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Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

That’s right. I just said that IN THE SAME SENTENCE. VisionAire is what it is called. The post says it is really not multi-touch, but that sounds so cool. Take that Wacom. I want to draw in the air. Can you image your entire room as your palette? Video below.

D-20 of Destiny

Plot Device Cards are used to support your own Characters or hinder the actions of your opponent’s Character Cards. Some Plot Devices can give an OFF power boost, others can prevent a card from acting, and some others still can destroy another card altogether. The placement and use of your Plot Device Cards can potentially turn around the most hopeless of situations, and can turn a guaranteed defeat into an upset victory.

BandwidthJust like the Character cards, Plot Devices may have a Bandwidth Cost, indicated at the top of the card next to the PD symbol. In order to play a card you must have the Bandwidth on hand to spend, which you must discard before placing your Character onto the field. At the time of this writing no Plot Device cards have a Bandwidth Cost, but as cards become more powerful that will certainly change.

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This week Yahtzee lets us know exactly how to make a gaming webcomic. While there are many truths to be had here, is he just pointing out the obvious setup that works or calling the need for change?

All I know is that drama can bring traffic to your site, as pointed out more then once on, CTRL+ALT+DELETE. Hell its exactly what Yahtzee’s whole gig is based on. Drama. So should I go around posting in all the forums “FF8>FF7″ and stir up some crazy ass drama? Choicecomics.net could use some traffic.

Video after the break.

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Manda the Song Mage

Character Cards can be considered the most essential cards in the game in that they’re the only cards you absolutely can’t play the game without. Characters are used to attack your opponent, defend yourself, and ultimately will decide if you lose or win a battle. While possessing wide range of different power levels and abilities, most character cards have similar features.

Bandwidth
Many cards have a Bandwidth Cost, indicated at the top of the card next to the Character symbol. In order to play a card you must have the Bandwidth on hand to spend, which you must discard before placing your Character onto the field. There are many Characters that have no cost to play, but usually the more powerful a Character the more they cost.

Mystic Genre
Characters are catagorized by Genre, which can dictate how the Character interacts with other cards. The main Character Genres include: Fighters, Mystics, Shooters, and Geeks. Some cards can only effect or be effected by certain Genres, while others can react differently in play against one type or another.

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D-20 of Destiniy

WAGON Webcomic Battle is a brand new collectible card game that is, you guessed it, entirely based off of webcomics and their contents. This covers all elements of webcomics, from their characters, to their story plots, and everything else that makes a webcomic uniquely what it is.

The game itself is played with three kinds of cards: Characters, Plot Devices, and Bandwidth. Characters are, obviously, based off the stars of their webcomics. Character cards are able to attack other cards, defend you from harm, and use various abilities to effect gameplay. Plot Devices are either objects or story points that can effect gameplay. This can mean anything from boosting a Character’s strength, preventing an attack, or destroying other cards outright. Essentially Plot Devices are used to support your Characters while hindering your opponents Characters. Bandwidth is the money system of the game, working like Mana or Energy that can be spent in order to use certain abilities or play more powerful cards.

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For all you people that are starting their webcomics, or thinking of redesigning your webcomics layout, please give this a listen. There are many, many, valid points to be had here. SEO is very important in bringing your webcomic to the top of the search engines pages.

As you all know, I hold the design of your front page pretty heavily (as you should) in my reviews. This is the one thing that makes someone stay or leave in one split second. As much as you want it to believe it is your current webcomic on the front page that draws them in… its not. You could have the golden nugget of the internet, but people won’t see it through the turd it is sitting in. I cannot stress this enough.

Is there any tips you guys have come across that you would like to add to these fine ass general rules presented here? Any design tips specifically for the webcomic world?

Effective June 17th, Webcomics.com closed its doors. The proprieter, T Campbell. states several reason why they will be putting Webcomics.com into hibernation.

# Although I enjoyed doing it, it was very time-consuming at the expense of other things that I enjoyed as much or more (like scriptwriting).
# With respect and thanks to the efforts of Alexander Danner and Brooke “Otter” Spangler, we never got the army of talented, prolific contributors I was hoping for. Mostly my bad: I was going on the “if you build it, they will come” strategy instead of recruiting.
# One other cause of the above is that webcomics, as a separate entity from print comics, don’t inspire the passion that they did, five or even three years ago. They’ve become part of the scenery. There’s less to be said about them now, and less force with which to say it.
# My interests are changing. I read fewer webcomics now. I’m more preoccupied with imagining and making things happen than observing and recording.
# Even when it was at its creative and productive peak, it didn’t find much of an audience. The Webcomics.com domain name gets a certain amount of traffic automatically, but we never pushed very far past that. No offense to regular readers, but… there just aren’t enough of you, as compared to other things we do that you seem to like more.

I wish the best of luck to them in their endeavors. I can see how trying to keep up with a website and drawing comics can be very hard to do, as I am only doing the Choicecomics.net right now and it has consumed my time 100%. I almost quit once. I’m not about to do it again!

This does bring a valid point that I have been seeing across the net recently. Is the webcomic world saturated? Have the resources been consolidated? Is there anything new to do? What is missing?

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