Sophie Labelle Verville / Guillaume Labelle / Serious Trans Vibes Comics / Assigned Male / Candycore Comics / Pastel Sexy Times / WafflesArt - Obnoxious webcomics and horrific porn by a crazy fat pedo troon

"Me, me, me, me, me, me, me, I will not even have the decency to refer to you as a living person, me, me, I'm so clever."

I bet Labelle wonders why he doesn't have a lot of friends in real life, especially if this is what he really considers to be deep sentimental conversation.

This does feel like a pretty good glimpse into how Labelle views social interactions. This isn't exactly an original arc by any stretch of the imagine, but it's at least an actual story so whatever, but it is weirdly one sided. Not just in the "but what about me" dialogue, but with the apparent ease that not-Ciel drops the news. Usually, this style of arc is a mix of the character who has to move struggling with the decision versus the effect it has on everyone else. Not-ciel hasn't said he'll miss Ciel or how hard things will be on his end or even expressed frustration at being forced to move by his family, like most kids tend to do in this situation. It reads to me like someone who wants to break up but refuses to outright say it so they just put on the barest front of caring, but in their mind the relationship is over the moment their bags are packed. Even the "hey, you still have your best friend here" line supports that. It just feels like Labelle can't ever write dialogue/plots that aren't entirely one sided because of his selfish world view.
 
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'meat vehicle'?

Good Lord Billy, way to prove that you're socially maladjusted.

I thought of this:

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This does feel like a pretty good glimpse into how Labelle views social interactions. This isn't exactly an original arc by any stretch of the imagine, but it's at least an actual story so whatever, but it is weirdly one sided. Not just in the "but what about me" dialogue, but with the apparent ease that not-Ciel drops the news. Usually, this style of arc is a mix of the character who has to move struggling with the decision versus the effect it has on everyone else. Not-ciel hasn't said he'll miss Ciel or how hard things will be on his end or even expressed frustration at being forced to move by his family, like most kids tend to do in this situation. It reads to me like someone who wants to break up but refuses to outright say it so they just put on the barest front of caring, but in their mind the relationship is over the moment their bags are packed. Even the "hey, you still have your best friend here" line supports that. It just feels like Labelle can't ever write dialogue/plots that aren't entirely one sided because of his selfish world view.
Really makes me wonder how much of this is Labelle being a terrible writer and how much is from his own life. I would not be surprised if Labelle had a few "boyfriends" who just came up to him one day and said "Uuuh, my family's moving...to...Europe or something. You have other friends to keep you company, right?"
 
Interesting changes. Stephie’s picture changes from a happy kid dressed as a cowboy to an uncomfortable boy in school uniform. Martin’s expression changes from sorrow to blank imbecility. An emotional comic dealing with Martin’s complex and conflicting feelings about his child becomes yet another pointless one-sided piece of troon propaganda.

The original was, IMO, one of the better AM comics. It showed Martin as a fully formed parent who genuinely loved his child rather than as an idiot antagonist, and Stephie as not an irredeemable cunt.
 
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