really flammable, so if you put a heater in a coop everything is going to burn down explosively because itās basically gunpowder in the air. So I think youāre right on that.
Q.: Birds pee and poop in one.
A. (3:48:25): Ah! I didnāt actually know that. That does make sense. You never actually hear about birds peeing on people.
Q.: My grandparents have pigeons and haven't had any trouble with those! A hawk ate one once though and all the other birds were too scared to come out of their coop for a while.
A. (3:49:28): Aw, poor little birdies. On the other hand, the hawk got happy, so that counts for something, I guess.
Q.: Would you be ok with peeps making similar design real clothes inspired from your stuff?
A. (3:54:03): Definitely! A couple people I think have done something like that, knitting-related clothes. Thatās really cool, since Iām not in the business of manufacturing clothing myself, it doesnāt harm me in any way if people make it as a fanwork. And a lot of people have done cosplay and that way also mimicked clothing of the characters. The only reason I would have something against it is if my greatest dream was to be a fashion designer and that was what I was trying to become and my dream was to one day make a clothing line that was inspired by the comic, then I would be like āNo! Thatās my territory! You are cutting my future profits as the greatest clothing designer!ā but since I have zero interests in becoming that, I have nothing against people designing clothes inspired by my work.
Itās kinda like the same sort of situation where some well-known artists are opposed to people doing commissions based on their characters, like, they have some really popular comic, letās say, and other people are making commissions based on those characters. Some artists are really opposed to that when they themselves also make commissions based on their own characters, because then the other people who are doing it are cutting into his profits and stealing potential customers away from the original creator. Whereas artists who donāt necessarily do commissions based on their own characters or having so many commissions that they donāt need anymore ā they tend to not mind that kind of stuff, and same goes with people selling prints based on those fanarts they have made. Some artists are really protective and wonāt allow that in cases when they feel like those people are stealing their customers, which is true sometimes. And then the artists who donāt think their work or their customers are being stolen will allow it. So thatās my reasoning. Clothing stuff is not really cutting into my business.
Q.: Do you cook?
A. (4:02:51): Kinda. I have basic dishes that I like to make. Usually, since I want to work a lot and be very effective, I donāt like wasting time cooking food. When I do cook, I do things that I can keep for several days and just eat it and not have to do it again. So I cook like lasagna or fish soup or meat stew or chicken pasta or chicken and rice, basic meals. Other than that, I might just buy something that I can put in the oven like fishsticks. I almost never actually eat stuff that use the microwave. At least it has to be something that requires putting it in the oven. And I try to be healthy since it has a lot to do with how productive I can be, so I do make sure that I donāt buy the instant food stuff because it might taste good since thatās the reason why people get hooked on some sort of simple microwave meal, and it tastes good and itās easy to make but itās low on nutrients, so when I buy things that can be heated in the oven, I make sure itās something proper, like fish with the crispy covering, I buy stuff where itās actually fish and not fish mixed with 90% of garbage.
Q.: Oooh, lasagna.
A. (4:05:00): Yeah, lasagna is so good. Oh and obviously lasagnaās twin sister, spaghetti and bolognese sauce are very similar in consistency and taste. But lasagna is so good, I actually try not to make it very often, because itās kinda addictive. Like, I make a pan thatās supposed to be enough for four days and I would eat it in two and a half, because I take one weak portion and Iām full, but it tastes so good that I eat a second portion and oooh, thatās horrible. Thatās like a luxury meal for me. But itās so easy to make. Itās one of my favorite foods. By the way, the worst kind of food that I make when I donāt want to cook anything is... I literally just take canned tuna because I keep a little bit of a pantry where I keep stuff that lasts long, and then I just open it, it all of it, get my protein, and then I eat a cup of frozen blueberries to get my vitamins and carbohydrates and thatās my meal. Itās really pathetic when those days come, when Iām just so lazy and Iāve forgotten to cook something the previous day and Iām like āAw, no.ā I mean, itās not unhealthy! You get the basic nutrients, itās not like Iām eating McDonaldās or something, but I definitely feel a little pathetic during those days, like āOooh, this is not how an adult is supposed to eat.ā
Q.: Canned tuna for the apocalypse.
A. (4:07:43): Iāll be honest, Iām actually always keeping a little bit of food in my pantry just in case something happens. I live in a small town, if for some reason something bad happens and you canāt get food from the store for a month, then I have enough food that I can survive! And thatās on purpose. That also means that I have a lot of tuna that I can eat when I donāt want to eat for a regular meal.
Q.: I also have the always tuna can and beans and stuff.
A. (4:08:35): Youāre supposed to have. Basically every government says that youāre supposed to have at least three days of food in case thereās a week when the food network is disrupted. But then youāre like āWhat if itās three weeks?ā Itās gonna be really tough if you have only three days of food. And itās so easy to keep a couple shelves of something that you eat anyway. All the stuff that I keep, like the tuna, I keep eating it and then I buy new stuff every now and then. It doesnāt take up space and give a little bit of piece of mind.
Q.: Now I kinda want some fish.
A. (4:10:38): Yes, itās been a very fishy day. Fish is good. Unless itās the kind that has been fished in the Baltic Sea. Or fed stuff that has been made of fish that has been fished out of the Baltic Sea. Any part of the food chain that has touched the Baltic Sea ā itās bad for you. Donāt eat it.
Q.: Wait what's bad about the Baltic Sea?
A. (4:11:46): It is the most polluted inland sea there is. Is it inland sea? Well, whatever it is technically called. Itās the most polluted part of the sea that there is because the only part where fresh water gets into it is that tiny-tiny strait between Denmark and Sweden, where our little crew drove over. If you look at the map, itās a really thin part where the water gets through, and itās narrow and winding, so there isnāt a lot of edge ins between the sea and the Baltic Sea, and thereās a lot of countries where all of the polluted farm water from rivers and toxic waste from cities and everything thatās going on are all running into the sea. Poland, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Russia, Denmark, the Baltic countries, all of them, and certainly some rivers from probably France and inner European countries all flow into the Baltic Sea, so it keeps getting more and more polluted. And fish who eat plankton and stuff that lives there, the pollution is collected in them, and the bigger the fish, the more concentrated the pollution is. Or I guess the fatter the fish, the more that fish has eaten, the more concentrated it is. At least in the Nordic countries, any shops that sell fish from the Baltic Sea have to have those kind of warnings that if youāre pregnant you shouldnāt eat and you shouldnāt eat it more than three times a week at maximum because itās too dangerous for your health otherwise.
Q.: How might the sound design for City of Hunger be (if there is to be any)?
A. (04:15:55): I donāt know yet, Iām going to have to do some proper research in whatās some basic sound design for the games that Iāve enjoyed, since thatās something that I never pay attention to when I play games. So when I want to actually think about what I want for my game, Iām like āAaah, I donāt know! Something that isnāt distracting I guess?ā But yeah, itās gonna be something that isnāt distracting. Something pretty basic.
Drawing: Inspirations, Techniques, ProcessQ.: How big are your comic pages usually?
A. (1:35:56): If you mean pixel-wise, two pages or the one spread is like 8000 pixels wide and the height was like... well, I donāt even remember. Itās 3000 or something. So theyāre not insanely big, but they have a lot of pixels. I know thereās people who insist on going always above 10000 pixels for any canvas theyāre working on. And Iām just like... Well, I would use it, too, if I had a really powerful computer. At some point you have to go with what your computer is able to handle, I donāt want it to take ten minutes every time I want to save the file.
Q.: I love colour scheme so much already

It reminds me a little of the prologue.
A. (1:14:38): Yes, itās kind of intentional, since its the colours that I picked to be the standard colors for the comic. Itās the tan background and then kind of a lot of purple or dark, deep violets, and then the reds. They are the colours that I use in a lot of the infopages and a lot of the prologue had, the actual comic pages had this kind of colour scheme. The very first layout that I had before the one that we currently have had the same colour scheme. It was just a group picture of the crew, they were standing and posing, but it had these colours, so Iām kinda going back to that one for the main website layout.
Q.: I've been writing a comic script for about a year, but I can't draw.
A. (2:36:30): Well, you know what the solution to that is! You just have to draw. And thatās how you learn. Nobody wants to write amazing script and waste their horrible learning years on that. So, if you want to learn how to draw and eventually get your comic script done, write another comic script that you still like but isnāt that important, and draw that one. And then it doesnāt matter if it sucks because itās going to suck. My first few comics that I made when I was a teenager, they are all really bad, but I still made them, and they helped me become better. So yeah, although A Redtailās Dream was my practice comic and my first real comic that I did, I actually have a like hundred comic pages that Iāve drawn as a teenager before that, you know, on different little projects that I abandoned, like, all of them. I donāt think Iāve ever ā actually Iāve done one comic properly to the end, which was 20 pages. Other than that, I definitely have like a hundred pages before even getting to a Redtailās Dream. Thatās always the answer, you just have to draw something to get all the bad pages out and you will eventually become good enough to draw your own comic, that it will become good to the point that people will actually want to read it.
Q.: Do you think you will stick to the style you draw the comic in now, or is there a particular look you are aiming for that you have not reached yet?
A. (3:51:09): I kinda have a particular look that I am trying to reach, that I think Iām pretty close to. I feel like Iām gonna stay pretty similar to what I have now, because thereās a problem where the look that Iām trying to reach is... I feel like Iām pretty close to it, but Iām not quite there, so Iām like, āWhy would I swing back and forth, getting slightly closer?ā and then Iām āOooh, Iām so close to the perfect style!ā and then I try to reach the perfect style and then make a misstep and fall further away from it and then I notice that I went too far away from it, and then I try to get back to whatever it was before. So my style is kind of shifting around still, but I feel like Iāve reached what I want my style to be. Itās not fluctuating as much as it was doing a couple years ago where I would have really good pages where I would still look back. I was really close to my dream style in this and this page, but it would fluctuate to something completely different on the next 20 pages and then shift back to being kind of more stable over the last year maybe.
Writing: Character-creation, PacingQ.: The thought of a post-apocalyptic world often evokes despair which is built in in many stories. SSSS is pretty light in tone. Do you ever struggle with that, whether or not or how much to build in a sense of despair?
A. (1:16:55): Not really, because I kinda donāt like the post Apocalyptic stories that wallow in some sort of despair all the time, especially when it comes to the way that humans are portrayed as almost everyone being evil and cruel, which might make sense, thereās a theory that if something really bad does happen the most cruel people will survive, because they wonāt hesitate to take advantage of the most kind people, so that way it would make sense. But I get tired of those stories really easily. Like the Walking Dead, I liked the comic (I havenāt watched the TV show) for quite a few volumes, but at the point where the stories stopped being about zombies as the main threat and it started being some sort of crazy warlord sort of person, everything got really depressing even for a post-apocalyptic story. I lost interest, I donāt like those kinds of stories, I like stories where they have some sort of goodness in them, except in cases where itās absolut horror stories, then I like it to be as dark as possible. But for long-running stories, I canāt keep interest if itās really negative. I just made the kind of story that I like so itās not difficult for me to balance the horror and the flashbacks to dark times with the lighter elements of camaraderie and people trying to survive and generally being not-evil.