{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "anonymous asked:\n What do you think are the most influential, successful, or popular webcomics? It can be kind of hard to tell,...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/622497161371959297/", "html": "<p><a href=\"https://rustingbridges.tumblr.com/post/622489812704854016/thewebcomicsreview-anonymous-asked-what\" class=\"tumblr_blog\" target=\"_blank\">rustingbridges</a>:</p>\n\n<blockquote>\n<p><a href=\"https://thewebcomicsreview.tumblr.com/post/622483206410813440/anonymous-asked-what-do-you-think-are-the-most\" class=\"tumblr_blog\" target=\"_blank\">thewebcomicsreview</a>:</p>\n\n<blockquote>\n<blockquote>\n<p>\n\nanonymous asked:</p>\n<p>What do you think are the most influential, successful, or popular webcomics? It can be kind of hard to tell, because the internet is really good at segmenting itself, so I would be curious about your opinions.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Penny Arcade is so obviously the most influential webcomic of all time that I\u2019m going to ignore it in favor of the second most influential webcomic of all time, one that has fewer direct clones than Penny Arcade, but which influenced early webcomics in varied and strange ways. A little 1337sp34k comic called</p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"90\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/cdb75971c7a3c1923ea57c2f6f1a2c1b03d12ccf_987eacbb86b6.png\" data-orig-height=\"90\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p><a href=\"https://t.umblr.com/redirect?z=https%3A%2F%2Fmegatokyo.com%2F&amp;t=ZjJkZTUxZDM1MTk1YTM1NDNhOTRiYTY4MGZiNDJkMTRlYmViYTJmZiw1ZjI2MmQxNzE2NGU1MjMzMzFjYzI4MGI5OTlmODJkOWJlYjVmZDMw\" target=\"_blank\">Megatokyo</a> was started in the year 2000 by two dudes named Piro and Largo. in the year 2000. </p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-embed tmblr-full\" data-provider=\"youtube\" data-orig-width=\"540\" data-orig-height=\"304\" data-url=\"https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DxPU8OAjjS4k%26feature%3Demb_title\"><iframe width=\"540\" height=\"304\" id=\"youtube_iframe\" src=\"https://www.youtube.com/embed/xPU8OAjjS4k?feature=oembed&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;origin=https://safe.txmblr.com&amp;wmode=opaque\" frameborder=\"0\" allow=\"accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture\" allowfullscreen=\"\"></iframe></figure><p>The year 2000 was a very different time, a limbo time. The 90s had ended with the Dot-Com bubble collapsing and average people starting to realize that computers weren\u2019t <a href=\"https://t.umblr.com/redirect?z=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D3EMwgdzyWVQ&amp;t=ODM1ZTM0NjUxMGYyYWQ5ZDc4Mjk4NTI0MTBlNDk2MDUzN2NjOWI4Ziw3NjJiMzhiYTJkZDM0YmRkMzFlY2FhMGFiYzcxZWNiMWZlZGMyMWFl\" target=\"_blank\">literal fucking magic</a>, but the 2000s hadn\u2019t really started yet. Al Gore was running against George W. Bush in an election where everyone thought the two candidates were basically identical and it would be the least important election of all time. After all, it was the End Of History, America was at the height of its power and would stay there forever, wages were rising and that obviously wasn\u2019t going to stop anytime soon, and our long national nightmare of peace and prosperity seemed unceasing, while our culture was united in the belief that torturing people was \u201cbad\u201d. Pokemon was far huger than it is even now, and a generation of kids was unaware of what Digimon Tamers was about to do to their burgeoning sexualities<br/></p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"304\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/9836204e3634aa216d7493afa3f6e5c573354a96_c1962a5284dc.png\" data-orig-height=\"304\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p><i>This show mostly just got me into Kazaa-ing to get the far superior Japanese OSTs, but other people had\u2026.stronger\u2026.reactions to Renamon. </i></p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"190\" data-orig-width=\"512\"><img src=\"/media/f10f0d128c47cff22e9aa62a212fbf5fd537d1af_ac874d0964e3.png\" data-orig-height=\"190\" data-orig-width=\"512\"/></figure><p>Webcomics of the time were mostly influenced by newspaper comics. Simple are, gag a day, and aimed at the kind of middle-aged tech nerd who\u2019d be an early adopter of the \u201ccomputer\u201d thingies. Penny Arcade mainly broke the mold by being edgier and aiming at a younger audience, but even they were clearly influenced primarily by newspaper comics first and foremost. </p>\n<p>And in this ecosystem, a dude named Largo wanted to make a gag-a-day comic and roped his artist friend Piro into drawing it for him. Largo wanted to make a traditional newspaper-style comic, but Piro was a massive weeb who wanted to do a vertical comic like Japanese 4Koma strips.</p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"540\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/8f91ed9894c36eb5cab4591fdccc5ebdb8cbd0da_7f428eebf794.png\" data-orig-height=\"540\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p>They decided to split the difference with this 2x2 grid as a compromise. The grid was actually a pretty efficient use of screen real estate on low-resolutions 90s monitors, and a lot of new comics started copying this odd square format. That\u2019s since fallen out of fashion, but one artifact of this arbitrary compromise lives on in internet culture to this very day</p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"304\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/5ea70643801c1aff47f7f8093540cdcd208656fe_76d07d4d1aa9.png\" data-orig-height=\"304\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p>As the comic went on, it became Piro\u2019s comic more and more and Largo\u2019s less and less, eventually leading to a falling out and the first big bit of Webcomic Drama, but for this essay what matters is that Megatokyo got weebier.</p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"810\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/76a110f032a6ef4224bda22bade9c8cb661e00ab_68afe092e9b4.png\" data-orig-height=\"810\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p>This is not what webcomics looked like in 2001. The art was phenomenal (er, by 2001 standards, at least. It was a different time, before anyone with an art background was making webcomics), and instead of being gag a day newspaper strip, it was a romantic dramedy graphic novel heavily inspired by anime and dating sims. Webcomic creators in 2001 were too old to have grown up with the mid-90s anime boom, but webcomic readers were, and the weebs and squeebs filling America\u2019s high schools in the Bush administration ate this shit up. That\u2019s not a random catgirl hat Piro is wearing up there, it\u2019s specifically the hat worn by Puchiko in <a href=\"https://t.umblr.com/redirect?z=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DbWo982dwTLI&amp;t=OWIwYzkyMmU1NjczYzY5NGM1MWJlY2U0NWFkNzE2YjBiMjgwM2ZkZCxhZjMxMTEyN2E5Mjc4MzdiZWIyYWJjNTk0OTQxYjllMjA3ZGQ4ZjRm\" target=\"_blank\">Di Gi Charat</a>, a contemporary anime that didn\u2019t air on TV on America and you either bought the DVDs or torrented it (you torrented it). You didn\u2019t get those kind of deep cuts from Penny Arcade, or PvP, or really anywhere on the internet but Megatokyo and anime forums. </p>\n<p>Megatokyo was responsible for bringing anime fans into the gamer-dominated world of webcomics. Would that happened anyway? Perhaps. Probably. But maybe not! Is it possible that, without Megatokyo, webcomics go the way of animutations and machinima and youtube poops, a small part of an internet subculture that never really becomes a\u00a0\u201cthing\u201d generally, until and unless some 90s kid gets old enough to create a hit comic of their own?\u00a0 Maybe. <i>I</i>\u00a0wouldn\u2019t have gotten into webcomics without Megatokyo. A lot of people wouldn\u2019t have. And perhaps, by bringing in a new and different audience, Megatokyo is actually the most influential webcomic of them all?</p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"810\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/ceb9ab222746a9991eb860c41390c23055ba658d_4ad8e2425653.png\" data-orig-height=\"810\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p>But the <i>strangest</i> influence Megatokyo had was Ping. Ping is an accessory for the then-new Playstation 2 who is a robot. Because this is Megatokyo, it\u2019s a robot that looks like a cute anime girl with pigtails, but, regardless. Piro and Largo had a pet robot. And other webcomics liked the idea of robots. They liked this idea a lot.</p>\n<figure data-orig-height=\"331\" data-orig-width=\"216\"><img src=\"/media/3b78be1a6da2c6283dcaa90fae700701d7ee02b9_5ff8ad9d71a2.png\" data-orig-height=\"331\" data-orig-width=\"216\"/></figure><p>Ctrl-Alt-Delete ripped this idea off most blatantly. Megatokyo had a Playstation robot, so CAD had an Xbox Robot </p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"498\" data-orig-width=\"303\"><img src=\"/media/469028e17d0337ac54c32c193d822a212e4e99c7_090439cf51d8.png\" data-orig-height=\"498\" data-orig-width=\"303\"/></figure><p>Applegeeks, a popular-but-not-dead comic had a Macintosh Robot</p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"450\" data-orig-width=\"360\"><img src=\"/media/1c6a74f0ae03aceec90083f2335c7c9d46f637c1_4670306f12d9.png\" data-orig-height=\"450\" data-orig-width=\"360\"/></figure><p>\n\nAnd Questionable Content had a PC robot (if you ever wondered why the otherwise realistic world of QC had sentient robots for over a decade before treating it as worth mentioning, that\u2019s why)\n\n<br/></p>\n<figure class=\"tmblr-full\" data-orig-height=\"797\" data-orig-width=\"540\"><img src=\"/media/b9748a4fd564cf5b9cb76c1371c30594673223e5_02bb6c019534.png\" data-orig-height=\"797\" data-orig-width=\"540\"/></figure><p>And then, eventually, QC made its robot a cute anime girl with pigtails, and the circle of reference was complete.\u00a0</p>\n</blockquote>\n\n<p>This has got me trying to figure out what year I started reading webcomics</p>\n\n<p>CAD is still omnipresent in the background on account of loss. PA is now a series of\u2026 Conventions? Or something. I wonder if megatokyo stills updates once a year or something. Maybe it finished!</p>\n</blockquote>", "thumbnail_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/media/cdb75971c7a3c1923ea57c2f6f1a2c1b03d12ccf_987eacbb86b6.png", "thumbnail_width": 540, "thumbnail_height": 90}