I wanted to highlight some underrated comics, but if i went with all webcomics, the list would be absurd. I really feel like reading some D&D based webcomics, so here are three that really need love. Obviously none of these are as good as OOTS or Goblins, but these are still all worth reading. I am not including any webcomics that can be found on this sight.
A D&D adventure from the perspective of the protagonists, who spend their time fighting against either other bigger evil things, or petty good guys. The art starts out poor and gets....slightly less poor. The world building is intriguing but sadly unexplored, the plot is kinda confusing, but the dialogue and most importantly the characters are fantastic. You really come to love the main bunch, which includes a Yuan-ti Pureblood Rogue, a Drow fighter (who is basically a massive nerd), a half Dragon Cleric, a Demon Touched Blackguard, A werebear fighter and a human aristocrat. It is really worth reading.
Set in a Japanese/Chinese setting, this story honestly really reminds me of Goblins. I don't know why. Anyways, it follows a Samurai who is trying to start up an all female military unit, which is ironically exactly what one of my players is doing. Extremely interesting character dynamics. Unlike all of the other examples, this is a straight drama, and is honestly really low key, the entire story feels like what it would be like to live in a D&D world. Art starts out Medocre and eventually gets to become....ok. But the writing is really top notch
Prime of Ambition
Well draw, nice presentation, and good set up but....kinda forgettable as the main character is a bit...Perfect? Still worth checking out
Drowtales
Extremely pretty to read, but I honestly have no idea what is going on. I would link it but the sight keeps changing every day or so and their seem to be two seperate stories going on....CAN SOMEBODY PLEASE EXPLAIN THE MADNESS TO ME. GAHHHHh
An OOTS inspired work which I think is fantastic, quite frankly on par with OOTS and Goblins in terms of quality. While not as funny as the former or as clever as the latter, OLA is told in a similar but distinct style to OOTS in an extremely interesting Dragonlance esc Fantasy world. In fact, my only major criticism is that their isn't more information on the world. I love the way it portrays the AL system and how people would realistically act in a D&D world. Also, it is the only one of these that actually feels like somebody is writing down their D&D games.
Does anybody else know any good D&D based becomics.
Last edited by CowardlyPaladin : 05-19-2013 at 07:28 PM.
Hmm...I'm not sure if it counts, and frankly I'm somewhat embarrassed for liking it, but Virtually Comics' Character Development, a playmobil-comic, is strangely intriguing to me. The plotline is really convoluted and quite ridiculous after a while and there is a not-unsubstantial amount of raunchy sexwacky shenanigans, but it's actually really hilarious at times.
EDIT: Oh, and by the by, Darken really is excellent (I've read it thrice, I believe). I have to respectfully disagree on OLA- it's not bad; it's got some shining moments from time to time and I still keep up with it, but frankly the fourth-wall breaking is too frequent and blunt for me to really delve into it thoroughly, and half the time I feel like the punchlines are...well, lacking their punch. Still worth a look, but definitely not on par with OOTS or Goblins in my opinion.
Last edited by MasterofFates : 05-19-2013 at 07:49 PM.
DM of the Rings by Shamus Young is really good. Although I wouldn't say it's underrated, it is D&D based. The premise is that Lord of the Rings is run as a D&D campaign, entailing a ton of railroading and exposition. Naturally, the players go off the rails and make a mockery out of the campaign. It's told by using screencaptures from the Lord of the Rings movies, rather than original art, but this doesn't detract from the quality. Also, it's finished with 144 comics plus a few extras, so you can read all of it in one sitting.
Yet Another Fantasy Gamer Comic is one of my favorites. Personally I think it's what Goblins initially attempted to be, a slice of life comic based around the monsters in a giant dungeon complex.
Dungeons and Dorks was another one that I used to follow. The first few story arcs are pretty good, but then writers and artists started dropping out and in became incomprehensible to me. If you start at the beginning though you should get some enjoyment out of it.
Another Gaming Comic* is literally a D&D comic, a group of players playing D&D, though it's a real mishmash of rules.
Unlike many, it doesn't indulge much in putting the characters in costumes in costumes and showing the action visually. Nope, it actually plays out basically as if you were watching a bunch of players play D&D, with only occasional illustrations of the actions for clarity. Since the players are playing characters who really are not them, including cross play, this is probably for the best.
The art is, to be charitable, terrible, but it does the job, and it's extremely text heavy, but the characters and situations are interesting nonetheless.
*Not to be confused with Yet Another Fantasy Gamer Comic.
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Originally Posted by Calanon
Raven_Cry's comments often have the effects of a +5 Tome of Understanding
Drowtales
Extremely pretty to read, but I honestly have no idea what is going on. I would link it but the sight keeps changing every day or so and their seem to be two seperate stories going on....CAN SOMEBODY PLEASE EXPLAIN THE MADNESS TO ME. GAHHHHh
here's a suitable link.
Drowtales has the main comic "Moonless Age", two drawn games, "Relic Hunters" and "Path to Power", the latter of which you can participate in for free, and a number of Daydream stories, where naughty stuff happens.
also, "Nahast: Lands of Strife" incorporates some mexican culture as well if i recall correctly.
I slogged through Darken recently. The first half was good...the second half I spent wanting terrible things to happen to the terrible, unlikable people I was reading about.
The only likable characters in the whole thing were generic rogue guy and some of the antagonists. Also...the plot..."let's go on an epic quest to find 3 ancient articacts! What's that? We found 2 of them by complete coincidence through no effort or merit of our own? Ok!"
The comic thread for DrowTales isn't called 'The Infodump' for nothing, and very little of the world interested me, so I literally never got into it. The only part I found fascinating was that humans were apparently a type of goblin in that universe. Too bad, it had quite good art, better than many, much more beloved comics.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Calanon
Raven_Cry's comments often have the effects of a +5 Tome of Understanding
I wouldn't call it "underrated" by any means, but I've got to give a shout out to Nodwick here. It's about as D&D as it gets, and was one of my favorite Dragon magazine comics. The author also does a comic called "Full Frontal Nerdity" on the same site that is also good.
I wouldn't call it "underrated" by any means, but I've got to give a shout out to Nodwick here. It's about as D&D as it gets, and was one of my favorite Dragon magazine comics. The author also does a comic called "Full Frontal Nerdity" on the same site that is also good.
Sadly, the former is over now.
Hench on, little big nosed buddy.
Hench on.
Still worth a read going through the archives I agree.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Calanon
Raven_Cry's comments often have the effects of a +5 Tome of Understanding
Another Gaming Comic is great. It has the added bonus of slavishly following the 3.5 rules, unlike other D&D comics which have moved further and further away from an external rule set.
here's a suitable link.
Drowtales has the main comic "Moonless Age", two drawn games, "Relic Hunters" and "Path to Power", the latter of which you can participate in for free, and a number of Daydream stories, where naughty stuff happens.
also, "Nahast: Lands of Strife" incorporates some mexican culture as well if i recall correctly.
Ok, but isn't their an original story and a reboot story?
Also I think the Elves are Mexican, at least the wood elves are, the sea elves seem vaugly indian, and the humans are Chinese/Japanese. I'm not sure what the dwarves are
Ok, but isn't their an original story and a reboot story?
well, most of chapters 1-12 of "Moonless Age" got rewritten and redrawn. the old versions are pretty much gone, though. only some pages can be found via search engine or people who downloaded them in time.
edit: or are you referring to the parts of the story that happen before and after the time skip?
Last edited by Fion MacCumhail : 05-22-2013 at 07:55 AM.
Shoutout and love to Dungeons & Denizens. This one is a gem, in my opinion. The comic focuses on Min the Minotaur as he takes on a tech support job for a dungeon that treats the occasional raid by heroes as a business. The comic's story is disjointed at best; I can never tell if the author genuinely believes he has some sort of narrative goal in mind or if he's feebly attempting to con me into believing that he's really planned everything out. For all that, though, the art is very nice, the characters are well defined, and the whole thing's just so lighthearted and reveling in its silliness that I just can't help but like it. Probably not for everyone, but certainly worth a look.
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Originally Posted by Socratov
Predator turned prey
Dangling helplessly at length
Dragons always win
God damn, is their like a guide book to Drowtales, so I can understand what is going on? This would be so much easier if it wasn't for the god forsaken overly complicated names. I keep forgetting who everybody is in this comic