Friday, July 3, 2026
Thursday, July 2, 2026
The League of Adventurers
On yet another cold, rainy afternoon in the month of Storing, Hyren sat in his comfortable library in his Altador villa, smugly ignoring the inclement weather as a fire roared in the hearth and his family and allies relaxed around him.
The blue Grundo’s faerie Draik brother Pharazon and Pharazon’s friend Celice were perched on one of the sofas, reading through a stack of books they’d bought earlier that day, and occasionally making comments to one another about whatever they were studying at the moment. Their sister Blynn was—well, Hyren wasn’t quite sure, but the disco Zafara was probably off doing Blynn things like trying to set a new puddle-jumping record or baking quintuple-chocolate cookies.
Hyren, meanwhile, was locked in a rather intense
round of Armada with his owner and the Werelupe King. Hyren enjoyed Armada—it
reminded him of his days in Dr. Sloth’s Virtupets military. Virtupets
programmers had developed a similar game, and Hyren had purchased it for his
electronic devices in order to relax during rare down times in his operations.
It utilised the Virtupets information networks to pit players against each
other, and Hyren took pride in his elevated place in the rankings. He’d taken
naturally to the game because the strategy involved was similar to what he
employed as a commander of troops.
If you're just playing the game, this is cute. But this exchange takes on a whole new level of meaning in the context of this comic.
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Bleeearrrgghhh social media is the worst. Again.
I’ve previously written about all the reasons I hate social media, and really only use it a) to stay connected with friends and b) try to get my work out there because I draw and write things so other people can enjoy them, not so they can stay hidden away in my hard drive.
A really horrible and stupid experience I had with Instagram a few weeks ago, though, just solidified why social media is more stress than it’s worth 99% of the time.
Before I want to get into that, though, I want to take a minute to explore and explain why social media is so stressful for me. I’m not just complaining to be a complainer. I’m complaining because I’m an introvert and the fast-paced, superficial, quantity-over-quality world of social media is just about the complete opposite of how introverts like to socialize.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
I honestly felt really bad for traumatizing that poor Chikorita, so I decided to draw a happier moment for it. It's okay, I promise! (And don't worry, Oak gets his due at the end of this chapter.)
Monday, June 29, 2026
You've Mastered the Basics--Now What? Part 3
Hello and welcome back, dear writer! You may remember that last week, I covered a lot of ground discussing plots and how to handle them. In this final installment, I have a few more things to say on the subject of story construction, and then some other miscellaneous tips for the intermediate-level story writer.
Made-up names
Neopia is a fantasy world, and that’s awesome for making things up. Characters need not have names that correspond to anything found on Earth today—names such as Blarthrox and Kakoni Worrill. And when you’re making up Neopian characters, there’s really no reason why you can’t give them unusual and fun names as well.
However, don’t get carried away and create
something unpronounceable or convoluted. Those kinds of names are hard to
remember, and if your cast is full of Ybbythriunias and T’lal’ov’kiiys, they’ll
be very difficult for a reader to keep straight. It’s a good idea to make a
name’s spelling as simple and intuitive as you can manage (for example,
“Hildra” instead of “Hylldrah”), and try not to throw in exotic items such as
dashes and apostrophes unless they’re a legitimate part of that Neopian’s
culture.






