What Did I Learn?

Webcomic Reviews by Delos Woodruff
 

Please note: This page is no longer updated.


New reviews are posted weekly on the blog page. These reviews are being slightyl updated and ported over to that blog to be republished every Wednesday. They are all scheduled to post and this page will remain until October 2009. You may wish to change your bookmarks.

[url=http://www.nekoandneko.com/>Neko and Neko[/url] with artwork by [url=http://www.comicspace.com/capitanpocaspulgas/]Hector Bustamante[/url]. Neko and Neko is a cute, off the wall comic. Everything contributes to the zany, fun feel. The artwork has lots of thick to thin solid lines, vibrant colors and spiky shadows. There's always a lot of action which is eye catching and solidly holds your interest. The sound effects and the lettering are all well done. The characters are cleanly constructed visually, with size and color contrasts. They also have clear personalities and goals. They all have a link to each other, even if it's a little convoluted. You have cats and peas and flies all wound in a cross intersection of desires. The glue holding this strip together is just the sheer zany fun of it. The strip has a lot of spirit which is reinforced by the strong emotional actions and reactions of the characters. I'm sure the characters help write the strip. What did I learn? Strong character design is more than just clean lines and the silhouette test. I always hear that cliche line 'what's my motivation?' but you should be able to answer that for your characters. The strength of color shoud support your works' desired tone. Look over [url=http://www.nekoandneko.com/]Neko and Neko[/url] and see if you don't agree.
 

Previous Reviews

 

Battlegate| Butterfly| Good Ship Chronicles| Evil, Inc.| Madscott| Jefbot| Chronicle| Sheldon| Stardrop| Theater Hopper| Knave| Lullaby| High Moon| Metadawn| Dead Days| PC Weenies| Ask Maridee | Tiny Folk | Gordian Algebra | Starslip Crisis | The Front | Coffee Time Comics | Patches | Little Creature | The Horrible Pirates | Serenity Tales | Crashlander | Girl Genius | This Is Me | Handle With Care | SuperFogeys | Copper | Eskimo Dave | Real Life | Chateau Wonderful | Count Your Sheep | Breakpoint City | Eeekeemo | Boxcar Astronaut | Zip and Li'l Bit | Wally & Osborne | Jump Leads | Dr. Sheep and the Aardvark | Station V3 | Dresden Codak | Lab Ratz | Toyzville | The Boids | Cow and Buffalo | Casey and Scotty | Just Outside | The Pretentious History of Everything | Tia's World | Quirks | Patrick Grey | For What It's Worth | The Sixth Dimension | Max and the Gorilla Goon Squad | Rainbow Orchid | Neko and Neko | Lions, Tigers and Bears | Spacequint | Lessons In Fire Safety | Corrupt Hardware | Enker's Tale | The Surreal Adventures of Edgar Allan Poo | A Rusty Life | You'll Have That | From the Margin | Jitterati

 
 
 

About These Reviews


I love comics and I'm always looking at how I can improve my own work by examining other creators' works. It's such a wildly diverse field that it's not advisable to make sweeping generalizations and ignore special circumstances and subjects.

There's a lot we can learn from one another. And while there are many forums where you might discuss this, I haven't found any lengthy discussion on what we can do to make our comics more successful. There are a few good books on the subject but the aspiring webcomic creator is forced to learn by sheer brute force practice how to adapt his/her personal style to the medium. This is not as efficient as it could be.

Also, there are literally thousands of webcomics but only a handful of places where you can find decent, regular reviews. The focus of my reviews will be on trying to determine what is positive, successful and worth emulating about each comic. You might even get hooked on a given comic you read about here.

You may also wonder where the 'criticism' is and where the negative things about the comics are pointed out. As a matter of fact, I did mention some dissappointing issues with layout and such in my initial reviews. I quickly came to the realization that it's easy for any viewer to know what they like and what they don't. I don't need to call extra attention to the negative. I have, on a few occasions, emailed a webcomic author with a few ideas for improvements but there's no need to make that information public.

I'm not trying to sugarcoat anything, mind you. I just wish to have an open discussion about what good comics do. Hopefully, more voices will join in.

 
 
 
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