Dropped Webcomics

Tell me about the webcomic that you most recently dropped and why, Zig Forums.

I dropped Whomp! last week because it kind of ran its course with me. For months I've been having the feeling that it's basically the same joke but told differently.

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I dropped Poppy O Possum before it turned into a novel. I felt it wasn't going to go anywhere, just keep doing pointless worldbuilding for a world it was never going to explore, and shit just didn't make any sort of logical sense if you thought about it for more than 2 seconds. I wasn't the least bit surprised when he turned it into a novel, Morbi always struck me as the sort of artist to consider any other form of artistic expression to be easier than his own art. Wasn't the least bit surprised when the reality hit him and he ended up dropping the whole thing.

Fuck everyone here who defended that hack and his anime-ripoff art style.

Lovesyck was dropped by its creator... feels bad

kill 6 gorillion demons or whatever it was called. was getting to gay and brown for me.

Same but for paranatural

>Poppy O Possum

I tried reading it once but it didn't really catch me.

i am obligated to post this whenever poppy is mentioned

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read mine. it'll just get better and better

I dropped Romantically Apocalyptic when you had to start reading the wall of text below each comic to even approach being confused about what was going on. I think he retconned the early comics around then, too, making even them a slog to get through. A real shame, because it's one I used to really enjoy.

I dropped Dresden Codak when he took one multi-month hiatus too many. It just wasn't worth the wait for a story that wasn't going anywhere and art that was getting sloppier. A real shame, because I'm one of the ones who actually liked Dark Science a lot.

I dropped Questionable Content (despite whoever keeps posting it here) after the robot's-locked-away-memories-she-didn't-want-and-now-they're-gone-hooray-oh-boo-or-whatever asininity. It had stopped being a fun, goofy story about twentysomethings and their relationship dramas, and turned into people with absurdly pointy chins in utter no-stakes dramas that resolved without any conflict. Boooo-ring.

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Yooooo Paranatural became so lame over the time.

Out of a sense of nostalgia I had kept on reading Girl Genius for a long ass while, but I just quit it.
There are no interesting characters to justify all its meandering and alk the tension has gone out of it as the characters act more and more silly.

It went from treating its setting with some seriousness to everybody behaving like vaudeville comedy characters.

If it ever ends I may bing read it, but it just isn't worth checking triweekly.

Technically Moon Light Sculptor, that art style change.

You say over time but there was a very definitive moment where most people realized the comuv had abandoned what made it work: Dodge ball.

We should have a /ko/ general considering just how many Korean webcomics there are.

Yeah, but even before the comic was getting lamer and lamer. The dodgeball arc was the moement all said shit got together. There was no way back after that, shit hit the fan.

I originally dropped Prequel shortly before the big two-year delay; tried to reread it recently and couldn't even get through that dream sequence without cringing. Is this really what we used to think was cool?

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I don't think I've actively ever 'dropped' any webcomic, granted I don't read much in the first place. It's moreso that I get lazy and don't bother keeping up at one point or another.

That shit was way too damn confusing when I first read it, I don't know how anyone keeps up with it but the weird logic of the world along with the jargon threw me off.

I miss Brawl in the Family

I stopped reading "Back" back when people had clocks on their faces. It was updating waaaay too slowly for the tiny movements in plot. Wow. that was multiple YEARS ago. I'mma go see if it's moved much since then.

>Schlock Mercenary
I used to love this waaaaaaay back when, but there's this arc where the main characters go undercover as circus performers and it made me realize I really only read it because it was half decent military science fiction, not because it was funny. Because it isn't funny. So I dropped it. Then, maybe a year ago, I checked it out again and read everything from the point where I dropped it to the then most recent stuff. All it did was make me realize the comic was never good in the first place, and I was just a dumb teen who hadn't read anything that was actually good. Also, while I expected the author to be dumb and right wing (the comic has some really old-fashioned depictions and humor), he's actually dumb and left wing. Dude's Twitter is completely toxic.

>Endtown
If you've heard about the comic, you know why. If you haven't, there's a rather infamous arc that does away with one character to replace her with another. It really isn't very good, and it's a notable drop in quality for something that had been rather unique up to that point. I think the author might be genuinely nutso after having seen what lead up to Endtown. I might return to it one day, see if it improved afterwards.

>Lackadaisy
It's very competently made. The art is great, as is the adherence to historical detail. But it's just too slow. The plot moves at glacier speeds, and so do the updates. This comic was running, what, for the better part of a decade before one of the characters attained the personality he has in the banner image? I just can't follow subtle character details smeared out over 10 updates per year or so. Might be worth reading once it's finished, which I expect to be around 80 years from now.

I used to read shitloads of webcomics semi-regularly, and of course dropped most of them at some point. I kind of love webcomics for what they represent, but making comics really is fucking hard, and most of them lose my interest at some point.

I've dropped every webcomic except for Oots

I dropped OotS when it decided it wanted to actually be epic Fantasy storytelling instead of lampooning D&D tropes. You're never going to get me to take stick figure stereotypes of D&D archetypes seriously, and the thing you're doing doesn't become less ridiculous if you know how ridiculous it is and stop to remind me every now and then.

Eh, I still kinda like it on rereads, it's just you know whats going to happen so it isn't as exciting. I'm starting to care less and less because of how infrequent the updates are and how little actually happen in them now. We've been sitting on a rock waiting for a guard for like 9 months or some shit now

Would you consider old /tg/ quests to be webcomics? There's a bunch of unfinished stuff that had really interesting worlds

Too many. I'm about to transfer my dead quest bookmarks into an SQL file for archival.

floraverse after that cutie was cut out from the story and finding out artist is fucked in the head

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>artist is fucked in the head
Many such cases.

Just googled it, looks like furry garbage

... Too many? Doesn't really answer my question.