12-15-2013, 11:46 AM | #71 |
Artist and Writer of Comics
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Keep reading! It'll all tie up in the end. Trust me! The way the comic is updated makes it seem like we're spending a lot more time on one aspect of the story than we really are. The ninja have only been around for a handful of pages, so to say they've taken over the comic and hijacked the genre isn't really true.
Also what part of what's going on is incoherent? Maybe I can smooth things over.
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12-15-2013, 07:20 PM | #72 |
Goomba
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 6
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It starts out well enough. You have Kit seeking revenge on Jeanne for (maybe?) having her shot, then getting involved with Liz against Burke, which sets the general tone of the comic (Western theme combined with DnD elements). The Dreadful is displayed, raising the mystery of who/what Kit actually is. Boozeloaf enters as an amusing supporting character, and Erin gives Liz a reason to go after Jeanne as well. Add the contention between Kit and Liz over Poe, and the mystery of what Jeanne is actually up to, and you have the start of an excellent and interesting story.
But then it seems like new ingredients keep getting added to the soup ad nauseum. Erin is resurrected by what was throwaway gag about fairies in bottles. The There's not much sign of continuity for anything that gets introduced. It seems like new elements are constantly being added without really fleshing out the story potential of any one thread. Additionally, the theme of the story has kind of exploded into a "everything that is 'awesome'" rather than being focused on a western fantasy theme. The comic is a combination of action, a little drama, and comedy, but it's become difficult to take any one of these aspects of the comic seriously. The action went from gun-slingy to DBZ/Naruto pretty abruptly. The importance of the drama of Kit and Poe's relationship and hard lives is lost amid all the insane stuff that keeps happening. The comedy is becoming less apparent as the comic becomes more about super-powered violence. It seems like the comic doesn't know what it wants to be, and is trying to be a whole lot of different things at the same time. Or maybe it started out knowing what it was, but has since been distracted from that goal, or simply didn't know how to get there and started exploring a lot of diversions. What I know is, as a reader, I was lured into the comic by the idea of a western fantasy, but am being turned off by the expansion into superheroes, ninjas, and the general devolvement into villains being superpowered murder machines. In a western, you want a gun with plain old bullets to actually mean something, you know? |
12-15-2013, 09:12 PM | #73 |
Artist and Writer of Comics
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 2,666
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Gun and plain ol' bullets still mean something!
There is a lot of stuff that happens in this comic for sure. It's hard for me to focus on one thing because...I dunno, I guess that's just my nature. I have a plan for everything though. It's just a matter of getting there. I have recently made a change to the way the story is structured, and that ought to keep it more focused. Thanks for the feedback though! Hopefully you'll stick with the comic for a bit longer.
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I do commissions! So Email me if you'd like anything and we'll work out the details! matts_1104@yahoo.com Follow me on Twitter for Dreadful news and random info! (though mostly it's just me babbling about nerd-stuff) http://twitter.com/#!/mSperoni Check out my Deviant Art page if you'd like to see other pictures I've made! http://exmile.deviantart.com/ Follow The Dreadful on Facebook! |
12-16-2013, 04:09 AM | #74 | |
Strangely Soothing
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 44
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Same thing here. I see no reason why magic, DBZ powers, supernatural elements, and other things can't exist in the same place. The western motif is just a stage. |
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12-16-2013, 11:01 AM | #75 |
Artist and Writer of Comics
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 2,666
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Japanese immigration to Texas was actually a thing in the early 1900s. They were trying to make money growing rice since the climate there was favorable for it. This was near Houston. Little communities sprang up and such.
If you look up Seito Saibara and Kichimatsu Kishi you will learn moooore!
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I do commissions! So Email me if you'd like anything and we'll work out the details! matts_1104@yahoo.com Follow me on Twitter for Dreadful news and random info! (though mostly it's just me babbling about nerd-stuff) http://twitter.com/#!/mSperoni Check out my Deviant Art page if you'd like to see other pictures I've made! http://exmile.deviantart.com/ Follow The Dreadful on Facebook! |
12-16-2013, 12:51 PM | #76 | |
Goomba
Join Date: Dec 2013
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Whether or not the inclusion of a given element is good for the narrative or overall quality of a story is another matter. A good story can be defined just as much by what it doesn't have as what it does have. Knowing the limitations of a character, or of a situation, allow for genuine tension to be built. When you make it clear that basically anything and everything could happen, it's difficult to create suspense or encourage the reader to become invested in a given character's predicament. There's a lot of potential for Deus Ex Machina if elements aren't handled carefully. This is one of the reasons powerful characters are difficult to write for. A story about them resolving their conflicts with their naturally powerful abilities isn't particularly exciting, and tends to lead to an arms race with the villains. When your character can handle "mundane" problems like baddies with guns like its nothing to worry about, you're forced to send superpowered villains after them to present them a challenge. At that point it's very easy for the story to stop being about the characters and just turn into a "who's stronger" contest. There's not a lot of depth to be had in that kind of story, which can be unsatisfying, particularly when the narrative started out differently. |
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12-16-2013, 01:50 PM | #77 |
Goomba
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 6
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@MSperoni: Without meaning disrespect to Moosh, I don't think you need to listen too much to what he said. He basically just restated what you've been saying several times in this thread, so he is being a mirror of what you already thought about.
By the way it's worth noting that when you say something about yourself or what you do, people are likely to take it at face value and agree, especially if it seems to put words on their intuitive perception. Anyway since the concerns Moosh expresses are actually yours they ARE valuable up to a point, but I personally disagree completely, just like Masterof7s it seems, and certainly many others. I would guess that it's a matter of taste but also of how the reader first boarded the story. I would take the opposite stance: I am glad and even grateful that The Dreadful's universe cannot be put in a defined category and is so unpredictable and mysterious. The comic is best read without preconceptions as it enables us to discover and understand an unusual but coherent universe as the story unrolls. That trait is shared with all of the all-times best pieces of fantasy and sci-fi, by the way. It brings pleasure beyond normal storytelling. If you are having doubts and stuff regarding the value of your work, well, there is good in doubt, but it is just as important to pin down one's strengths and embrace them Last edited by Glabrezu; 12-16-2013 at 02:13 PM. |
12-16-2013, 02:34 PM | #78 | ||||
Goomba
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 6
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12-16-2013, 03:34 PM | #79 | |||
Goomba
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 6
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What is "pointful" is our two stances and the balance of feedback. Quote:
The goal is to balance out feedback because ultimately, even though your lens is worth acknowledging, I disagree completely with it. Provided the universe remains consistent and coherent, what you see as a problem is one of the comics' most interesting aspects to me; i.e. original, unpredictable, yet sound. The reader has to figure out the world. And it is crafted well enough that I would be pleased to read unrelated stories in this same universe just like I would with the Forgotten Realms, Tolkien's stuff and some others. I rarely say that of a fictional universe, honestly. In the end I think Matt already decided to embrace this aspect of The Dreadful while being extra careful about what you (and he) expressed here. So what remains is preserving high motivation and happiness in work, which is the reason I posted after you. I'm pretty sure my points already crossed his mind and I said nothing new technically. (It's fun how words can be used to convey something completely different from what they are actually saying ) Last edited by Glabrezu; 12-16-2013 at 03:43 PM. |
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12-16-2013, 11:19 PM | #80 |
Eric Charles
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Bethesda, MD
Posts: 98
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For the record, I am still enjoying the comic, but I broadly agree with Moosh's comments. Though I liked the more straight-western flavored theme we started with (even the fantasy elements were clearly tweaked to fit the western environment), I don't mind the mixed genera mode that has developed.
That said, there are so many bloody tangents here, and they take up so much space (not individually, but in combination), that I'm not really sure what the story is at this point. Were this a comic not trying to have a plot, but merely plodding around an interesting world, that would be fine.... but I'm pretty sure this is a comic trying to have a plot, or at least it started out that way. I'm also worried about the overpoweredness. Overpowered people fighting overpowered people is fun once in a while, but it sure doesn't make a deep story. I'm not sure why normal people exist in this world at all, when half the characters we have seen are A) super powered, and B) neutral to enthusiastic about killing random people. Now, I'm happy to maintain faith that all this stuff is headed somewhere and, as I said, I am still enjoying quite a bit, but I can also understand if other people are getting a bit forlorn, especially if they don't read the forum.
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