Gone with the blast wave
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Sniper seems to be the more trained and organised of the two protagonists and often will point out how illogical any suggested plans are, but nonetheless ends up going along with them. While more sane and practical than his counterpart , he still like most of the soldiers in the city has a pessimistic, sarcastic attitude, and will sometimes do reckless things out of boredom. Still, for the most part, he is fairly cautious and is definitely intelligent. He even shows some concern for the lives of other Reds, getting angry at Pyro when it looked like he was being careless with lives of his squad Issue 36 and Issue While he seems more empathetic than Pyro he kills for the "challenge" and openly laughs at a crushed Blue soldier in Issue
Gone with the blast wave
It follows a group of soldiers fighting for reasons they're more than a little hazy about in a ruined city of a post-apocalyptic world. It "is not a very serious comic", having a lot of Black Comedy - the author advises you to "think of it as some kind of a parody" of more serious post-apocalyptic settings. Compare Romantically Apocalyptic. It doesn't update very often at all, but not so much because of Schedule Slip as because the author has decided not to try for a schedule - it's a side-project, and the update arrangements are unashamedly on a "whenever-I-feel-like-it" basis. Was on a hiatus for almost a year, returned with the author promising an update once a month, twice a month if the readers bribe him, then slipped back into hiatus with few sporadic strips since. After the End : The whole setting. Subverted in the April Fool's Day comic, in which it's restricted to only the city which was nuked in Ambiguous Situation : There's a war going on. There are sides fighting each other. We dunno; they just are. The April's Fool had the City be revealed as a "historical preserve" showing the dangers of nuclear warfare, with the world outside being an idyllic Utopia. Armed Farces : A good number of the characters we run across clearly don't have any idea how to do their jobs properly. Played to the extremes with The Green Army as their ranks seem to have consisted entirely of these people.
Their own language is depicted as illegible scribbles. Despite the synopsis this book is a dark comedy by one of the creators that work on romantically apocalyptic.
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Why do we fight? Bored: Sniper gets bored and kills a Blue trooper by shooting his respirator and a nearby gas canister. Pyro beats Snipers 1 min 27 secs by 2 seconds, winning his next lunch. Plane Goes Boom: Sniper shoots a Blue pilot though the head bringing the plane down on a squad below. Laugh at dead people: Sniper promises not to lecture Pyro on morals after laughing at a dead Blue. One of them shoots himself as a "way out". Flawed: The Yellows interrogate Sniper about how to escape the city.
Gone with the blast wave
It follows a group of soldiers fighting for reasons they're more than a little hazy about in a ruined city of a post-apocalyptic world. It "is not a very serious comic", having a lot of Black Comedy - the author advises you to "think of it as some kind of a parody" of more serious post-apocalyptic settings. Compare Romantically Apocalyptic. It doesn't update very often at all, but not so much because of Schedule Slip as because the author has decided not to try for a schedule - it's a side-project, and the update arrangements are unashamedly on a "whenever-I-feel-like-it" basis. Was on a hiatus for almost a year, returned with the author promising an update once a month, twice a month if the readers bribe him, then slipped back into hiatus with few sporadic strips since. After the End : The whole setting. Subverted in the April Fool's Day comic, in which it's restricted to only the city which was nuked in Ambiguous Situation : There's a war going on. There are sides fighting each other. We dunno; they just are.
Archie sonic
Want to read. Worthless Yellow Rocks : Justified: someone went underground to mine for gold. Highly Conspicuous Markings : Due to everyone wearing identical Gasmask Longcoat combinations, the three sides are differentiated by bright primary-color markings. Page 50 filler shows "25 essential expressions" of these guys Big "WHAT?! Kill Steal : "Would you tell anyone if I shot him? Failed a Spot Check : The two soldiers who don't notice the tank about to land on top of them. Improbable Aiming Skills : Crosshairs is really , really good at his job. Cancel Save. Flat "What" : General reaction to Crosshair guy being a wolf. Something of a Running Gag : "How the hell did we get lost in a city?! Last panel: "I ran out of ideas so I let my friend write a page. Subverted: They have a moment talking about rifles and maintenance before another Red guns him down.
Sniper seems to be the more trained and organised of the two protagonists and often will point out how illogical any suggested plans are, but nonetheless ends up going along with them.
Another one when the squad discovers a the corpse of a Red which is set up as an Obvious Trap. Badass Normal : The two main protagonists, who, despite being lowly grunts, manage to keep up with and even outperform a Red army Special Forces guy they encounter in their journey. Subverted: They have a moment talking about rifles and maintenance before another Red guns him down. Community Reviews. Cloudcuckoolander : Pyro deserves a special mention for qualifying even by the standards of this setting. Explore Wikis Community Central. Crosshairs has his moments of madness but mainly acts as the straight man for Pyro. Popular pages. Ares Squires. As the series goes on, though, small differences emerge - The Yellows don't speak English and are shown to be far more numerous and supplied with tanks, while a brief conversation with a Blue soldier reveals that Blue rifles are sturdier and better-designed than Red rifles. Flamethrower Backfire : Crosshair at one point suggests destroying a group of Yellows by having Pyro run into the middle of them and then shooting his fuel tank. Sniperguy bumming one off him signals his Despair Event Horizon at the very end. It doesn't update very often at all, but not so much because of Schedule Slip as because the author has decided not to try for a schedule - it's a side-project, and the update arrangements are unashamedly on a "whenever-I-feel-like-it" basis.
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