Desperate for companionship, Frankenstein's Monster pretends to be the Opera Ghost. A grave mistake.
Namesake
Isa, Meg
There's ghosts at your heels and fairy tale worlds ahead. What do you do? Jump down the rabbit hole!
Beeserker
TJ Cordes
This comic is about a robot powered by bees, but it's also about the kind of people who think filling a robot with bees is a good idea, and why they're wrong.
2 Slices
RJ Morel
After a case of mistaken identity, will awkward Daisuke find help from excitable Mamo, or will his love life be thrown completely off track?
Dumbing of Age
David M Willis
Joyce has been homeschooled her entire life until now, when she's suddenly a freshman in college! Things don't go well.
The Otherknown
Lorian Merriman
Chandra is a 12-year-old accidental time traveler with a reluctant new dad, who happens to be a member of a feared galactic crime syndicate.
Cyanide & Happiness
Explosm
Satire, dark humor and surreal humor.
Countdown to Countdown
Velinxi
Iris Black is a self-proclaimed inventor with the curious ability to bring his drawings to life, and yearns to find a space where he can use his powers freely.
Blindsprings
Kadi Fedoruk
Tamaura, wrested into a world 300 years in the future, must find a way to save the magic fading from her country.
Guilded Age
T Campbell, John Waltrip, Florence Machina
Welcome to the saga of the working-class adventurer! Enjoy the complete story with new annotations daily!
Mac Hall
Matt Boyd
The legendary early-aughts webcomic that inspired a wave of webcomic creators.
Slightly Damned
Chu
Rhea Snaketail returns from the dead, befriending a Demon who falls in love with an Angel. The afterlife ain't what it used to be!
Paint the Town Red
Windy, Winter Jay Kiakas
Winona runs a werewolf shelter with partner in crime, Odile in the Gothic city of Merlot. One day they take in an injured vampire, and soon unravels many of the dark secrets of Merlot.
Commentary
Posted March 21, 2009 at 1:00 am
TITLE: Sad Kitty Ellen
[rule]
Just fair warning: This entire commentary is pretty much blabbing about print vs web layouts ^^;
This update, along with the previous one, are among the ultimate examples of the "slice and dice" update approach being put into practice. For one thing, the last panel of the previous page will take up half a page in print.
That's fine on paper, but on the web, it's kind of bad to have to scroll to see the entire first panel when it also reveals all the panels to follow it on that page. Even if this half of the page were combined with the first half from the previous update, I would have changed the layout to work better for the web.
As for this update, these panels will be stacked vertically in print. Rather than force everyone to scroll down to read through them online, I rearranged them into a landscape format. I had the high-res print version made before I created this web version, so it won't come back to bite me later when I (hopefully) have to get these comics ready to be printed.