I wrote this part, so just to clear this one up, Del says "have you guys looked at the SCANNERS yet?". Did you notice the word 'SCANNERS' there.
Beech,
I did notice it. It's right there on panel 1 of page 3.
The "or even looked out of the window recently" is supposed to be the sarcastic follow up line, to Skip (the brashly self-confident pilot) because he had not been monitoring the previously mentioned SCANNERS as he should have been!
That's an excuse, not a reason. And I'd suspect it's an excuse made up after the fact too.
Skip the Pilot didn't bother to look at the scanners because he was too busy? That's plausible, barely plausible but plausible nonetheless. What excuse does the Del the Gunner have then? He's obviously been watching the scanners because, you know, they are kind of important when he needs to aim his weapons and because you, the writer, said he's been watching them.
So, this is the story you want us to believe: Del's been sitting in his turret during the multi-hour run to the jump limit. He's been watching the scanners like any good gunner because you said he has. He has been watching the fighters and SDBs on those scanners get closer and closer until they're in visual range. He's also been watching them close for all that time without telling anyone. He doesn't hear anyone else mention the fighters and SDB for all that time, but he doesn't speak up about their presence until Skip brags about getting away.
Does that story sound plausible to you? Do you expect us to find it plausible?
How about the real story instead? You wanted a dramatic series of pages that would instantly set the story and grip the reader's imagination. Therefore, you chose to write and illustrate the following scenes in the following manner:
- The BurrowWolf dramatically makes orbit and begins preparations for jump - regardless of the existence of jump limits.
- The BurrowWolf crew is dramatically and humorously surprised by the fighters and the SDBs - regardless of the existence of scanners.
- The BorrowWulf dramatically "jinks" around the SDB and jumps - regardless of vector movement.
You chose to do all that. That's the only reason it was done. You chose to do it.
I even used the word 'window' instead of viewport to make it sound more of a humorous remark, it obviously did not work though.
That's the only thing that didn't work.
Same with the planet if you show it 100D away - far too small.
So you've ignored a vitally important part of the setting in order to make your job as an artist easier? Ships in
Traveller normally jump after clearing the 100D limit, desperate ships jump after clearing the 10D limit, and suicidal ships jump at any time. You could have shown the planet and you could have also indicated some passage of time before the BurrowWolf jinks around the SDB like some atmospheric fighter and jumps away if you chose to do so.
Think minor setting details are either unimportant or can be ignored for "artistic" reasons? Let me tell you a story...
I've seen a
Star Trek comic book issued during the original show's first season. The ship looks the same, the characters look the same, the uniforms look the same, everything and everyone have the same names. It was 99.99%
Star Trek except for one thing: the illustrator chose to have
flaming rocket exhaust plumes coming out of the end of each nacelle and the shuttle bay doors.
The
Enterprise is a spaceship, spaceships use rockets, and the illustrator needed to show the
Enterprise moving so he ignored a minor setting detail and added flaming rocket exhaust. Of course, the failure to adhere to that minor setting detail means that no
Star Trek fans will ever think of that comic book as
Star Trek despite the title or the illustrator's intentions.
I liked your webcomic. As I wrote earlier, some of the technical aspects of it reminded me of the Eisner Award winning
Criminal series. I fully expect the comic to get better too. I also think there isn't enough
Traveller in your webcomic to say it's
Traveller-based.
The comic is good, it just isn't
Traveller.
Regards,
Bill
P.S. RockViper is right. The engineer is seriously creepy. Finding out more about him and his species as the comic progresses will be fun.