| Comments | | | Rayqui | ... and the damn fourth wall is already broken. Crap.
Naturally, I'm the main char. The other guy, known as "Ben", is my best IRL friend. I know him for, like, 7 years. I don't know yet if he wanted to be in a comic... LOL
Hope you'll like it. Updates randomly. -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 |
| | User: LameHero | | 5 | | Faved. -Posted on Jun 04, 2009 | | User: Colak | | | | Pft, most of the funniest comics practically piss on the fourth wall. Who needs it? -Posted on Dec 24, 2008 | | User: Kaolyne | | 5 | | Whoopsie! -Posted on Dec 22, 2008 | | User: Chiyoi | | | | Faved -Posted on Nov 11, 2008 | | User: Rayqui | | | | Indeed. -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 | | User: psychic master | | 5 | | That fourth wall is getting expensive to fix nowadays. -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 | | User: Chiyoi | | | ...
Right.
...
I knew that. I... I wanted to test you... -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 | | User: Rayqui | | | "The fourth wall is the imaginary wall at the front of the stage in a proscenium theater, through which the audience sees the action in the world of the play."
""Breaking the fourth wall" refers to a situation in which a character reveals his or her awareness of the audience [...]. Most often, the fourth wall is broken by having a character directly address the audience (one example is the Stage Manager in Thornton Wilder's Our Town). A similar effect can be achieved by having characters interact with objects outside the context of the work (e.g., a character is handed a prop by a stage hand) [...]. Breaking the fourth wall is often employed for comic effect, as a sort of visual non-sequitur; the unexpected departure from normal narrative conventions is often surprising and creates humor."
Wikipedia is your friend. =) -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 | | User: Chiyoi | | | | BTW, how do you make that sprite? -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 | | User: Chiyoi | | 5 | Again, my stupid brain leaves me.
What is the fourth wall?
+fav -Posted on Nov 10, 2008 |
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