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ClaimingLight
2016-01-20, 01:51 PM
I've been following this comic for over a decade. And I've loved every moment of it. But it's time. The story needs to start coming to a close-- and a new Durkon side quest just seems like a distraction. Particularly when Xykon has been sitting at the new gate waiting for the heroes for a long time. It's starting to feel like a Final Fantasy game.

I can only hope that the Durkon subplot ties neatly into the rest. Side stepping to another city with a friend of Elan's Dad and spending the next RL year there is just not the halt in momentum I feel the story can bear.

But that said, I for one would be sad to see these characters go. Perhaps they've got another adventure in them when they're twenty years older? Maybe history repeats itself and they all go their separate ways to safeguard gates of their own? That'd be cool. But this story has gone on a very long time. The narrative deserves closure.

Cizak
2016-01-20, 02:01 PM
I think you're out of luck. The story in planned to span 7 books in total, meaning we're on the next to last one now.

Keltest
2016-01-20, 02:02 PM
Xykon has only been at the gate for like three days now, and we have no idea how far he's gotten in breaking through its defenses. While the pressure is on, the Order still has time. And its not like they can just ignore this.

Kish
2016-01-20, 02:25 PM
I've been following this comic for over a decade. And I've loved every moment of it. But it's time. The story needs to start coming to a close-- and a new Durkon side quest just seems like a distraction. Particularly when Xykon has been sitting at the new gate waiting for the heroes for a long time. It's starting to feel like a Final Fantasy game.

I can only hope that the Durkon subplot ties neatly into the rest. Side stepping to another city with a friend of Elan's Dad and spending the next RL year there is just not the halt in momentum I feel the story can bear.

But that said, I for one would be sad to see these characters go. Perhaps they've got another adventure in them when they're twenty years older? Maybe history repeats itself and they all go their separate ways to safeguard gates of their own? That'd be cool. But this story has gone on a very long time. The narrative deserves closure.
I've got good news and bad news for you. The good news is that Rich has said, ever since he introduced the comic having a plot at all, that it has a planned end, and when Blood Runs in the Family was the current book he nailed down exactly where that planned end is, bookswise.

The bad news is that, as Cizak says, it's going to end in the next book, not the current one, and Rich has also said that he is not going to adjust the in-world schedule because comics come out slowly. He's thinking in terms of the "momentum" of a reader reading the completed webcomic after it's finished, for whom the six seconds of in-comic time between #1018 and #1019 is six seconds, not several days.

Killer Angel
2016-01-20, 02:40 PM
I've been following this comic for over a decade. And I've loved every moment of it. But it's time. The story needs to start coming to a close-- and a new Durkon side quest just seems like a distraction. Particularly when Xykon has been sitting at the new gate waiting for the heroes for a long time. It's starting to feel like a Final Fantasy game.

I don't share this particular pov, but you are not the only one with this opinion (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?472379-Have-you-ever-wished-that-a-series-you-still-enjoy-would-just-end-already).

Emperordaniel
2016-01-20, 03:06 PM
Plus, Xykon (or was it Redcloak?) said it would take a few weeks to cast the Gate Ritual - and we don't even know if they've made it to the actual Gate yet. The Order has time.

theNater
2016-01-20, 03:43 PM
Plus, Xykon (or was it Redcloak?) said it would take a few weeks to cast the Gate Ritual...
It was Xykon (http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0416.html). (Panel 7).

littlebum2002
2016-01-20, 04:10 PM
This is far from the first part of this comic where this has come up, and this is the reason:


He's thinking in terms of the "momentum" of a reader reading the completed webcomic after it's finished, for whom the six seconds of in-comic time between #1018 and #1019 is six seconds, not several days.

And to be perfectly clear, this is NOT a commentary on the update schedule. It's just a fact of life about any webcomic, regardless of how often it's updated. Reading it as it comes out is gonna be a different experience than reading it all at once. And when the story gets slow (such as now, or when they were hanging out in Bleedingham) it's gonna seem like it drags out FOREVER when you're reading it as it comes out. (the Bleedingham arc was another point when I remember people complaining the comic was moving too slowly). But if you go back and read it now, all at once, it seems perfectly fine. That's how this arc is gonna read when the book finally comes out and you read it all at once.

Ron Miel
2016-01-21, 03:05 AM
My guess: the first 1/3 of the book is drawing to a close. In a couple of updates Roy and the others will head off towards Dwarven lands.

Next we will see what O'chul and Lien have been doing since we last saw them, and also the Azurites on the island. This will fill the second 1/3 of the book. It will finish with their arrival at the gate. Maybe a brief appearance of Team Evil, but not much.

Then back to the Order's fight with Durkon for the final part of this book.

Bulldog Psion
2016-01-21, 04:22 AM
Odd how people actually want this story to end. :smallconfused: As quickly as possible, too.

I wouldn't mind if we were at the halfway point only. :smallbiggrin:

In any case, I'm really, really looking forward to finding out more about Durkon's family. I hope we'll run into his mom soon (hopefully not just to witness her horrific death) and find out the mystery about his dad, and his birth, that was implied earlier. So I'd rather not see a cut to last gate at the moment, thanks.

goodpeople25
2016-01-21, 05:10 AM
Odd how people actually want this story to end. :smallconfused: As quickly as possible, too.

I wouldn't mind if we were at the halfway point only. :smallbiggrin:

In any case, I'm really, really looking forward to finding out more about Durkon's family. I hope we'll run into his mom soon (hopefully not just to witness her horrific death) and find out the mystery about his dad, and his birth, that was implied earlier. So I'd rather not see a cut to last gate at the moment, thanks.
I don't think it's odd to want a story to have an end, I think it's actually kinda refreshing, but i second your :smallconfused: on the quickly as possible aspect.

But while i doubt this is the halfway point. I'm guessing we still have around a third to go, though i wouldn't mind if the books are 50% as big as the last one, which brings us about halfway between a third done and halfway there.

But I still don't really see the mystery of durkon's backstory though. (It's possible of course and i see possible hints but to me it's enh..what happens happens i think it's just as possible it's nothing) but yeah no skipping thank you, and i am looking forward to Dawrven lands. (Though maybe not the speculation likely to follow *cough* Hilgya *cough*)

Czhorat
2016-01-21, 05:46 AM
I disagree; I feel that we have one story left.

We've had subplots focus on Belkar, Haley, Elan, and Roy, but Durkon hasn't had the spotlight until now. It feels to me that we've just gotten the shape of the conflict between Durkon and the vampiric spirit in his body. With the spirit's missteps and lack of understanding as to how memories come together we've been shown the seeds of a potential victory over this foe, but we're nowhere close to it yet.

The way the book seems to be shaping is that we'll get a resolution to this conflict after we see the fulfillment of Durkon's prophecies (returning to the Dwarven homelands posthumously and bringing death and destruction).

Then the last book can (I'm guessing here) focus on the Order's last efforts to stop Xykon as well as the three-way conflict among the villains (Xykon vs Redcloak vs an increasingly conflicted MiTD).

"A year real-time" is not really the way to measure it; when these are compiled as books, each will read much faster and somewhat differently (though I'm not really sure how well the earlier strips have aged).

Mozill Marshal
2016-01-21, 09:57 AM
Hi there everybody.

If anything I'm really gutted that there's only one more book to go before the end although I've only been ready oots for a couple of years; it's by far my favorite online comic.

But thinking as a DM there's always another story to tell, another adventure to undertake and plenty of gold to be won. So hopefully the last book isn't the end of oots just the end of the first full adventure.

If I was to pick anything apart it would be the title of the origins book "the origins of the PC" as I felt it was more like "the origins of the stick" that way Rich could've had another book going into more backstory. Our sexy shoeless GOD of war doesn't have to tragic backstory to be awesome.

Sorry if this isn't the place to say all of that BUT I'm loving the current story arc and the fact that I'm checking for updates twice a day just means I'm really into the story not waiting for things to speed to their conclusion.

littlebum2002
2016-01-21, 10:00 AM
My guess: the first 1/3 of the book is drawing to a close. In a couple of updates Roy and the others will head off towards Dwarven lands.

Next we will see what O'chul and Lien have been doing since we last saw them, and also the Azurites on the island. This will fill the second 1/3 of the book. It will finish with their arrival at the gate. Maybe a brief appearance of Team Evil, but not much.

Then back to the Order's fight with Durkon for the final part of this book.

When I first read this I thought you said "the first 1/3rd of the STORY is drawing to a close". I was like how long do you think these next two books are gonna be??

Peelee
2016-01-21, 10:33 AM
I've been following this comic for over a decade. And I've loved every moment of it. But it's time. The story needs to start coming to a close-- and a new Durkon side quest just seems like a distraction.


I'm sorry you don't care for it, but this isn't a "sidequest." This is the main plot.

Kish, gotta admit, you were right.

Ron Miel
2016-01-21, 10:43 AM
If anything I'm really gutted that there's only one more book to go before the end

Don't worry. There's still quite a way to go. The current book is maybe one third complete, and a whole other book to follow. Plus probably at least one more prequel, and perhaps several of them. And the kickstarter books.

Essentially the equivalent of at least three books to go, maybe more.

And The Giant has some projects planned for after that.


If I was to pick anything apart it would be the title of the origins book "the origins of the PC" as I felt it was more like "the origins of the stick"

You do understand that it's a pun, right?

Just in case you missed it, there's a very famous and influential book called On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Origin_of_Species).


War and XP's is also a pun (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_and_Peace).

KorvinStarmast
2016-01-21, 11:14 AM
It feels like it's time.

Are you suggesting that it feels like the Wheel of Time, by Robert Jordan? (Never ending series of stories that approach culmination but don't quite arrive ...)
I've been following this comic for over a decade. And I've loved every moment of it. But it's time. The story needs to start coming to a close-- and a new Durkon side quest just seems like a distraction. Not a distraction. Based on what Rich has offered in some of this posts, there will be a total of seven books (like George RR Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire, which originally were to be five books ... ) and this is book 6, about 1/3 of the way through, and this book will contain the Major Durkon Story Arc.

I can only hope that the Durkon subplot ties neatly into the rest. I expect that this is Rich's objective.


The narrative deserves closure. As Rich has noted, and others have commented upon, this is a serial episode story from. Consider how a TV series like Breaking Bad goes when first aired. You wait for each new episode to arrive with plot movement ... and a year later you can binge watch the entire season over a weekend. Each is a different way to experience the story.

With this web comic, reading a whole bunch of strips to catch up, or to take them in bunches at a time, is a different way to experience the story than reading one strip per day, or one strip per week.

Because the OoTS web comic format has been presented one episode at a time, closure of various story arcs will come in time.

I just re-read the "Get off the Mechane" through "You're Not Durkon At All" set sequentially. The cohesion and flow was far more effective for me than when I was reading one strip per week, and flowed a lot better.

It's the nature of the beast for the tempo to be what it is. When it's all done, if Rich stays true to previous form, the story will hold together just fine.

ClaimingLight
2016-01-21, 03:33 PM
Are you suggesting that it feels like the Wheel of Time, by Robert Jordan? (Never ending series of stories that approach culmination but don't quite arrive ...)

Well, I don't really want to say that. Though I've never seen TheGiant end a story, he's certainly earned my faith in his storytelling ability-- so I'm not trying to be negative.

I suppose I'm just giving voice to the gut feeling I had as I'd watched this develop. The feeling that the climax was getting farther away than I had come to expect from my sense of the plot's flow. But Durkon and Belkar deserve some final character exposition and development and I can totally stay on board with that. I'm certainly not planning to go anywhere.

But it's certainly worth mentioning: in the next few comics as we see Roy's ideas on how to handle the problem of having to be two places at once, I very well may have my fears put to rest.

Darth Paul
2016-01-22, 07:32 PM
My feeling is that there's a long way to go, and when we get there, we'll feel as though it ended too soon.

I'm going to make a comparison between OOTS and Lord of the Rings, which isn't 100% appropriate- for one thing, Rich is one helluva lot funnier than Tolkien- but it's personally apt, because LOTR was THE formative fantasy series in my life. I've read it once a year from the time I was 12 (that's 38 years, sports fans).

For many years I skipped over Book 5- all that stuff about Frodo and Sam in Mordor. I found it tedious. I couldn't wait to get to the action. Then I realized that Frodo and Sam are the action. The mental and moral struggle they go through is even more important than the physical struggle of their allies. They are the reason for their allies marching on Mordor. And I began appreciating both equally.

At this point in the narrative, we're sort of in Mordor. We're in a very dark chapter of the story. Durkon's moral struggle is NOT a distraction from the Order's quest, though- it's an integral part of it. Because DURKON is an integral part of the Order. Sometimes I feel as if we've written him off; but he's still there, and soon we're going to witness an epic struggle in the center of his mind. I'm ready. I've got my popcorn. This is gonna be great.

But I have this feeling that, just like LOTR, when the whole story is over, I'll be sad- because the adventure's over.

SaintRidley
2016-01-22, 09:45 PM
I hesitate to speak for Rich, but he's said more or less as much in numerous posts that probably grace the quote index somewhere: you appear to be missing the point if you think this business with Durkon is a sidequest. It is the main plot. The story is about the Order of the Stick more than it is about the resolution of the Gates plot.

Jasdoif
2016-01-22, 10:05 PM
I hesitate to speak for Rich, but he's said more or less as much in numerous posts that probably grace the quote index somewhere: you appear to be missing the point if you think this business with Durkon is a sidequest. It is the main plot. The story is about the Order of the Stick more than it is about the resolution of the Gates plot.Let's go for a big quote from the Index, then:


The MacGuffin is not the antagonist. The MacGuffin is the object sought by the antagonist. Narratively speaking, it does not matter what it does—only that the antagonist is willing to kill the protagonist to get it. That is the source of the conflict. It does not matter what is in the rift, it matters who is willing to kill whom to get it, even if they are mistaken about its usefulness. What is in the rift is only important insofar as it may, at some point, change who is willing to kill whom and why. And that IS important, because those details will change the shape of what happens, but not as the source of conflict. The Snarl is not the threat; Xykon is the threat. The Snarl's powers have as much relevance to the quest to get the Snarl as the exact properties of the glowing briefcase have on the plot of Pulp Fiction, or the exact dollar value of the statue in The Maltese Falcon.

Likewise, the setting is not the protagonist. What happens to the world is only important because the protagonists are the sort of people who care about what happens to the world. If Team Evil or the Linear Guild kills the entire Order of the Stick and then takes the Gate only to find that it does not do what they thought it did...how does that help the Order of the Stick? They will still be dead, and the story is about them. The Linear Guild is not a threat because they will do something bad with the Gate; they are a threat because they will kill the Order of the Stick to do it. At the end of Star Wars, one does not care that the Death Star is about to blow up Yavin 4; one cares that the Death Star is about to kill the protagonists, some of whom happen to be on Yavin 4.

If one does not care about the protagonists or antagonists and is not emotionally invested in their struggles—whether those struggles are external or internal, relevant to the MacGuffin plot or not—and all one cares about is the resolution of the MacGuffin chase, then you will almost certainly be bored with a lot of the material I'm producing. And more importantly, I won't care. The Snarl plot is part of the armature upon which I hang the characters' conflicts; it is not the whole of the story. The strip is titled The Order of the Stick, not The Chase for the Snarl or even Saving the World. Ultimately, it seems like you want the story to be about things it is not going to be about, so it's unlikely you are ever going to enjoy it.

Wildroses
2016-01-22, 10:38 PM
What stops me from feeling it's time to resolve the gates is that it is pretty clear Rich planned a vampirised Durkula to return to the Dwarven Homelands a long way in advance, and something planned that early is almost certainly a major part of the overall story, even if I couldn't or can't see how. Early book three was when the prophecy about Durkon returning home posthumously was made. Those who have read the Origin of PCs books know Durkon was kicked out because a prophecy was made that he would bring death and destruction when he next returned home. Those who haven't would be have been aware that something very dodgy and secret was behind Durkon's exile on the basis of comic 305 and 375 which were about seven hundred comics ago ( http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0305.html and http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0375.html )

Also, the only reason they are so worried about the snarl and gates is because they don't want the world to end, and the reason they are now about to rush off to the Dwarven Lands is because they don't want the world to end, so viewed like that this isn't a deviation from the main plot.

ClaimingLight
2016-01-23, 01:12 AM
Sure, the story is about the characters. But it isn't fair for anyone, author or not, to suggest that the characters are all I'm here for. I want them to succeed not just because I like them-- but because they're on a mission that I want to see succeed.

If the Order of the Stick was on a quest to, say, fix the plumbing in the upper east side of Desert Town, I wouldn't have been as interested. Thinking of the gates as purely a McGuffin does a disservice to the story TheGiant has worked to create. This isn't the Crystal of Fire we're talking about here. It's a well written, deep part of the world that we've been guided toward caring about. A true McGuffin is just a thing we've been told we're supposed to care about.

Added:
But I don't want to carry on too much about it. This was meant as a reaction, not as a call to arms! I'll be happy to see where the story goes.

Silverionmox
2016-01-23, 08:47 AM
I've been following this comic for over a decade. And I've loved every moment of it. But it's time. The story needs to start coming to a close-- and a new Durkon side quest just seems like a distraction. Particularly when Xykon has been sitting at the new gate waiting for the heroes for a long time. It's starting to feel like a Final Fantasy game.

I can only hope that the Durkon subplot ties neatly into the rest. Side stepping to another city with a friend of Elan's Dad and spending the next RL year there is just not the halt in momentum I feel the story can bear.

But that said, I for one would be sad to see these characters go. Perhaps they've got another adventure in them when they're twenty years older? Maybe history repeats itself and they all go their separate ways to safeguard gates of their own? That'd be cool. But this story has gone on a very long time. The narrative deserves closure.

The way the story is shaping up, it seems that all the PC's are being set up to have a sequel adventure: Elan and Haley get to overthrown an empire, V gets to travel the world to make amends for the familicide, and Durkon will get to clean a vampire infestation in the dwarven lands (perhaps supported by Roy, if he doesn't die permanently while dealing with the current main plot).

137beth
2016-01-23, 11:10 AM
While the Banana already gave the big quote from the Giant, I think there is a recent one relevant to this thread:
This is not a side quest (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?472546-OOTS-1016-The-Discussion-Thread&p=20208612#post20208612).

Peelee
2016-01-23, 12:25 PM
While the Banana already gave the big quote from the Giant, I think there is a recent one relevant to this thread:
This is not a side quest (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?472546-OOTS-1016-The-Discussion-Thread&p=20208612#post20208612).

Oh, c'mon! I out-banana'd the Banana for once, and get banana'd for it? This is bananas!

Sir_Norbert
2016-01-23, 02:59 PM
Sure, the story is about the characters. But it isn't fair for anyone, author or not, to suggest that the characters are all I'm here for. I want them to succeed not just because I like them-- but because they're on a mission that I want to see succeed.

If the Order of the Stick was on a quest to, say, fix the plumbing in the upper east side of Desert Town, I wouldn't have been as interested. Thinking of the gates as purely a McGuffin does a disservice to the story TheGiant has worked to create. This isn't the Crystal of Fire we're talking about here. It's a well written, deep part of the world that we've been guided toward caring about. A true McGuffin is just a thing we've been told we're supposed to care about.

Well said! I don't at all agree with your original post -- I'm hugely enjoying the gradual unravelling of the story and its mysteries and the last thing I want is for them to be hurried to an end -- but I think you raise an important issue here. The people here often link to the Giant's comments as if they were discussion-enders, but it is possible for the Giant to be wrong, even about his own story. In fact, I disagree with pretty much all of the post quoted above.

The Snarl is not a MacGuffin, and its powers do matter. Firstly because the Snarl is, itself, an agent in the conflict: see #945. Laurin may not be a protagonist, but she's a well-developed character and I care what happens to her. Secondly because the Snarl is the reason the entire world is in danger (either directly, if it gets loose, or indirectly, if the gods destroy the world because of it). And I care about this world where I've spent so much time, got to know so many characters, and laughed at so many jokes.

Thirdly, the Snarl matters because of the mystery of the planet in the rift. It's an intriguing development that was completely unexpected at the time, and I'm really curious to see how it will be explained, and what impact this will have on the story. I don't mean I want the answers on a postcard. I mean that I will love every minute of watching the characters speculate and get closer to the answer as they will in the natural course of events.

And yes, it does matter what's in the rift. It's clearly set up to be one of the big mysteries of the story, so naturally we're curious about it and looking forward to a satisfying payoff, as we've gotten with all the previous ongoing mysteries that have now been resolved. It would be hugely disappointing if it turned out to be something mundane -- "Blackwing only saw a cardboard facade that looks like a planet" -- or if it was never revealed at all.

It's the same with Star Wars, really. The attack on the Death Star is meaningful, partly because our protagonists are in danger, but even more because it's an evil empire's weapon of mass destruction and we've come to care about this fictional world and want to see the Empire defeated.

As for the Durkon plot, it's certainly a sidequest, in that the protagonists have a main goal of stopping Xykon, and this is a diversion from it. (Suppose the storylines were reversed, so that Xykon was dealt with first, and then we spent half a book on Durkon's story. It would feel like a huge anticlimax.) But that's not a criticism, because detours like this can be good or even necessary -- as in The Lord of the Rings when Frodo and Sam were picked up by Faramir for a three-chapter detour. That could have been avoided if Tolkien had wanted to tell a slightly shorter story, but in the story as it is, those chapters work as part of the whole. They introduce a new character; they deepen the characterisation of Frodo, Sam and Gollum; they have an impact on later events (when Faramir meets Gandalf); and of course, they contain some excellent writing and are very enjoyable to read.

Anyway, I'm very happy with the current pacing, and I think this arc is one of the best parts of the story so far.

Darth Paul
2016-01-23, 10:49 PM
Oh, c'mon! I out-banana'd the Banana for once, and get banana'd for it? This is bananas!

When the Forum gives you bananas, bake bread. :smallbiggrin:

Murk
2016-01-24, 04:51 AM
Well said! I don't at all agree with your original post -- I'm hugely enjoying the gradual unravelling of the story and its mysteries and the last thing I want is for them to be hurried to an end -- but I think you raise an important issue here. The people here often link to the Giant's comments as if they were discussion-enders, but it is possible for the Giant to be wrong, even about his own story. In fact, I disagree with pretty much all of the post quoted above.

Agreed.
I don't think this current arc is a sidequest, or even that it is dragging on - far from it. But simply because the author says "this isn't a sidequest" doesn't mean it really isn't to some people.
If you feel the main quest is the gates - then, yes, this is a sidequest. I'm sure it will be neatly tied to the gates somehow, but then it's a sidequest tied to the main quest. The Giant can feel the characters are the main plot, but eh, as a reader you don't have to agree. If you want the weasels search to be a sidekick to a paladin to be the main plot - feel free.

I've been feeling what you said about these discussions for a long time, so I just wanted to give it some attention :smallsmile:

Dr.Zero
2016-01-24, 05:33 AM
Odd how people actually want this story to end. :smallconfused: As quickly as possible, too.

I wouldn't mind if we were at the halfway point only. :smallbiggrin:


I agree. Even if so far I don't like too much this arc, I'm very happy that it exists, so the story can be longer, because the fact that I'm not crazy about this one doesn't mean that it has not good and even great momentsm anyway. :smallsmile:

Killer Angel
2016-01-24, 08:53 AM
I'm not feeling comfortable, with all of this banana talking...

Darth Paul
2016-01-24, 11:53 PM
I'm not feeling comfortable, with all of this banana talking...

..... Nah. Too easy. :smallbiggrin:

littlebum2002
2016-01-25, 09:18 AM
I hesitate to speak for Rich, but he's said more or less as much in numerous posts that probably grace the quote index somewhere: you appear to be missing the point if you think this business with Durkon is a sidequest. It is the main plot. The story is about the Order of the Stick more than it is about the resolution of the Gates plot.

This is so true. Some people on here have always had a thing for Durkon, but I've found him pretty boring. He's just a Generic Dwarf Cleric, and if he died and got replaced with Murkon Lightninghammer no one really would have noticed. It was very refreshing to see him FINALLY have some character development, and I for one can't wait to see how it ends.

Jasdoif
2016-01-25, 12:08 PM
The people here often link to the Giant's comments as if they were discussion-enders, but it is possible for the Giant to be wrong, even about his own story.I like to think we link to the Giant's comments because it helps frame the discussion, focusing it rather than ending it. If the story currently feels like a side quest is taking too long, that's because the Giant views it as a main arc instead of a side quest. You can certainly disagree with the assessment, or the intent behind it; but we're closer to all being on the same page and debating the same things.


Anyway, I think it's more likely that there's enough to the story for it to have multiple interpretations, rather than saying that two different views of the same story requires one of them to be wrong. Like all art, a story centers around subjective interpretation; what one gets out of it is at least somewhat influenced by what one brings to it.


I'm not feeling comfortable, with all of this banana talking...I know what you mean, I always feel this slight tearing sensation at the edges of my mouth when I talk; like it could split across my peel if I start speaking emphatically. It hasn't actually happened...or at least there's no evidence of it happening, maybe some form of damage reduction?...but I prefer to write, regardless.

...or is that not what you meant? :smalltongue:

Mike Havran
2016-01-25, 03:16 PM
I only felt the story was dragging for a time right after I fininshed the archive binge and was eager to read what happens next. But now, I actually enjoy the slow unravelling - it feels like I find a new gem once at a time, and the uncertainty about what exactly happens next is pretty exquisite. With 1+2/3 of a book left (excluding the very likely Linear Guild prequel), that's one heck of a time to look forward to.

Ruck
2016-01-25, 04:14 PM
I would have thought that someone who has been reading the comment for over a decade would realize that the same complaints about pacing and "side quests" have been made for roughly the same amount of time. And yet, somehow, it's all seemed to work out in the end.

Murk
2016-01-25, 04:41 PM
I would have thought that someone who has been reading the comment for over a decade would realize that the same complaints about pacing and "side quests" have been made for roughly the same amount of time. And yet, somehow, it's all seemed to work out in the end.

Even in book form I agree with some of those complaints. Not all arcs are fast-paced, and some are slower (or to me less interesting) than I would have liked.
I really really like the story as a whole, but there's bound to be people around for every arc that think "for me, this isn't really enjoyable".

Ruck
2016-01-25, 05:36 PM
Even in book form I agree with some of those complaints. Not all arcs are fast-paced, and some are slower (or to me less interesting) than I would have liked.
I really really like the story as a whole, but there's bound to be people around for every arc that think "for me, this isn't really enjoyable".

Yeah, that's fair; I guess I just don't get the point of saying "hurry up and move on" when A)it's not going to happen and B)the evidence suggests that people frequently desire this and the story turns out better in the end for not doing so.

I just feel like, once you've made the decision to put your faith in the storyteller, you have to accept the format and the limitations that come with it (in this case, serialization). Otherwise, you can come perilously close to being the guy who criticizes chapter 3 of a novel for lacking in climax before you've even finished the book.

axus
2016-01-25, 07:31 PM
Hmm, I'm OK with more hero vs. vampire chases and battles. Rich can keep drawing the characters forever, and I'd keep reading. It's nice that we have a forum to freely debate these topics.

Pyrous
2016-01-25, 08:33 PM
Rich can keep drawing the characters forever, and I'd keep reading.

I feel the same way.

I also feel like it's time for some D&D in the Dwarven Lands. It's going to be awesome.

Lombard
2016-01-26, 12:56 AM
Ah, to think back on the young scallywag I was when I first started reading this comic. Sigh. Now I'm starting to look 'distinguished' on my good days, and being called 'sir' more and more regularly. /lulz

It almost makes me sick to my stomach to think of the comic ending. At the same time, I would really, really love to see what else Rich could do. Like, in a starting from scratch format with all the experience he's gained.

ClaimingLight
2016-01-26, 04:37 PM
I would have thought that someone who has been reading the comment for over a decade would realize that the same complaints about pacing and "side quests" have been made for roughly the same amount of time. And yet, somehow, it's all seemed to work out in the end.

This would best be answered, I think, by referring to something the Giant did in his comics. When V got all that wizard-super-saiyan power and tried to rush Xykon. I think Vaarsuvius was meant as a stand in for the audience.

V was getting impatient and bored with the party's lack of progress toward the end goal of the story. So when zhe was presented with an option to 'skip to the end', zhe took it. The ultimate conclusion of that confrontation was an illustration of what happens when you try to meet your fate before the proper time-- you get an anti-climax and nothing is truly resolved.

But despite what I've taken as the Giant's artistically presented resistance to the idea of pushing forward too quickly, I have to say that particular part of the story was perhaps the strongest and most compelling portion yet. Not just because of the tension, the action and the high emotions-- but even if it may have been presented ironically, I felt movement toward the goal I cared most about.

Having said all that: I've felt fatigue with the story before and have been drawn back in before. But I've never gone looking for a post or posted anything myself to that effect. This time is a bit different. The overall flow the story has led me to believe that we're in the Final Countdown. Take a look at #965 and #966 for instance. Roy says more than one thing to the effect of we don't have any more time for distractions! We're being told through the narrative that 'Hey, you need to pay attention. The end is coming." So that's what I've been gearing for.

But even so- an inconvenient attack from the Linear Guild (or something) wouldn't have been a concern. It'd have just been an interesting diversion as we moved toward the ultimate goal. This particular development, the potential that the world could be ended as a precaution, has me a little worried. The stakes in this new plot element are basically as high as the stakes in the main one. So all of the suspense we've built up toward seeing a conclusion has been made a little foolish in light of an equally dangerous threat that's just been laid in our laps.

So we a trouble here. If this new plot is resolved with too much ease then the main plot would look easy to resolve by comparison-- and that would make the entire journey up to now look like it wasn't worth the time. On the other hand, if the new plot takes just as long to resolve as the main plot-- well obviously that would be a problem, too.

As I think about it, I believe there might be only one way out of this problem. And actually, if TheGiant does it this way, it'll be pretty damn good. But now, having arrived at that potential conclusion I think I'd better keep it to myself. Lol besides... somebody would probably link me a post of someone else having said the same thing at some place, in some time.

Added:
But I figure that I should add these aren't criticisms, their reactions and observations. None of this is meant to suggest that I'm losing or have lost faith.

The Derp Potato
2016-01-26, 05:50 PM
While I don't want the comic to end, I feel like it would be best if after this Durkon plot, they went to the last gate and got it over with, finishing the story, save for an epilogue. It seems fitting that a story that began in a dungeon will end in a dungeon. HOWEVER there is still the cliffhanger left in strip #945 to come. And we are only on the next to last book so I'm not sure...

Peelee
2016-01-26, 07:00 PM
This would best be answered, I think, by referring to something the Giant did in his comics. When V got all that wizard-super-saiyan power and tried to rush Xykon. I think Vaarsuvius was meant as a stand in for the audience.

V was getting impatient and bored with the party's lack of progress toward the end goal of the story. So when zhe was presented with an option to 'skip to the end', zhe took it. The ultimate conclusion of that confrontation was an illustration of what happens when you try to meet your fate before the proper time-- you get an anti-climax and nothing is truly resolved.

Really? Because I felt that was pretty damned climactic.

ClaimingLight
2016-01-27, 01:00 PM
Really? Because I felt that was pretty damned climactic.

It may have been better to say "inconclusive".

Darth Paul
2016-01-27, 11:53 PM
My SOLE OOTS-related fear- connected to my being a longtime fan of Stephen King's Dark Tower series, which was even longer in the writing- is for The Giant himself. King nearly suffered Author Existence Failure (http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AuthorExistenceFailure) before his epic was complete; Rich had the thumb incident which, IIRC, still hampers him somewhat. Both were frightening reminders of the unpredictability of life. Sir Pterry Pratchett left us with who knows how many Discworld novels still unwritten.

Life happens: I don't want it to happen to another of my favorite creators.

We love you, Rich. Be careful out there.

Kish
2016-01-28, 01:27 AM
I'm totally with ClaimingLight as far as wanting the story to have a defined end, not just go on until Rich runs out of steam and then abruptly end--and would be even if a genie promised me that Rich would continue to make comics for the rest of my life. Good stories have defined beginnings and endings. I'm just not with them as far as wanting to brush the plot with Vampire Durkon out of the way and get to the final volume already.

georgie_leech
2016-01-28, 05:12 AM
Worth noting that this remains part of the main plot regardless of the the word of The Giant. The whole reason everyone except Durkula was going to the moot in the first place was to get Durkon raised. This remains relevant to the general pattern of the other books: when part of the party is missing or otherwise incapacitated (or dead :smalltongue: ) they have to get them back, and rather than skipping to 'yay, they're reunited,' we follow their actions as they try to bring that about. When they try to do otherwise, bad things happen. There was the whole thing with V and the IFCC, and that led to further problems at Girard,s pyramid. Carrying on without Durkon and Belkar directly led to Durkon getting vamped.

In short, this isn't a side quest because this is the Quest to get Durkon Back. If the opening parts of Return of the Jedi weren't filler, neither is this.

Dracon1us
2016-01-28, 05:43 AM
With all the due respect and the endless gratitude for Rich, I feel that Hela and his priest are not au par with the other antagonists...B-list villain, in the words of Tarquin.

georgie_leech
2016-01-28, 08:26 AM
Yeah, that whole 'everything going as planned' bit is sure setting Durkula and Hel apart. :smallamused:

KorvinStarmast
2016-01-28, 09:49 AM
There was the whole thing with V and the IFCC, and that led to further problems at Girard,s pyramid. Carrying on without Durkon and Belkar directly led to Durkon getting vamped. Don't Split the Party, again and again and again ...

georgie_leech
2016-01-28, 10:39 AM
Don't Split the Party, again and again and again ...

Hey, the Order is strongest when they're actually working together. They're not about to go up against the BBEG's of the entire series without Durkon, regardless of what Durkula has to say about it.

Kish
2016-01-28, 10:55 AM
With all the due respect and the endless gratitude for Rich, I feel that Hela and his priest are not au par with the other antagonists...B-list villain, in the words of Tarquin.
Hel is not a "him."

littlebum2002
2016-01-28, 11:03 AM
With all the due respect and the endless gratitude for Rich, I feel that Hela and his priest are not au par with the other antagonists...B-list villain, in the words of Tarquin.


Hel is not a "him."

Maybe Hela, whoever that is, IS male though :smallconfused:

Ruck
2016-01-28, 12:46 PM
I'm totally with ClaimingLight as far as wanting the story to have a defined end, not just go on until Rich runs out of steam and then abruptly end--and would be even if a genie promised me that Rich would continue to make comics for the rest of my life. Good stories have defined beginnings and endings. I'm just not with them as far as wanting to brush the plot with Vampire Durkon out of the way and get to the final volume already.

I have no doubt it will, though.

This part is important to me because not only does the team need Durkon back (and, of course, needs to make sure that there is still a world to save before they resume saving the world), but it's also another whack in the head from the Master to Roy-- "When are you going to start listening to your teammates?"

One thing Durkula was right about: "You've never been very good at listening to any idea that didn't originate inside your own skull." How often have we seen Roy blow off someone because he thinks he knows what they're going to say, or it's not what he wants to hear? And now-- as he realized after Hel's vote in #1000-- he has authored his own misfortune; the very world he is trying to save may well be destroyed because of his denial over who Durkula really is, a denial that springs from the same well of "Not hearing what you don't want to hear."

For Roy to be the real Hero What Saves the World, he's going to have to start listening to his teammates, and, as Belkar put it, become "emotionally equipped to deal with bad things happening to good people." I see this stage as crucial character development for Roy. (And Durkon as well, but that's a separate topic.)