I see that XKCD has gotten several mentions, and at least one other person mentioned Sinfest. However, I am stunned by the profound lack of links to Achewood (http://www.achewood.com).
Also, I'm very much into a relatively new Webcomic called Octopus Pie (www.octopuspie.com). Very clever and beautifully drawn.
I recently put Too Much Coffee Man (http://www.tmcm.com/) back into my rotation, though in the year or two since I last followed it, the focus has shifted to a new, unfamiliar character, and TMCM himself is nowhere to be found.
It's not specifically a Web comic, since it appears in many GLBT-realted print publications, but Dykes to Watch Out For (www.dykestowatchoutfor.com) is as insightful and endearing as ever, and one of the best-drawn graphic narratives in any medium. Also, there's a lively community centered around Alison Bechdel's frequent blog posts.
He doesn't post very often any more, what with his weekly columns for Wired taking up most of his time, but Lore Sjoberg's Lore Brand Comics (http://www.lorebrandcomics.com/) is insanely great when he gets around to it.
I should also mention that I'm developing a Web comic myself. Since it's the first thing even remotely like this that I've ever done, and I can't, well, you know, draw, I probably shouldn't over-hype it. All I'll say now is that it's called Cream of Aluminum Soup and its motto is: better poetry through empiricism. A computer is involved, possibly one or more humans, and, god willin' and the crick don't rise, some sort of sloth.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-03 06:00 pm (UTC)Achewood (http://www.achewood.com).
Also, I'm very much into a relatively new Webcomic called Octopus Pie (www.octopuspie.com). Very clever and beautifully drawn.
I recently put Too Much Coffee Man (http://www.tmcm.com/) back into my rotation, though in the year or two since I last followed it, the focus has shifted to a new, unfamiliar character, and TMCM himself is nowhere to be found.
It's not specifically a Web comic, since it appears in many GLBT-realted print publications, but Dykes to Watch Out For (www.dykestowatchoutfor.com) is as insightful and endearing as ever, and one of the best-drawn graphic narratives in any medium. Also, there's a lively community centered around Alison Bechdel's frequent blog posts.
He doesn't post very often any more, what with his weekly columns for Wired taking up most of his time, but Lore Sjoberg's Lore Brand Comics (http://www.lorebrandcomics.com/) is insanely great when he gets around to it.
I should also mention that I'm developing a Web comic myself. Since it's the first thing even remotely like this that I've ever done, and I can't, well, you know, draw, I probably shouldn't over-hype it. All I'll say now is that it's called Cream of Aluminum Soup and its motto is: better poetry through empiricism. A computer is involved, possibly one or more humans, and, god willin' and the crick don't rise, some sort of sloth.
That is all.