06-02-2010, 01:13 AM | #121 | |
Beware the Fangirl
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Under a rock, in a cave on Mars with my fingers in my ears going "OOOOOOOM..."
Posts: 40
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Quote:
Dragoon is the guy in blue sitting with RM, the yellow guy is the guard who's been chasing that poor messenger for most of the comic.
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:bmage: I just want to cause destruction on a global scale. Is that so wrong? :fighter: You will someday BM. I know you will! :bmage: Aww, heck. You're just sayin' that to make me feel better^^ |
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06-02-2010, 01:42 AM | #122 |
tamp tamp tamp
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Virginia
Posts: 1,270
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Yes yes yes yes yes, this is how this comic was meant to end!
I, I think I want to read the whole thing again now. Also ha ha, the viziers all want to be elf king a la place du elf king. Seriously though this is like, perfect. I completely want to hug everyone involved. I want to make this uncomfortable for everyone, because you all didn't have to do it and you didn't have to do it like this but you did and now the comic has closure and just, thanks.
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Hey baby, I hear the blues a-callin'. Tossed salad and scrambled eggs Oh My! Mercy! And maybe I seem a bit confused, yeah maybe, but I got you pegged! But I don’t know what to do with those tossed salads and scrambled eggs. They're calling again. Last edited by Art of Hilt; 06-02-2010 at 01:46 AM. |
06-02-2010, 01:46 AM | #123 |
Keeper of the new
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: A place without judgment
Posts: 4,506
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Congrats on the best ending of anything since Scrubs. I could almost hear nostalgic music in the background. . .maybe "Everyday"?
I guess there's nothing more to be said now. The story's all done. Such sweet misery. Time to look into buying comic books from the US.
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Hope insistent, trust implicit, love inherent, life immersed |
06-02-2010, 02:06 AM | #124 |
Queen of the Naked Mole People
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 8
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FANTASTIC! I agree, the perfect ending.
Also, you've just established Red Mage and Black Mage, two characters I already had the hots for, as being epically hot (emaciated, man! I LOVE EMACIATED). Yeeeess. |
06-02-2010, 03:13 AM | #125 |
Goomba
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2
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And now it is part of history - not a large part, y'know, it's like one of those things they put into a book when they don't want to spend a lot of time on it - oh, damn, what is that called, that thing at the bottom of the page that basically says "this thing happened but isn't important enough to clog-up the main narrative here", umm, uh, jeez - an ankle message? a knee letter? OH - a FOOTNOTE! Yeah , that's it. It is a footnote for the generations and ages that follow - as long as someone actually looks down there when they come across the asterisk or dagger symbol, or little number if there's a bunch of them on that page.
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06-02-2010, 03:17 AM | #126 |
Troopa
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 31
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Awesome epilogue! I love all the little touches, especially the FF7-11 job board, and the restaurant menu for some reason. I feel compelled to actually make up a recipe for Goblin Punch now. Oh, and the elven court being viziers all the way down. Also, thanks to the poster who first mentioned the 12 dragon nacho joke. I got it, but only once it was pointed out that it WAS a joke...
But my absolute favorite part of course, was Red Mage continuing to excel at oblivious accidental innuendo. |
06-02-2010, 04:10 AM | #127 |
Master of War
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: The End of Time, in the room with the kickin' theme music.
Posts: 95
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I have just received remuneration for six years of backhanded "Fuck you" -- hilarious backhanded "Fuck you," but backhanded "Fuck You," all the same.
My verdict? I loved it. I feel at peace with this comic, now. It's an awesome memory that was worth every moment I spent reading it, and every even longer moment I spent anticipating a late update. I was damn near sweating blood a few times there towards the end, but seeing that everyone actually ended up okay, despite my own dire predictions to the contrary, just puts a smile on my face. Brian Clevinger actually has a soul. Who'd have been fool enough to think?
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If you're strong, I look strong. If you're weak, I look weak. |
06-02-2010, 04:54 AM | #128 |
Goomba
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 3
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I stumbled across 8-Bit during the early Survivor comics. Doing so started a long chain of events beginning from sprite comics becoming an almost-sole hobby, to me starting/running a website for sprite comic backgrounds, with side-trips into ROM-hacking and technical writing. Today, I'm a decently-well-off software engineer and web developer. And it's all your fault, Brian Clevinger.
There are many things I could say about 8-Bit Theater that would be true: "it holds a special significance in my life", "it was the only constant thing in my life over the years", "it'll forever be one of my most vivid memories", etc. Many people in the sprite comic hobby have the likes of Bob and George and That's My Sonic as their first hook, but for me, it was 8-Bit, the best of them all, over eight years ago. The time spent reading 8BT, checking the site for news updates, and waiting for the next issue was time well spent. Given a chance to do it all again, the only thing I would change is not becoming a member of the forums prior to posting a sappy "thank you" message at the end. While this note is just one of many, know that it's filled with profound gratitude for the effort you've put into making the series. Thanks for nine years of memories, Brian. They were all great. |
06-02-2010, 05:28 AM | #129 |
Wat
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Amongst the dead
Posts: 2,716
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So FF12 and 13 are a waste?
Was that the punchline? |
06-02-2010, 05:39 AM | #130 |
Goomba
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 3
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And now I'm going to wax. Not exactly philosophically, but nostalgically.
I turned seventeen yesterday. On the same day, I read the Epiclogue. Then I had one of those introspective "remembering better days" montage-orgasms. Seriously, I swear there was acoustic guitar playing, and this time it was not from my hippie housemate. When this comic started, I was still seven. I read it for the first time when I was nine. My brother and sister, both way older than me, read it and I saw a little bit of it. We didn't have a whole lot of money, but my brother loved video games. Most of the games I was familiar with were NES and SNES games, with some MAME arcade emulation. I loved the pixel styles, the blockiness of it, the way it could reduce a complicated character into a series of little blocks. I remember building Mario out of legos once or twice. So needless to say, seeing 8-Bit Theater for the first time, I was enchanted. I kept up with it for a few years. In that time, a lot of stuff happened. My sister left home, my parents fought more and more, and stuff was overall pretty intense. That's depressing and not the point here, so let me sum it up as "boo-freaking-hoo" and we'll move on. In that same time, I turned to the internet and, well, general nerdery more and more. 8-Bit Theater shaped my internet habits, and they came to shape me. For starters, the links page introduced me to Bob and George back in, oh, say, 2004. Bob and George in turn introduced me to spriting, manga, Gaia Online, the concept of a "forum", roleplaying. Seeing comics like BnG and 8-Bit made me want to be an artist, and a writer. I kept coming back to Nuklear Power, reading all the side columns and extra comics that Brian made on the side. Sosa introduced me to DnD. I'm sure I sent him horrible, febreze-ridden vs. requests. Somewhere around 2005, I fell out of contact with 8-Bit Theater. I had more limited computer time. I fell behind on the updates and didn't want to spend the time checking up on it. It took me a few more years before I checked back in. If I recall, Bob and George actually mentioned 8-Bit in one of their comics, and it reintroduced me, in a really cyclical way. But I kept falling out. The past few years have been some of the hardest in my life, blah blah blah. Finally, one of my friends started reading it, independently of me. This was just a couple months ago. It brought me back. I pulled through the archives in one, very amusing night. I'd played Final Fantasy on a ROM at some point, and had a good perspective of where the comic was at, in terms of the overall progression of the game. I remember something Brian wrote way back, a couple of iterations of the site ago, when people were wondering how long the comic was going to go for. He said something like "It took me a hundred strips just to get past Garland. It's not ending any time soon." Well, here we are. I loved the conclusion. I loved the story. I'm glad I got to follow it through the last arc. Thanks Brian. It's been great growing up with 8-Bit Theater. |
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