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BiblioRook
2016-06-15, 02:28 AM
So I'm really kind of surprised at the lack of a thread for Willis' Dumbing of Age (http://www.dumbingofage.com/). I mean considering the popularity of Questionable Content, I would find it very hard to believe people don't know about it much less read it.

That being said, if I'm to make a topic on it I kind of feel like I have to set up something of an introduction. I've probably been reading comics by David Willis for as long as I've known about webcomics period. Back when the comic was about college roommates, to alien abduction, to secret agents fighting said aliens, to working at a toy store, and now back to college students again.

For those unfirmilar with the comic, Dumbing of Age is a complete reboot of his comic world placing every character back into an ordinary college setting with not an alien in sight (aside from the cartoon variety), even characters that had nothing to do with the original college roomate comic.

EternalMelon
2016-06-15, 06:09 AM
Jen Aside:
The problem I foresee in a dumbing of age thread is that Willis often writes story lines about religion and politics. Because of our forum rules it might be hard to have lasting discussions without verging into off topic territory.

That being said it would be folly not to at least try.

I've been reading the comic for a while now (can't remember off the top of my head when I started exactly) and I really enjoy it. I find it better than the other stuff I've read of Willis's, but I haven’t read much more than a spattering of Shortpacked! any ways. I like how it manages to be very accessible while maintaining inside jokes to his other comics, or so I've been told.

BiblioRook
2016-06-15, 06:33 AM
Jen Aside:
The problem I foresee in a dumbing of age thread is that Willis often writes story lines about religion and politics. Because of our forum rules it might be hard to have lasting discussions without verging into off topic territory.

Yeah, this very much did occur to me and was wondering if it was the case for not having it's own thread. Though it's not as if that that is exclusively what the comic is about and considering how Joyce is developing maybe a bit less as it goes on (Mary is a whole other story however), I honestly would be more worried about getting heavily side-tracked on LGBT talk more actually...

Prince Zahn
2016-06-15, 08:43 AM
I wouldn't be surprised of it did get sidetracked, yes. :smalltongue: I would love to talk for ages about Joyce who is a(nd always was) without a doubt my favorite character, you come for the innocent big blue eyes and that wake-up-at-7-on-a-Sunday attitude and stay for the sick, twisted character development. :smalltongue:

I'll say it like this,
David Willis writes about hard topics of discussion, and every single one of his main characters is built around those challenging topics. Every single one of them deals with problems revolving the values of family, Religion, relationships (whether straight or LGBT) and identity/orientation, those who don't face these issues either helps with and/or instigates those problems of others. But on a large scale the most recurring motif is that all the things the primary characters learned or expect about life is put to the test when they enter the real world. Thankfully, Becky is starting her new life on the right foot, she has some of her personal information now, she's getting along with everyone, she's in a relationship and sports a new "banging haircut" even though I don't care for it, personally. Though she's pulling Joyce deeper and deeper into her situation, I don't want to know how the Browns will ultimately react to the new Becky, and the new Joyce. But this might be either a critical development point in Joyce or it could end up being a major sacrifice if her parents confront her and try to make her give up on Becky.

halfeye
2016-06-15, 11:41 AM
I'm pretty sure we did have a thread about this author, maybe even this strip, but there is a fairly short thread necromancy deadline (A month? not exactly I think, but less than two months I'm pretty sure) on these forums.

Some comics just can't keep a thread going, I've personally started a couple for "Daily Grind" and they died (I think without a reply both times), and one for A Girl and her Fed, that got one reply. It's long enough ago now that if they were reopened they'd be locked by mods for thread necromancy, if I want to write about those again, I'll make a new thread or respond to someone else's new thread.

I do read Dumbing of Age, I kind of like it, but it hasn't made it into my bookmarks yet, I dunno why.

Takver
2016-06-18, 08:27 PM
I read Dumbing of Age, after having read none of Willis's work previously. It's OK. The "newspaper comic" type format really limits the art. Webcomics have an infinite canvas, and DOA has four very small panels in a row. No room for a nice big splash panel. The art is good for what it is, though. Nice clean lines.

The stories are decently interesting, with some good character beats. I agree that Joyce is the most interesting character. My big problem storywise is the preachiness. The comic tells you exactly how to feel about Becky's dad, Amber's dad, Mary, Joyce's mom, the politician sister, etc etc. My politics mostly agree with Willis's, but I still roll my eyes a little at these flat villains.

I think of it as a better Questionable Content. I had it on my RSS feed for a while, but I got frustrated with the minimal content of the updates. I found it works best for me to just forget it exists most of the time, and check it once every two or three weeks.

EternalMelon
2016-06-18, 10:24 PM
How can you say a comic with characters like Marcus has flat villains?
Seriously, Marcus is like, the worst person to ever grace the earth, but since introduction has done nothing but add variety and nuance to the grey and grey morality comic we now find ourselves in. Combining truly chilling lines and speeches with honest but heart-warming kick/pet the dog moments, the comic has introduced a charecter that will no doubt be an icon in pop culture for decades to come.

But yeah, the preachyness is sometimes heavy handed and the villians cartoonish, but the main characters are decently flawed and multi-dimentional. A lot of the casts problems arn't with other people, its with themselves. Still does make me wish some of the villains were better handled.

Prince Zahn
2016-06-19, 02:55 AM
The stories are decently interesting, with some good character beats. I agree that Joyce is the most interesting character. My big problem storywise is the preachiness. The comic tells you exactly how to feel about Becky's dad, Amber's dad, Mary, Joyce's mom, the politician sister, etc etc. My politics mostly agree with Willis's, but I still roll my eyes a little at these flat villains.


How can you say a comic with characters like Marcus has flat villains?
Seriously, Marcus is like, the worst person to ever grace the earth, but since introduction has done nothing but add variety and nuance to the grey and grey morality comic we now find ourselves in. Combining truly chilling lines and speeches with honest but heart-warming kick/pet the dog moments, the comic has introduced a charecter that will no doubt be an icon in pop culture for decades to come.

But yeah, the preachyness is sometimes heavy handed and the villians cartoonish, but the main characters are decently flawed and multi-dimentional. A lot of the casts problems arn't with other people, its with themselves. Still does make me wish some of the villains were better handled.
Yeah, Marcus is the worst! :smalltongue:

On the topic of flat villains, I have a feeling it was intentional. A story like DoA is trying to deliver some strong messages, and Willis isn't trying to be subtle about them. These flat villains aren't more complex than they need to be to fulfill their part. Look at Toedad, for example. He's a over- zealous, self-righteous father who thinks he can "fix" his daughter by taking her from her friends' campus at gunpoint. This simple, flat, and extreme role exists to make Becky's life harder, and more profound, and probably traumatized (even though Becky's making an effort to hide it). Toedad isn't to be rooted for or sympathized with because that's missing the whole point of Toedad, same with Blaine or Gashface. That's why he's demonized by both the story and by Willis. He's literally saying in his DoA that that kind of behavior is blind and dangerous, and abusive. In short, I completely agree: the villains are caricatures, but it's also intentional, but these sort of people, - and these kinds of issues they cause to the main cast - aren't unheard of.

Discus-Spinner
2016-06-19, 05:11 AM
On the topic of flat villains, I have a feeling it was intentional. A story like DoA is trying to deliver some strong messages, and Willis isn't trying to be subtle about them.
The problem with that is that the only readers who won't be more irritated by than approving of the preachiness are the people who agree with you already. So you're likely to lose the others, and end up preaching to the converted. Which surely removes the point of the preaching in the first place? Telling people that they're right just makes you and them look smug, and doesn't make the world a better place.

halfeye
2016-06-19, 09:55 AM
Which surely removes the point of the preaching in the first place? Telling people that they're right just makes you and them look smug, and doesn't make the world a better place.
However, if it brings in the money, maybe that's okay? :smallconfused::smallfrown:

eschmenk
2016-06-19, 01:19 PM
Which surely removes the point of the preaching in the first place?

I haven't read the comic, but according to the about page, Willis had a very intense Evangelical Christian upbringing, so he would have been subjected to tons of preaching. Much of that preaching would have taught him that he, in turn, must preach to others. Apparently he has rejected much of what he was taught, but perhaps he still believes in the importance of preaching as a religious belief? Maybe it's just what is natural for him because he never learned how to not do it? Maybe it's hard for him to accept that it's not effective, given how much emphasis was put on it in his youth? Or maybe he just realized how much people enjoy feeling smug and recognized the commercial possibilities of helping them feel that way (halfeye's point)? Or some mixture of these reasons?

Added: To be fair though, maybe in some cases people have made a decision and they need reassurance. In that case, as long as they made the right choice, reassurance would be a good thing. If people stop there and don't go all the way to smug, there probably isn't a problem.

Pluto!
2016-06-20, 08:21 PM
I tried to get into this comic, but the comic relies so hard on its drama being taken seriously while at the same time every character is so one-dimensional and unrelatable, every single plot point is so hamfistedly forced and every individual strip operates at such a different degree of realism that I kept finding myself digging into the comments to see whether I'd missed something, or whether the comic that day just wasn't worth caring about.

...Kind of like Mark Trail but with better color.

The thing that continually made me uncomfortable with the comic is that many of the ideals that are being heavy-handedly pushed are ideals I actually share. But the comic treats opposing viewpoints as so egregiously inhuman and incomprehensively-motivated that the whole comic continually left me with the rank aftertaste of rhetorical sleaze.

Takver
2016-06-21, 05:42 PM
Vividly put! And I find it hard to disagree with any of it. "Rhetorical sleaze" is a phrase I'm going to have to put in my pocket.

halfeye
2016-07-21, 08:30 PM
There's already a Dumbing of Age thread (http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?491467-Dumbing-of-Age).
My bad. Presumably I didn't look carefully enough.

Knaight
2016-07-27, 01:23 PM
The thing that continually made me uncomfortable with the comic is that many of the ideals that are being heavy-handedly pushed are ideals I actually share. But the comic treats opposing viewpoints as so egregiously inhuman and incomprehensively-motivated that the whole comic continually left me with the rank aftertaste of rhetorical sleaze.

This would be much more convincing if it weren't for the entire characters of Joyce, Joyce's dad, etc. Sure, there are some flat villains - but its their effect on the main cast that is relevant most of the time anyways, and even then they are frequently presented with understandable motivations.

Max_Killjoy
2017-05-04, 11:02 AM
I tried to get into this comic, but the comic relies so hard on its drama being taken seriously while at the same time every character is so one-dimensional and unrelatable, every single plot point is so hamfistedly forced and every individual strip operates at such a different degree of realism that I kept finding myself digging into the comments to see whether I'd missed something, or whether the comic that day just wasn't worth caring about.

...Kind of like Mark Trail but with better color.

The thing that continually made me uncomfortable with the comic is that many of the ideals that are being heavy-handedly pushed are ideals I actually share. But the comic treats opposing viewpoints as so egregiously inhuman and incomprehensively-motivated that the whole comic continually left me with the rank aftertaste of rhetorical sleaze.

First, this comic can't seem to find a consistent tone, wandering between the verge of the previous Shortpacked's wacky hijinks tone, and dead-drama-serious. The incongruity is at times striking.

Second, Willis suffers from a deep state of "convert's fallacy" and no lack of arrogance. His comments make it clear that he views opposing opinions as detestable, backwards, and ignorant, and never lets facts get in the way of his beliefs (and that's no small degree of irony).

Third, the comments section is overall an echo-chamber for a very particular crowd, with unwelcome viewpoints and even inconvenient facts shouted down, insulted and belittled, and then eventually blocked from posting by none other than Willis himself. Many of the people are quite intelligent, kind, and open-minded, but the collective effect is that they're smelling their own butts and thinking "Mmmmm, roses!"

Lacuna Caster
2017-05-06, 01:07 PM
I'm generally the first to complain about tonal dissonance, but DoA has never struck me as a major offender on that score. There are hijinks, and there is drama, but the hijinks tend to consist more of characters saying funny stuff than pointedly violating physics, and the drama doesn't veer into the realm of, say, torture-porn and ethnic cleansing. (Unlike, uh, certain webcomics I could mention.)

I don't think that Toedad or Joyce's near-rape(?) are a particular strength of the series, and I can't speak for the author or general readership's tolerance of diverse opinions, but I enjoy it for the general humour and charm, the broadly harmless main cast, and the deceptively simple art that grows on ya.

Lacuna Caster
2017-05-06, 01:28 PM
I haven't read the comic, but according to the about page, Willis had a very intense Evangelical Christian upbringing, so he would have been subjected to tons of preaching. Much of that preaching would have taught him that he, in turn, must preach to others.
Yeah... if he's willing to shed his former metaphysical beliefs, social circle and politics, I'm betting that anything left over is probably genetic. But that's a topic for another day.

There's an interesting video clip (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpNRw7snmGM) with Penn Jilette which touches on the subject, in that, despite being an atheist, he often finds it easier to get along with fundamentalist Christians than he does with religious moderates. (I've actually found that myself, on a few occasions.) "I think in a certain sense, I'm a preacher. My heart is there."

Max_Killjoy
2017-05-06, 02:02 PM
I haven't read the comic, but according to the about page, Willis had a very intense Evangelical Christian upbringing, so he would have been subjected to tons of preaching. Much of that preaching would have taught him that he, in turn, must preach to others. Apparently he has rejected much of what he was taught, but perhaps he still believes in the importance of preaching as a religious belief? Maybe it's just what is natural for him because he never learned how to not do it? Maybe it's hard for him to accept that it's not effective, given how much emphasis was put on it in his youth? Or maybe he just realized how much people enjoy feeling smug and recognized the commercial possibilities of helping them feel that way (halfeye's point)? Or some mixture of these reasons?

Added: To be fair though, maybe in some cases people have made a decision and they need reassurance. In that case, as long as they made the right choice, reassurance would be a good thing. If people stop there and don't go all the way to smug, there probably isn't a problem.

The problem is that he ditched the specific beliefs, but clearly retained the smug confidence in his own rightness and disdain for differing opinions.



Yeah... if he's willing to shed his former metaphysical beliefs, social circle and politics, I'm betting that anything left over is probably genetic. But that's a topic for another day.

There's an interesting video clip (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpNRw7snmGM) with Penn Jilette which touches on the subject, in that, despite being an atheist, he often finds it easier to get along with fundamentalist Christians than he does with religious moderates. (I've actually found that myself, on a few occasions.) "I think in a certain sense, I'm a preacher. My heart is there."

As an agnostic and empiricist, I've found that nothing offends people who really, really believe in any particular thing... more than moderation.

Lacuna Caster
2017-05-06, 02:55 PM
Are ya positive ya don't like preaching Max? Just a little bit? :smalltongue:

One of the commenters, entirely fairly, pointed out that the moderates are less likely to launch an actual crusade, but the thing is- and I've heard Jilette talk about this before- if you genuinely believe that doing X could send you to hell or doing Y could prepare you for heaven, then it's entirely reasonable to do everything in your power to convince other people that it's true. It's also entirely fair for you to criticise the empirical basis for said beliefs, but... just telling fundies to shut up and mind their business is essentially asking them to be self-serving social cowards for the sake of convenience.

Max_Killjoy
2017-05-08, 09:43 AM
Are ya positive ya don't like preaching Max? Just a little bit? :smalltongue:

One of the commenters, entirely fairly, pointed out that the moderates are less likely to launch an actual crusade, but the thing is- and I've heard Jilette talk about this before- if you genuinely believe that doing X could send you to hell or doing Y could prepare you for heaven, then it's entirely reasonable to do everything in your power to convince other people that it's true. It's also entirely fair for you to criticise the empirical basis for said beliefs, but... just telling fundies to shut up and mind their business is essentially asking them to be self-serving social cowards for the sake of convenience.

Well, my problem is that the person in question has simply traded one sort of "this is TRUTH, if you don't believe you're a dangerous fool who needs to be silenced" orthodoxy for another set of "this is TRUTH, if you don't believe you're a dangerous fool who needs to be silenced" orthodoxy. It's just another set of beliefs that they don't want challenged.

If there's someone telling people to shut up, it's not really me.

halfeye
2017-05-08, 10:06 AM
Well, my problem is that the person in question has simply traded one sort of "this is TRUTH, if you don't believe you're a dangerous fool who needs to be silenced" orthodoxy for another set of "this is TRUTH, if you don't believe you're a dangerous fool who needs to be silenced" orthodoxy. It's just another set of beliefs that they don't want challenged.

Fundamentalists of one belief becoming fundamentalists of another without apparently transitioning through any doubt, is allegedly/apparently something that happens IRL.

Lacuna Caster
2017-05-15, 01:15 PM
I remember reading somewhere that agitated young men would switch between the nazis and the communists in weimar germany almost at the drop of a hat, regardless of how compatible their camp's philosophies might be. Can't remember the quote, though.

I think the implication was that the internal consistency of belief systems wasn't really the crux of membership- simply the sense of belonging and/or the opportunity for venting at external adversaries. Without getting into 'fair and balanced' territory, I'm sure that's not unique to the rustbelt.


If there's someone telling people to shut up, it's not really me.
Oh, I'm not saying that you do personally. I'm just trying to explain Jilette's perspective- that he'd rather have an honest argument than a quiet life (or worse, an echo chamber.)

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-02, 04:45 AM
Given some recurring themes (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/03-the-thing-i-was-before/cword/) in the strip, I thought this (https://medium.com/@freddiedeboer/the-iron-law-of-institutions-and-the-left-735da96f61d3) might make for interesting reading.

"Letting people fixate on their fantasies of righteous violence hurts the cause. But asking them to do otherwise hurts your position within the cause."

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-02, 06:39 AM
Given some recurring themes (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/03-the-thing-i-was-before/cword/) in the strip, I thought this (https://medium.com/@freddiedeboer/the-iron-law-of-institutions-and-the-left-735da96f61d3) might make for interesting reading.

"Letting people fixate on their fantasies of righteous violence hurts the cause. But asking them to do otherwise hurts your position within the cause."

I experienced that on the comments section there -- the "righteous wrath" and utter disdain they express towards people who don't share in the echoes of their chamber can only hurt their causes, but to point that out to them makes you persona-non-grata.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-02, 09:07 AM
I experienced that on the comments section there -- the "righteous wrath" and utter disdain they express towards people who don't share in the echoes of their chamber can only hurt their causes, but to point that out to them makes you persona-non-grata.
I'll occasionally look at the comments sections for Strong Female Protagonist, and while I think it's a great strip with some excellent perspectives and surprisingly nuanced discussion of ethics, there are times when it's target audience seem dazzlingly unaware of how far it can veer into self-parody (http://strongfemaleprotagonist.com/issue-6/page-61-3/).

(To be fair, I sometimes get a similar feeling from reading the original Superman strips, which I also love.)

halfeye
2017-06-02, 12:32 PM
She ruined his life by revealing what he's been doing? Rather than he ruined it by doing those things?

I hope he's about to get a much deserved beating.

That guy linked above lost me at "As Marxists".

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-02, 03:56 PM
I don't think you need to be a marxist to appreciate that, e.g, poverty and unemployment are fairly objectively important issues that cut across race, religion, gender and nationality to affect tens of millions of people, and should therefore be near the top of the agenda for any political movement that wants a broad base of influence. That's not always (https://mappingpoliceviolence.org/unarmed/) evident (http://www.unhcr.org/en-ie/news/briefing/2017/4/58ec9d464/unhcr-says-death-risk-starvation-horn-africa-yemen-nigeria-growing-displacement.html) in certain corners of the web.

Anyway- I'm sure that dude-with-scar-on-face-whose-name-I-don't-recall will be speedily dispatched by Amber, and I doubt that knowing her secret identity would make any difference. He's already been convicted in the court of public opinion- who would listen to him?

halfeye
2017-06-02, 06:46 PM
I don't think you need to be a marxist to appreciate that, e.g, poverty and unemployment are fairly objectively important issues that cut across race, religion, gender and nationality to affect tens of millions of people, and should therefore be near the top of the agenda for any political movement that wants a broad base of influence. That's not always (https://mappingpoliceviolence.org/unarmed/) evident (http://www.unhcr.org/en-ie/news/briefing/2017/4/58ec9d464/unhcr-says-death-risk-starvation-horn-africa-yemen-nigeria-growing-displacement.html) in certain corners of the web.

I am not a marxist. Anyone who claims I am, is out of order, and so far as I am concerned out of luck.


Anyway- I'm sure that dude-with-scar-on-face-whose-name-I-don't-recall will be speedily dispatched by Amber, and I doubt that knowing her secret identity would make any difference. He's already been convicted in the court of public opinion- who would listen to him?

I'm becoming less and less sure of that. If that happens it's story over for that aspect of the story, which might be good, but there's more drama to be had with him getting away somehow. Still, we should find out soon enough.

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-02, 07:38 PM
I am not a marxist. Anyone who claims I am, is out of order, and so far as I am concerned out of luck.


No one said you were. :smalleek:

halfeye
2017-06-03, 07:37 AM
No one said you were. :smalleek:

No one here did. Which is good. :smallsmile:

The guy in the link wrote something like "As Marxists, we ..." it's quite a way into the screed, but it threw me right out.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-03, 08:33 AM
...That's not really a sound logical basis for dismissing any and all arguments coming from said person, though. They're either independently valid or they're not.

I'm sure that additional drama could be wrung from whatsisface, but I'm quite happy when the strip is puttering along with regular slice-of-life dorm-comedy, so I'm not particularly pushed in that regard.

halfeye
2017-06-03, 09:00 AM
...That's not really a sound logical basis for dismissing any and all arguments coming from said person, though. They're either independently valid or they're not.

That depends on what you think of Marx's logic, I think it's weak.

eschmenk
2017-06-03, 10:34 AM
...That's not really a sound logical basis for dismissing any and all arguments coming from said person, though. They're either independently valid or they're not.


That depends on what you think of Marx's logic, I think it's weak.

No, it shouldn't depend on what you think of Marx's logic if it's independently valid.

halfeye
2017-06-03, 12:01 PM
No, it shouldn't depend on what you think of Marx's logic if it's independently valid.
However, the probability of it being independently valid is dependant on the writer's ability with logic, and if they accept weak logic, their own logic is probably weak.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-03, 04:44 PM
No, that's still not right (http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Association_fallacy). Accusations of weak reasoning should be supportable by inspecting the argument, not the arguer.

halfeye
2017-06-03, 05:56 PM
No, that's still not right (http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Association_fallacy). Accusations of weak reasoning should be supportable by inspecting the argument, not the arguer.

In general that seems like a good idea, however:


In theory there is no difference between theory and practice, in practice there is.

There are a lot of ideas in the world, most of them are wrong, once I've identified that they are wrong, I don't care very much why or how they are wrong. I strongly suspect that if it had been Hitler whose logic I'd denied (as I certainly would), we wouldn't be having this discussion.

The thing about Marxists so far as I am concerned isn't that they believe one arbitrary wrong thing, it's that they believe a whole conjoined mess of wrong things, as do fascists, and a bunch of other groups, the particulars of which cannot be discussed here.

So, Amber's grabbed and disarmed him, apparently. I wonder what's next.

geoduck
2017-06-04, 01:33 AM
So, Amber's grabbed and disarmed him, apparently. I wonder what's next.

She and Willis both go too far.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-04, 06:38 AM
...it's that they believe a whole conjoined mess of wrong things, as do fascists, and a bunch of other groups, the particulars of which cannot be discussed here.
Actually, there were some ideas (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_welfare_in_Nazi_Germany) expounded by Hitler that I feel no particular shame about advocating.

The problem here is that you're not denying the author's logic at all. You are rejecting any perspective that don't come from a pre-approved quarter of the political spectrum. Which is exactly the problem.

halfeye
2017-06-04, 10:12 AM
The problem here is that you're not denying the author's logic at all. You are rejecting any perspective that don't come from a pre-approved quarter of the political spectrum. Which is exactly the problem.

What I have is not a whitelist, it's a blacklist, and it's quite short. The way I see things is that some ideologies overpower other ideas, such that believing in them is incompatible with sensible thought. Most of the things we do in life don't require thorough going logic, but in the instances where we need it, it needs to be applied free from constraints.

What is Amber doing? I do hope it's not some self sacrifice ploy.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-23, 05:03 AM
"We're a festive people (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/04-the-do-list/weekdays/)." That cracks me up for some reason.

I am a little curious as to exactly where Joe was keeping his hawtness-list that it would be hacked. Was it not just a file on his hard-drive, or did he keep a backup on dropbox or something?

Seerow
2017-06-23, 12:19 PM
"We're a festive people (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/04-the-do-list/weekdays/)." That cracks me up for some reason.

I am a little curious as to exactly where Joe was keeping his hawtness-list that it would be hacked. Was it not just a file on his hard-drive, or did he keep a backup on dropbox or something?

Based on previous comic references, it was an RSS feed. And he regularly offered random people access to it. So unless those were just one-off jokes, and he actually did keep the real thing private, the whole school getting it is not surprising.

John Campbell
2017-06-23, 12:19 PM
I am a little curious as to exactly where Joe was keeping his hawtness-list that it would be hacked. Was it not just a file on his hard-drive, or did he keep a backup on dropbox or something?
It's not clear exactly where he keeps it, but, yes, it's online, and has an RSS feed (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/02-everything-youve-ever-wanted/boyspizzaretreat/).

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-23, 01:41 PM
Fair enough.

I think "What was I, Joe, before I hurt you?" might be my favourite Joyce line yet.

Cikomyr
2017-06-26, 11:50 AM
Hey guys, thanks for showing me this comic. So far, i find all characters interesting, engaging and frustrating. They all have their foibles, nobody is a total jerk or a total saint. The depth of characterisation implemented for such a large cast is actually impressive.

However.. i feel the website is horrendously optimized. I feel my (relatively new and powerful) phone struggles to open every page, and it heats up so much when i browse the comic. Is that normal?!?

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-26, 12:19 PM
Hey guys, thanks for showing me this comic. So far, i find all characters interesting, engaging and frustrating. They all have their foibles, nobody is a total jerk or a total saint. The depth of characterisation implemented for such a large cast is actually impressive.

However.. i feel the website is horrendously optimized. I feel my (relatively new and powerful) phone struggles to open every page, and it heats up so much when i browse the comic. Is that normal?!?

That's all the ads for Willis's side gig as a pron-lord loading, plus the heat exchange from the echo chamber in the comment's section.

Cikomyr
2017-06-26, 12:58 PM
Pron-lord..?

Otomodachi
2017-06-26, 01:02 PM
Fair enough.

I think "What was I, Joe, before I hurt you?" might be my favourite Joyce line yet.

A crazy hypocrite who brought a OPENLY violent jerk to chaperone your date, who you also encouraged to beat the ever loving crap out of said date because he looked at a pair of breasts?

Grey_Wolf_c
2017-06-26, 01:07 PM
Pron-lord..?

Presumably, they were either going for pr0n lord or the more straightforward porn lord. The author makes money by selling side stories of the sexual hookups of various pairs of characters. I'd say calling him a lord for that is a bit overmuch, mind you.


A crazy hypocrite who brought a OPENLY violent jerk to chaperone your date, who you also encouraged to beat the ever loving crap out of said date because he looked at a pair of breasts?
No, that would still be part of the "0-" grade, I'd imagine. If he knew about all that before going on a date, he would've skipepd it, I'm sure.

GW

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-26, 01:39 PM
Presumably, they were either going for pr0n lord or the more straightforward porn lord. The author makes money by selling side stories of the sexual hookups of various pairs of characters. I'd say calling him a lord for that is a bit overmuch, mind you.


Willis has called himself that multiple times.

It's part of his Crowley-esque rebellion against the over-strict standards he was evidently raised under.

Grey_Wolf_c
2017-06-26, 01:45 PM
Willis has called himself that multiple times.
Fair enough, then.


It's part of his Crowley-esque rebellion
I don't recognize the reference. I can only think of two Crowleys (The one from Good Omens, and the one from Supernatural, who is likely a reference to the first), and while the first did sort of rebel, as a comparison it doesn't quite work, so I'm guessing you mean a third Crowley?

GW

Cikomyr
2017-06-26, 01:54 PM
Presumably, they were either going for pr0n lord or the more straightforward porn lord. The author makes money by selling side stories of the sexual hookups of various pairs of characters. I'd say calling him a lord for that is a bit overmuch, mind you.


Oohhh.. really? Are those Explicit?!

...what?! I like the art style

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-26, 02:00 PM
Fair enough, then.


I don't recognize the reference. I can only think of two Crowleys (The one from Good Omens, and the one from Supernatural, who is likely a reference to the first), and while the first did sort of rebel, as a comparison it doesn't quite work, so I'm guessing you mean a third Crowley?

GW

The historical Aleister Crowley (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleister_Crowley).

Grey_Wolf_c
2017-06-26, 02:06 PM
Oohhh.. really? Are those Explicit?!

I'm guessing yes? I haven't purchased any of them, but given where they are published, I would expect them to be some manner of explicit. However, this whole line is way too close to breaking board rules as it is, so... maybe do your own research?


The historical Aleister Crowley (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleister_Crowley).
Thanks.

GW

Cikomyr
2017-06-26, 03:38 PM
I'm guessing yes? I haven't purchased any of them, but given where they are published, I would expect them to be some manner of explicit. However, this whole line is way too close to breaking board rules as it is, so... maybe do your own research?


Sure, lets not push any further than she can handle it ;)

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-27, 06:47 AM
A crazy hypocrite who brought a OPENLY violent jerk to chaperone your date, who you also encouraged to beat the ever loving crap out of said date because he looked at a pair of breasts?
I've actually completely forgotten the scene with Joe & Joyce's date. Can someone link me?

Cikomyr
2017-06-27, 07:15 AM
I've actually completely forgotten the scene with Joe & Joyce's date. Can someone link me?

Start from the start. He is the very, very, very first boy she has interaction with, the date happens quickly thereafter.

Btw, i hate you all people and u blame you for me only managing to sleep at 3 in the morning. The stories are damn engaging.

I just reached Becky's.. declaration.

Btw, had we seen Becky's father before? Because people in the comments say "not him again"

Grey_Wolf_c
2017-06-27, 07:45 AM
Btw, had we seen Becky's father before? Because people in the comments say "not him again"

Maybe, but not necessarily. Pretty much every character in Dumbing of Age is an expy of characters in Willis' first webcomic, Roomies/It's Walky! from way back.

Grey Wolf

Cikomyr
2017-06-27, 08:14 AM
Maybe, but not necessarily. Pretty much every character in Dumbing of Age is an expy of characters in Willis' first webcomic, Roomies/It's Walky! from way back.

Grey Wolf

I should check out those one of these days. It seems like there is a lot, lot, lot of subtext in the comic about this "first universe". Character relationships, for example.

Grey_Wolf_c
2017-06-27, 08:20 AM
I should check out those one of these days. It seems like there is a lot, lot, lot of subtext in the comic about this "first universe". Character relationships, for example.

Sort of, but more like in-jokes. Couples of the original story are kinda hinted at, then smashed as being completely unsuited for each other - a jab of the author at himself.

FWIW, I enjoyed It's Walky! back in the day, but its a bit of a mess. I'm not sure I could force myself to read it now - it has not aged well, I fear.

GW

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-27, 08:23 AM
Sort of, but more like in-jokes. Couples of the original story are kinda hinted at, then smashed as being completely unsuited for each other - a jab of the author at himself.

FWIW, I enjoyed It's Walky! back in the day, but its a bit of a mess. I'm not sure I could force myself to read it now - it has not aged well, I fear.

GW


At least in his older works, his penchant for snark and absurdity didn't clash with the seemingly grounded setting, and he wasn't trying to address sober topics in his juvenile manner.

Grey_Wolf_c
2017-06-27, 08:43 AM
At least in his older works, his penchant for snark and absurdity didn't clash with the seemingly grounded setting

Err... yes, they did. Which is why Roomies! (the grounded, could-have-been Dumbing of Age setting) became Its Walky!

(I am intentionally NOT commenting on your "sober topic" thing because nothing good could come out of that)

GW

Cikomyr
2017-06-27, 08:56 AM
Oh come on, its not like

- Religiosity
- Sheltered Upbringing
- Sexual self-discovery
- Religious Repression of self-identity
- Suicidal Alcoholism

Are hot topics here :-P

Yhea, its serious. I like it.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-27, 02:30 PM
Start from the start. He is the very, very, very first boy she has interaction with, the date happens quickly thereafter.
Found it! It's like 50 strips in (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2011/comic/book-1/03-men-are-from-beck-women-are-from-clark/bliss/), though. Yeah, I'd forgotten that Joyce/Mike were kind of a jerk about thought-policing there. But she does seem a little contrite about it, both here and later.

I'm really struck by the development of the art style too. It feels so tacked-together in the early strips.

Otomodachi
2017-06-27, 04:07 PM
Found it! It's like 50 strips in (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2011/comic/book-1/03-men-are-from-beck-women-are-from-clark/bliss/), though. Yeah, I'd forgotten that Joyce/Mike were kind of a jerk about thought-policing there. But she does seem a little contrite about it, both here and later.

I'm really struck by the development of the art style too. It feels so tacked-together in the early strips.

She ABSOLUTELY did grow as a character, you're absolutely right. That first date still REALLY bothers me, though, and it also bothers me that she's turning the screws on Joe right now when he's already panicking. Like, Joyce, are you really surprised after giving this guy probably THE worst date of his life that he doesn't rate you very high on HIS BANG LIST? Like, honestly, being a 0- seems like what she was TRYING to get out of him, at the time.

Since then she's started at least considering that she might have a sexuality to explore, and she has NO WAY of knowing how badly Joe is doing this exact moment. But still, she's bugging me right now. I LIKE Joe. He's probably one of my favourite characters across the Walkyverse. He's simple, but I honestly think he's pretty enlightened. Fairly self-aware for his age, too, IMO.

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-27, 05:39 PM
I like Joe as well. I'm not sure I'd consider him 'enlightened', but his particular brand of hetero swag strikes me as relatively harmless, compared to... well, the strip's actual examples of toxic masculinity.

I also don't think disclosing his do list to all and sundry was wise if he didn't want exactly the kind of blowback that's happening now, but if I glance around a room and squint a bit I could probably assign numbers between 0 and 10 to various people. That's what sexual preferences are.

I don't think Joyce is deliberately turning the screw here, or even angry- more a case of curiosity, maybe even concern. It's just obvious that Joe is masking an attraction on a deeper level than he's used to, and that terrifies him.

Seerow
2017-06-28, 10:15 AM
Maybe, but not necessarily. Pretty much every character in Dumbing of Age is an expy of characters in Willis' first webcomic, Roomies/It's Walky! from way back.

Grey Wolf


Becky/Toedad were actually exceptions to this, neither ever showed up in It's Walky/Shortpacked (unless they came into It's Walky after the paywall went up at the very end. But I doubt that).

Max_Killjoy
2017-06-28, 11:32 AM
Becky/Toedad were actually exceptions to this, neither ever showed up in It's Walky/Shortpacked (unless they came into It's Walky after the paywall went up at the very end. But I doubt that).

IIRC, Becky and Toedad were from the "Joyce and Walky" days, Becky was their neighbor I think.

Cikomyr
2017-06-28, 10:10 PM
Jesus Christ is it easy to lose track of time reading that comic. Man, its really catchy.

I am in Becky/Dina budding relationship.

Cutest
Thing
Ever

Lacuna Caster
2017-06-29, 05:15 AM
So, Mary (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/04-the-do-list/pissier/)- unexpectedly pleased by 3rd-party assessment or taking twisted pleasure in others' distress? Place your bets!

Cikomyr
2017-07-02, 05:29 PM
All right! All caught up!!

Oh god oh god oh god what happened to Amber??!

John Campbell
2017-07-02, 06:15 PM
Ah, Amber's fine.

It wasn't Amber who Willis tagged because their blood was in the strip. (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/03-the-thing-i-was-before/wellyikes/)

eschmenk
2017-07-02, 09:10 PM
All right! All caught up!!

Oh god oh god oh god what happened to Amber??!

I'm not reading the comic, but I looked at the strips around the one that John Campbell linked to. It looks to me that Amber disarmed Ryan, then punched and cut him. Was there something else?

John Campbell
2017-07-02, 09:46 PM
I'm not reading the comic, but I looked at the strips around the one that John Campbell linked to. It looks to me that Amber disarmed Ryan, then punched and cut him. Was there something else?

Note that the strip I linked ran almost a month ago - in a daily comic, so almost thirty strips ago - and is still the most recent appearance of either Amber or Ryan. Until today, it was also Dorothy's most recent appearance. The next strip was a three-day timeskip to a completely different set of characters, and Willis has been deliberately taunting us with checking up on everyone else and every other plotline going before letting us know whether Amber just straight-up killed a dude in front of Dorothy or what.

Max_Killjoy
2017-07-02, 11:05 PM
Note that the strip I linked ran almost a month ago - in a daily comic, so almost thirty strips ago - and is still the most recent appearance of either Amber or Ryan. Until today, it was also Dorothy's most recent appearance. The next strip was a three-day timeskip to a completely different set of characters, and Willis has been deliberately taunting us with checking up on everyone else and every other plotline going before letting us know whether Amber just straight-up killed a dude in front of Dorothy or what.

The hopping about gets old. It comes across as an attempt to gin-up suspense and/or drive advance-access sales.

Lacuna Caster
2017-07-19, 05:17 AM
And, we have closure (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/04-the-do-list/beefed/) on the "do" list series.

Yeah, the 'treasure map' aspect was also something I had not considered.

Cikomyr
2017-08-03, 09:19 PM
So.. if i wanted to start the Walkyverse, where should i start, and when should i spin off?

The Extinguisher
2017-08-04, 05:10 PM
So.. if i wanted to start the Walkyverse, where should i start, and when should i spin off?

I would recommend http://www.bringbackroomies.com
Willis is re-releasing all of the old walkyverse comics daily and it nice if you want to follow along with it. If you're just looking to binge the whole thing, start here http://www.joyceandwalky.com/d/19970908.html and go through all the way until the end, then you can start on Shortpacked!

Roomies! is alright, has some good ideas but also has a lot of bad ones. Its Walky! gets good about half way through and Shortpacked! is pretty good consistently with some minor exceptions, and there are definitely parts of all three that are just Awful so heads up but Willis does start to get progressive throughout Shortpacked!'s run which ends on a very gay note.

Lacuna Caster
2017-08-07, 07:15 AM
Speaking of gay notes- I know the characterisation is both odd and mildly troubling, but I find myself cracking up over Mary's recent behaviour (http://www.dumbingofage.com/2017/comic/book-7/04-the-do-list/creeeaaation/).

137beth
2017-08-24, 03:38 PM
Hello y'all,

This comic had been on my radar for quite awhile due to frequent recommendations. The initial description never sounded appealing to me, so I avoided reading it for a long time. I finally tried it a week and a half ago and finished binge-reading today.

I haven't read any of Willis' other comics, but that didn't really stop me from enjoying this one. It isn't very often that I care about the characters in a webcomic while also laughing as much as I did for this one. I'm not sure if I am going to read the Walkyverse comics yet, though I'll probably go through the DoA archives at least one more time to see if it is as good the second time as the first.

Cikomyr
2017-09-26, 01:38 PM
I love this comic so damn much