I didn't expect Wonder Woman to be canonized as lesbian and Superman as asexual in a movie where Superman is a communist trying to take over the world but I'll take representation wherever it comes
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Note to Self - Word Balloons: A Study
(No spoilers, don't worry)
14 total comics to compare against, across genres with half as traditionally printed comics and half from webcomics. While not an exhaustive list, should be enough to start to give some idea about preferences.
Text Type: Either fully capitalized (EXAMPLE) or with mixed case (Example)
All Caps versus Mixed Case
Mixed Case vs. ALL CAPS for all comics
Mixed Case vs. ALL CAPS for Traditional Printed Comics AND for all webcomics (same results)
A slight preference for the traditional method of writing out word balloons with text in all caps
Spacing Between Text and Outer Balloons
Min Spacing versus Regular Spacing versus Max Spacing
Spacing between text and outer balloon for all comics
Traditional comics are basically evenly split between a normal spacing (about the width of a letter) and min spacing (which leaves essentially no room between the text and the balloon)
Traditional comics slightly tend toward a minimizing the spacing between the text and the balloon
Spacing between text and outer balloons for webcomics
Webcomics are split between between a normal spacing (about the width of a letter) and extra spacing (which can sometimes double or triple the distance between the text and the balloon). Webcomics slightly tend towards adding additional space between the text and the word balloon
Word Balloons Within or Outside the Panels
Within Panel versus Outside Panel
Whether word balloon (typically) lie entirely within or can exist outside the strict space of the panel
This is perhaps the most obvious difference between webcomics and traditional comics. All traditional comics in this set only have word balloons that lie within the panel, while all the webcomics typically have there word balloons lie outside their panels
Conclusion
As reductive as it sounds, the overall conclusion is that any combination of word balloon choices are well represented in both traditional and webcomics. The only noticeable difference is that webcomics tend to take greater advantage of the negative space between panels by moving their word ballons out of the panel borders
Resources (and Comic Recommendations)
Format: Print (Traditional)
Fables by by Bill Willingham, Lan Medina, Steve Leialoha, Craig Hamilton, Sherilyn van Valkenburgh
Nimona by ND Stevenson
Bone by Jeff Smith
Ghostopolis by Doug TenNapel
Saga by Brian K. Vaughan, Fiona Staples
Tintin by Hergé
Superman: Red Son by Mark Millar, Dave Johnson
Format: Online (Webcomic via Webtoon)
Marionetta by Míriam Bonastre Tur
Suitor Armor by Purpah
Castle Swimmer by Wendy Lian Martin
Cursed Princess Club by LambCat
Lore Olympus by Rachel Smythe
Space Boy by Stephen McCranie
The Dragon Tutor by Mar_Mai
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“what if Superman was adopted by the Soviets” “what if Superman was adopted by the Nazis” well what if he was adopted into an alien conspiracy doomsday cult. what about that. Why’s it always fascism with you people why can’t you let him be evil in a silly way
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How batman acts with his variants
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This is so unfinished it was supposed to be like a comparison batman v superman on how they treat their alternative selfves with batman being mostly chill with his and superman always beating the fuck out of his whenever he meets a alternative of himself but I lost motivation to finish this, thought I would post it anyways tho
The image inspo:
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Unpopular Opinion: Fuck Homelander, Omni-Man and Brightburn, give us more stories like Superman: Red Son where the ultra powerful hero is oppressive and controlling, but because they genuinely think it's the best way to keep humanity safe. That's way more interesting than "lol what if Superman was EEE-VIL???" which was a tired trope years ago.
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