page 1402 – Oh Yeah, That’s Also A Thing Going On
Okay, just when I hoped everything would start to thaw ought around here, winter storm part two is on the way. Once again, I’m going ahead and queuing this page up slightly in advance, just in case. At least THIS time, I was able to get the page fully edited and colored in first, so I guess that’s something. Really though, I’m just trying to get all of this Friday’s stuff done ahed of time so that I can get a head start on TUESDAY’S comic and cover myself if there’s a power outage over the weekend. Always something, huh?
Anyway, there should hopefully be a fresh TWC Voting Incentive by the time you read this. The PLAN is to go ahead and draw that before digging in to page 1403, though I’m talking about the future at this point, so who knows. I’m sure gonna try, though, because the odds are good that I won’t be getting a new Incentive done before I hit the road next week, and I sure don’t wanna skip two weeks in a row.




So, really, with no propulsion, all the Exposition has to do is move in between them and the cityship, or even just give them a very light physical tap sideways and Isaac Newton will take care of the rest.
*cut Cap’n Crosby discovering what OTHER ship systems are on the fritz thanks to Tabitha’s various tinkering*
New plan, Stilez tosses Avatar at the pod to knock it off course.
No doubt “drift in rage” was a typo but I enjoy it nonetheless 🙂
That sounds like the name of a REALLY aggressive racing game
That’s pretty much just an accurate description of playing at Legend rank in “Sonic Racing: Crossworlds”.
The issue with perspective in the first panel can easily be explained. When panicking Mariska gets… jumpy. As in, she literally starts jumping in place. That’s what all the “shake lines” are actually indicating, she’s going into the air and back down again. It could be explained as a cultural thing, or as a biological thing.
Culturally, Mariska’s planet developed to have bouncing-in-rage be the local equivalent of trembling-in-rage, starting as a joke that people ended up taking seriously.
Biologically, Mariska’s people are used to drastically higher temperatures than the rest of humanity. If they react to frustration through acts of cardio, that warms them up and makes them more comfortable, in turn making it easier to calm down.
Both can be true at once.