A Grab Bag of Delights: What the Webcomic Overlook readers read

Two weeks ago, I asked Webcomic Overlook readers which comics they thought weren’t getting much attention. I was driven, mainly, by laziness. (Or, frankly, not having time due to some trip planning.) But, really, I’d been looking for an excuse to do something like this for a while. There are many, many webcomics out there, which means thousands upon thousands that I will never get to. Thanks to everyone for answering my call and for mentioning several more webcomics that I never knew existed:


The Grumpiverse


Terinu


Trying Human


Spacetrawler


Featuring Talking Guinea Pigs


Sunrise


Reliquary


Holiday Wars


Dimes for Nickels


The Left 4 Dead online comic


The Ocarina of Tim


The Cartoon and Quasar


Archipelago


Faraday the Blob


Nicky510


Calamities of Nature


Not Invented Here


Precocious


Hitmen for Destiny!


Unwinder’s Tall Comics



The Retriever


Flashback Universe


Johnny Wander


Brickworld Saga

Not featured but was recommended: Sam & Fuzzy … because that actually is my next review.

Thanks again to everyone who played along!

xkcd sucks … no more!

Not entirely true… in more ways than one, depending on your opinion of the webcomic anyway. I’m talking specifically about Carl Wheeler’s site xkcd Sucks (formerly called xkcd: Overrated). The site is one of the most notorious agitprop blogs about webcomics, namely dissecting every xkcd strip and talking about how bad it is.

I’ve read a few. I guess I’m a little bit of a believer that even the worst webcomic creators have good days, hence I am not necessarily a fan of the format. (Plus the whole “If you hate it so much, why do you keep reading it” argument gains a lot of traction here.) Still, I am also in favor of honest criticism if something is bad, and the write-ups in xkcd Sucks were, for the most part, valid and well-argued.

But that changes now, because xkcd Sucks is going in a new direction. From the blog:

When I first started blogging here, I was doing it out of a frustration I no longer feel. That’s not to say xkcd has gotten better, of course – in fact, it’s gotten worse. But some things have changed: When I started, it was because I felt like no one else seemed to realize that xkcd was getting so terrible. It was just frustrating to feel like I was the only one who “got it”, which I know is a super pretentious thing to say, but it’s how I felt. I was hoping that someone else online had come to the same conclusion, so naturally I googled “xkcd sucks.” I didn’t find much. So I decided it was up to me. I had some brief experience with blogger.com, so I set up an account and started posting.

So here’s what’s different now: I’m not the only one who thinks xkcd sucks. There are you guys, certainly, and I love you all for it. But even elsewhere – it’s far more common to hear people say that xkcd is getting a lot worse. I no longer feel like I’m doing anyone a favor by having this blog. That alone, though, wouldn’t be enough to stop – I truly do enjoy this sort of thinking and this sort of writing, and the practice is certainly good even if no one is reading. And recently, that’s dropped off too – the overarching problem with most recent xkcd comics is not that they are terrible but that they are boring. It’s not fun to write about. A lot of the problems in the new comics are the exact same problems as in old comics, so to criticize them properly would be to merely repeat myself. That’s not fun.

At the same time, I’m reading tons of other comics. I link to them when I can, but usually the amount of time I spend on xkcd crowds out the rest of the stuff. I want to spend more time reading new comics and writing reviews of those, or writing more book reviews, or interviews. And I want to have a few more voices represented, not just mine.

But all this I had decided long ago – the problem was, I still felt like xkcdsucks should continue too, and I didn’t have time for both. So here’s my compromise: “xkcdsucks” is now going to be a weekly feature of the new blog. Rather than feel the need to comment on every single xkcd no matter what, this will let me be more adaptable – if only one comic is worth commenting on that particular week, then that’s all I’ll do. I always say that Randall’s problem (ONE of his problems) is that he forces himself to update constantly, regardless of quality. So I shouldn’t do that myself.

Hey! I still haven’t told you anything about the new site! And this is what I am super excited about, too. So! It’s a wordpress blog, right now it’s pretty basic visually but I hope to work on that in the comic weeks. If you want to help out that would be cool. I certainly want some nicer images around, and maybe some help with the general visual theme. My idea is that everything can be done through one blog, but that there would be links to only certain by certain features (like, “posts written by this guy” or “interviews,” etc.) so it would feel a little more organized than just “all posts here, read in order.” I have a few ideas for what to write about – actually a whole lot – so I’m pretty excited to get started. The URL is www.webcomics.me , so that’s a pretty nice place for it. I don’t have a name for it besides just calling it “webcomics.me” so if you think of a good name let me know. Actually if you think of anything at all let me know.

So there you go. The head prophet for the proposition that xkcd might not be the greatest webcomic in the world has gone and started an all new blog, scaling back xkcd Sucks duty to a once-a-week at best. Will Carl start talking about webcomics he actually likes? Maybe.

(h/t reader Dane Thulin)

Critics not a-mew-sed by Blade Kitten, the video game based on the webcomic Blade Kitten

Apparently, there’s a webcomic out there by Steve Stamatiadis named Blade Kitten that’s been turned into a video game. That’s fairly impressive, since you don’t see many webcomics translated into other mediums that often. I honestly can’t think of any other webcomic-based video games out there beyond the Penny Arcade game.

However, the reviews aren’t very encouraging. You could say they were a little .. catty. (Cat puns! What fresh level of hell has the Webcomic Overlook stooped to?) IGN and Gamespot both give it a 5/10 (and remember, this is on a scale where 7 is considered a bad grade). 1Up.com was a little more charitable, giving it a B-, and Eurogamer gave it an 8/10, which probably proves that European gamers aren’t sick of anime yet. The latest review comes from the AV Club, which gave it a C+.

Australia-based Krome Studios (of Spyro The Dragon reboots and Ty The Tasmanian Tiger) has developed the webcomic Blade Kitten into an episodic 2-D action-platformer with cel-shaded cotton-candy visuals and gameplay that provides a short-lived sugar rush, but there isn’t enough depth or difficulty to sustain the game past its sixth stage—let alone beyond episode one.

I browsed through the Blade Kitten comic, and on first blush it seems like pretty much the puree of every anime that has ever existed — kitty ears, space setting, and all. Surprisingly, this comic was not co-created by Vinson Ngo, a.k.a. Bleedman.

Attention to video game developers: if you’re going to make a video game out of a webcomic, how about Galaxion? Or Dead Winter? Or The Order of the Stick? I guarantee all of these choices are purr-fect game fodder. (Guh.) On the plus side, you could probably save a ton of cash on graphics for that last one.