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"The D&Dability of Daredevil"

11 Comments -

1 – 11 of 11
Blogger Adam Dickstein said...

"One of the great questions that faces many RPG bloggers is: When do I get to talk about comic books?"

My answer, "Anytime I damn well please!" Which turns out to be fairly often.

Nice article. I'm never been a big Daredevil fan, but I enjoyed the Miller stuff, much of the Nocenti run, and the Netflix series.

April 20, 2015 at 4:55 PM

Blogger valiance. said...

Love the comics posts Zak. You have good taste in comics: I bought Ironwolf and a bunch of other stuff on your recommendation and they were awesome.

Q: Why no mention of the Brubaker/Lark run?

April 21, 2015 at 2:22 PM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

didn't catch it

and thanks!

April 21, 2015 at 2:23 PM

Blogger piles said...

Living in the Netherlands, I hardly encountered American-style comics in my youth. Now, when reading through the many (d&d) blogs, I seem to have missed quite a bit and posts like this are especially helpful in guiding me where to start. Thank you for that.

April 21, 2015 at 3:21 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I second what valiance said. Some of my favorite comics are things I discovered because of your blogging: Born Again, Cosmic Odyssey, Ironwolf, Walt Simonson Thor.

Here's a thing: why are genre fantasy comics generally lamer - certainly less D&Dable - than superhero comics? I can think of a couple of possible reasons, which pull in different directions. First, genre fantasy comics may deliberately skew conservative to stay within genre expectations. Second, the outer limits of weirdness for superhero comics may be much further afield, because there are more of them, or they've been around for longer, or superhero comics are just weirder, period. What else?

April 23, 2015 at 8:58 PM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

superhero comics are better because there are more of them

and there are more of them because both the technology and the format favor the way color is used in superhero comics over how it;s used in more historically based genres.

westerns, cops and medieval stuff all look too brown and grey unless the colorist is unusually talented

April 23, 2015 at 10:48 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Interesting. I remember you writing in some other post about how it was hard to do medieval fantasy in comics without everything being brown, but I'd never thought of color as the reason why superheroes are so dominant in comics. I suppose that also explains why pulps were more diverse, genre-wise - all they really needed art-wise was one gripping cover image, and it was probably easier to sneak color into crime, western, etc. stories for just one image than for the entire book.

Anyway, I'm always happy when you blog about comics because I know I'm about to discover new cool things. So please indulge that impulse as often as you like.

P.S. Red and Pleasant Land is just beyond. Even when I'm not running it directly, I can feel the ideas in it bending my game Voivodja-wards, like the invisible gravity well around a black hole. Thanks, sincerely, for making it.

April 23, 2015 at 11:30 PM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

thanks!

April 24, 2015 at 1:20 AM

Blogger nolan said...

No love for Kevin Smith and Joe Q's Guardian Devil arc?

April 25, 2015 at 11:59 PM

Blogger Doc Savage said...

So Frank Miller's constant thesaurus-referencing overwriting is superior? Comics are, ironically, a visual medium. The fewer dialogue balloons and thought bubbles and narration boxes the better.

June 21, 2015 at 8:36 AM

Blogger Zak Sabbath said...

If you would argue for your taste, do it--don't make dismissive statements backed up by vague pedantry.

Comics are a medium that appears on a page, and anything you can do with a page might make the reading experience better or worse.

And if you need a thesaurus to think up "maggot" or "chimes" then I feel sorry for you already.

June 21, 2015 at 12:07 PM

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