In my experience, the DM would generally try, and fail, to get the game back on track for at LEAST another five or six hours. Maybe try to even it out by introducing a dice-rolling goose. Until literally no one cares and are just playing on their phones or sleeping.
Imagine complaining about a comic storyline you didn’t pay for and could simply ignore if you didn’t like it. Imagine the concept of no page limits or printing deadlines, and being able to explore a complex, multi-faceted concept like superstition in as many pages as the author feels is necessary to convey the story authentically. Imagine, that a year from now, “fourteen pages” will take someone all of five minutes to read, and yet firmly establish a pivotal moment in the journey of one of these characters.
For all the downvoters: why? This guy is just saying, in a polite and honest way, that he thinks it’s taking a bit long. What is wrong with that? If you are running a business, would you not care to hear it when people actually don’t like something? Do you only want to hear the good? What if all the people who don’t like this arc drop out? What if it’s 100 people who drop out? Tim has said before this is his business, his profession, his job. If he does not keep potential customers interested, he might lose patreons… Read more »
Yeah I know. I’m just wondering if there is a proper reason for the downvote or just – like someone a bit further down is proving – some immature “pff this guy dislikes something we like, off with his head”
I will not hesitate to copypaste Buckley’s fiercely defensive response to anyone who has the temerity to suggest that a month is too long to spend on a joke about dice.
I still look forward to the next twist to die for.
For a monstrously long drag out you really need to look into LFG, it was,and still can be, a good webcomic, but when lar gets on a sidestory and loses track of how to finish or get out of it… some of the comics get very weird or obscure and go nowhere for a very long time. The current story line is a prime example.
Long live the chicken!
New that choke the chicken joke was coming. ?
*knew ? can’t edit to fix it lol
Too late, the Grammar Patrol is en route to your house right now.
And being a non-native speaker, I just learned some more “urban dictionary” language ^^
Another almost imposible roll
That chicken could become a next generation weapon
Winner, winner chicken dinner.
I can’t believe P2 choked his chicken in front of all of them……
To be fair, 4 was helping just before it erupted. A new budding relationship?
A bad one………..
Is it over yet.
Panel 2 seems absolutely unrealistic.
In my experience, the DM would generally try, and fail, to get the game back on track for at LEAST another five or six hours. Maybe try to even it out by introducing a dice-rolling goose. Until literally no one cares and are just playing on their phones or sleeping.
I’m pretty sure he’s learned when to walk away for a bit, learning from his experience during other sessions.
I am getting a bit tired of this story
Well I think it’s to die for.
Imagine complaining about a comic storyline you didn’t pay for and could simply ignore if you didn’t like it. Imagine the concept of no page limits or printing deadlines, and being able to explore a complex, multi-faceted concept like superstition in as many pages as the author feels is necessary to convey the story authentically. Imagine, that a year from now, “fourteen pages” will take someone all of five minutes to read, and yet firmly establish a pivotal moment in the journey of one of these characters.
You could, and should, give at the very least a hint of a reference to the original author of that:
https://cad-comic.com/comic/identity-p16/#comment-39186
For all the downvoters: why? This guy is just saying, in a polite and honest way, that he thinks it’s taking a bit long. What is wrong with that? If you are running a business, would you not care to hear it when people actually don’t like something? Do you only want to hear the good? What if all the people who don’t like this arc drop out? What if it’s 100 people who drop out? Tim has said before this is his business, his profession, his job. If he does not keep potential customers interested, he might lose patreons… Read more »
Downvotes don’t make comments invisible. His opinion is there regardless of if the funny vote number is red or green.
Yeah I know. I’m just wondering if there is a proper reason for the downvote or just – like someone a bit further down is proving – some immature “pff this guy dislikes something we like, off with his head”
I will not hesitate to copypaste Buckley’s fiercely defensive response to anyone who has the temerity to suggest that a month is too long to spend on a joke about dice.
I still look forward to the next twist to die for.
For a monstrously long drag out you really need to look into LFG, it was,and still can be, a good webcomic, but when lar gets on a sidestory and loses track of how to finish or get out of it… some of the comics get very weird or obscure and go nowhere for a very long time. The current story line is a prime example.
Long live the chicken!
Because if I dislike a comment ,I will fucking downvote it.
Here’s two cents back.
The situation sure got dicey. Feathers are getting ruffled.
It’s poultry in motion
This got a little off the rails at some point.
What’s weird is I can actually see this happening in some of the more intense D&D groups I’ve been part of.
https://imgur.com/gallery/Hb21QpE