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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #4 on: 25 March 2011, 06:29:39 » |
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Yeah, I've been reading MSPA since the Problem Sleuth days. I'm pretty sure Snare reads, too. Honestly, I think this is one of the MOST impressive feats of storytelling that has ever existed.
The beauty of it is that it's something that can ONLY fully exist on the internet. Most webcomics can, you know, be printed and or published and still be experienced in much the same way. What Andrew Hussie is doing, however, is something that you can't take off the internet. Huge chat logs of varying length, animated GIFs with flat images, a side comic that adds another dimension (Sweet Bro & Hella Jeff), playable Flash games, and of course, the amazingly detailed Flash animations set to music.
I'm completely in awe of this guy. Not only is it hilarious, it's also one of the most unbelievable intelligent works or art I've seen in years. The complicated time travel stuff is one thing, but I'm talking more about the literary aspects. The way he thematically links things together over the course of years in a way that almost seems to be laughing at the reader, daring you to keep up.
Not only that, but Hussie ACTIVELY #####S WITH his readers. The entire troll storyline is based on things the internet has been known to hate: furries, Twilight vampires, Juggalos, LARPing, etc. etc. And you know what? These are some of the most well-rounded characters in the whole story. And you root for them. What was meant to annoy you has done a full circle and now they're more fleshed out than the main characters.
Oh, and then you've got the mastery of "hipster irony," the "so bad it's good" sort of humor. Nobody does ridiculous typos and intentional terrible art better than Hussie.
Honestly, this sort of thing excites me to no end and I've never been more inspired by any internet project than I've been by this.
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