Atomic wrote:
So, OK, OK, things are a bit "standard" for webcomicdom at the moment. I've no doubt we're in for a ride. All of this is world establishment, and it happens to take a Teen Drama format. Tune in this time next year, and we'll see where we're going, and appreciate where we've been!
Well said!
Although I wasn't a reader back when the Golem Girls were introduced, I've heard that some fans of the strip back then were quite unhappy with their appearance, feeling that they changed the whole focus of the story, that they were silly character, and that Wapsi Square had "jumped the shark" and was headed downhill.
I think we know, now, how much depth and power was added to the tale through Bud, Brandi, Jin, and the whole structure of the Lanthis back-story. It took plenty of time to develop... some of the little Chekhov's Guns didn't fire for years (and some are probably still hanging fire somewhere over Stage Left). It wasn't so much that the story changed, but rather that the existing story and characters were seen to be part of a bigger story, being played out on a much larger stage.
Paul made it explicit, on both sides of the Fourth Wall, that the focus of the strip was moving away from Monica. Phix told Monica as much, in a conversation in the Library. And, as you say, Paul is taking the opportunity to do a bunch of world establishment and elaboration now. A lot of what we've seen (through the eyes of Atsali and her crew) is about the "sociology of the mythic" - the nature of, and relationship between, the various paranormal races who populate our mythology and shape our relationship with the cosmos.
I have a feeling that we'll realize, in time, that Paul has once again managed to scatter around a whole pillaged armory's worth of Chekhov's Guns. Poseidon's niece?!?
The Lilith? The Good People? And, of course, there are plenty of existing story elements which are still simmering, just outside of field of view... Tina and the changes she's going through, for example.
He's enlarging the stage again... and there's a lot of "show, don't tell" in his approach.
This won't be to everyone's taste, quite obviously. That's OK.
But, I strongly suspect that patience will be rewarded.