Whoa, that button-pushing-hand close-up. So stickfigure people DO have them all along. Or is this like the stunt hands in Star Trek activating the transporter, onnaccounta Doohan’s missing finger
anyway I love when a beam fires out an actual little pew pew segment. I suppose that must be possible with real lasers, but it would be impossible to actually see that in action because you’d require some kind of faster-than-light shutter speed on a camera. And that’s how you get Alabama.
anyway that last panel was funny. That was some good regular-ass punchline structuring.
The less detail I use, the better it looks, because of the whole “no talent” thing. So if you get to see a fancy-schmancy hand, you don’t get to see the myriad other buttons, dials, switches, etc. on that seaboratory console.
Whoa, that button-pushing-hand close-up. So stickfigure people DO have them all along. Or is this like the stunt hands in Star Trek activating the transporter, onnaccounta Doohan’s missing finger
anyway I love when a beam fires out an actual little pew pew segment. I suppose that must be possible with real lasers, but it would be impossible to actually see that in action because you’d require some kind of faster-than-light shutter speed on a camera. And that’s how you get Alabama.
anyway that last panel was funny. That was some good regular-ass punchline structuring.
The less detail I use, the better it looks, because of the whole “no talent” thing. So if you get to see a fancy-schmancy hand, you don’t get to see the myriad other buttons, dials, switches, etc. on that seaboratory console.
I parodied myself about that in the last panel of this one: http://mountaincomics.com/comic/mt887/
Don’tcha just love how lasers in sci-fi shows actually move slower than bullets? Alabama, indeed.
Maybe the speed of light in this specific bit of the ocean is really really ridiculously slow.