Hello, Aanker here. I've decided to start a community-driven comic, where I - and maybe others, depending on if any talented drawers would be interested - will be drawing up comic images that you have planned, which all, in the end, will be part of a finished fantasy comic.
Here's your first set of three images to build the plot on.
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
Note the Film Noir style (yes, this is going to be black/white, owing to apparent time limits etc.)
RULES
- This is a community project that requires cooperation, not only between me and the participants, but also between the participants themselves. Keep that in mind when you design your strip/set of images: build on what others have done (that means not introducing a new character every time it is your turn), stay within the limits of the story established in the introducing 'pages' and don't put your successors in akward situations. Simply put: be nice.
- Only when it is your turn may you submit a plot plan, spanning three or four images (although I can accept variations; a battle scene may require one, large image etc.).
- No breaking of TWC rules.
- Try to avoid political, religious or cultural allegories. I wouldn't enjoy drawing a scene that, between the lines, says 'Swedes are awful'.
CURRENT ORDER OF TURNS
(I would like to give participants at least three days of preparations before their plan must be submitted, but I will not enforce this at all times, depending on my own available time etc.)
-Cedric37III
- .Mitch. IV
-KatsumotoIII
- Leonidas the Lion IV
- abbews I
- Subuatai de Bodemloze I
- Alone Elf III
- Killerbee II
- pvtgunny III
- Helvetica II
- naq II
- The Third-
- Makrell
GUIDELINES
Submit your suggestion with the following structure (or something that resembles this structure):
-General Description
--Background (intentions, recommendations on what should follow etc.)
--New Characters, if necessary, include their abbreviations
-Script
--Image 1
---Description of the scene
---Dialogue and event lines
--Image 2
...
Note: due to the 'Prince Valiant' approach of telling the story largely without speech bubbles and such, the above plan could be simplified to feature only a descriptive text of the ongoing events and perhaps, if needed, a plan on the shape of the image itself.