Novil — Please ask Sandra and Woo to come to my paper and replace FC and Marmaduke, with the help of semi-automatic weapons if necessary. And if they’d like a little more room on the page, it’s fine with me if they kill DtM.
i have to say that even though the comic is in its infancy, i am impressed. it has a certain quality that seems to be absent from other comics, that i havn't seen sense calvin and hobbes. like you write your comics for yourself, without obsessing over fan opinions. this gives your comic a sense of rustic charm that even bill watterson would approve of.
Yes, the forum could endure a few more entries. My opinion: I like the comic and I love the drawings . (And if this is badly expressed, English is not my native language )
kitsune wrote:bah, forums are usually more fun than comment per page, or something, anyway, nice comic, and well keep up XD
Agreed. I kinda liked the Define Cynical approach of having a forum specifically for discussing comics, with a new thread for each one. This way, people actually pay attention if someone makes a comment on an older strip. As it is now, the only people who would see those comments would be people browsing the comic archive from the very beginning.
I think more readers are willing to write a comment directly beneath the strip then to register at a forum. However, everybody can start a thread about a specific strip here. If this should be done on a regular basis, I would create a new forum for it (and move all old threads to it).
True, the ease of access is much higher on the comments than it is for the forum, but you mostly only get comments on the strip itself, not replies to other people's comments. Whether or not this is a good thing can be debated of course.
Ed Power (the writer of the syndicated strip My Cage) wrote:
1. Sandra and Woo - Great little strip! It’s about a young girl and her pet raccoon having adventures. It reads like a modern day fable and manages to do both single strips and longer running stories equally well, as well as manitaining a webcomic sensibility with a subtle sweetness that keeps it from the ‘cynical-ness’ of a lot of webcomics. In short, it’s sweet without being ‘cutesy’ and poignant without being overtly pointed.
The art is amazing also, combining the best of Manga and Walt Kelly’s Pogo.