Sophie Labelle's Assigned Male - Original Thread - The Incredible Adventures of Stephie (Who Won't Shut Up About Being Trans)

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One of the things that bugs me the most is how terrible the art is. The main character looks like she either has a receding hairline or a Jimmy Neutron-esque forehead, people's wrists break frequently, everyone's ears look like beans attached to their skulls, everything's weirdly blobby, and there's a horrible case of sameface syndrome going on.
I actually am okay with the art style. It comes across as childish which I guess is appropriate. Me thinks the authors has a mild case of the 'tism so the whole same face shit is probably because she has no idea how a human face works. It's more of the message that pisses me off
 
One of the things that bugs me the most is how terrible the art is. The main character looks like she either has a receding hairline or a Jimmy Neutron-esque forehead, people's wrists break frequently, everyone's ears look like beans attached to their skulls, everything's weirdly blobby, and there's a horrible case of sameface syndrome going on.
I actually am okay with the art style. It comes across as childish which I guess is appropriate. Me thinks the authors has a mild case of the 'tism so the whole same face shit is probably because she has no idea how a human face works. It's more of the message that pisses me off
I think the issue is that they're not a good artist -it happens- but they imagine a comic would be more accessible than a blog.
 
I actually am okay with the art style. It comes across as childish which I guess is appropriate. Me thinks the authors has a mild case of the 'tism so the whole same face shit is probably because she has no idea how a human face works. It's more of the message that pisses me off
I take the same view. If I saw this art style in a regular agenda-free children's book, I probably wouldn't find it objectionable. If the artist took more care to avoid mistakes, it would be fine. Although the same-face thing is a problem in comics, which are a primarily visual form of storytelling.

Having read a lot of shitty webcomics, mostly I'm glad the artist actually has a style of her own rather than just going for shitty pseudo-manga or furry characters.
 
I take the same view. If I saw this art style in a regular agenda-free children's book, I probably wouldn't find it objectionable. If the artist took more care to avoid mistakes, it would be fine. Although the same-face thing is a problem in comics, which are a primarily visual form of storytelling.

Having read a lot of shitty webcomics, mostly I'm glad the artist actually has a style of her own rather than just going for shitty pseudo-manga or furry characters.

THAT is just about the most nice thing you or anyone else (including myself) could ever say about this comic - this had potential to be used on a newspaper strip, instead - as in, not in this particular comic. No one should be begging to read this is no newspaper or whatnot.
 
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Something tells me, he does know what he'd say to a cis kid normal child.. Also, someone needs to tell Mom that dying her hair that much isn't good for it.. explains why it's always so short....

The parents then return home to the babysitter forcing the kid into a dress and smearing lipstick on him against his will to "teach" him that gender is only a social construct.
 
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Something tells me, he does know what he'd say to a cis kid normal child.. Also, someone needs to tell Mom that dying her hair that much isn't good for it.. explains why it's always so short....

That's been the same character all this time? I couldn't tell, seeing as the only defining part of anyone's appearance is their hair.
 
Is this real?
Is the author implying trans kids only talk about SJWs/tumblrisms?

At least that's what the author wants kids to only talk about.

Do people normally ask 11 year olds to babysit? I thought that was like a 14 years and up kinda thing.

The author forgets the character's age a lot, I can't tell if the kid is supposed to be 9 or a 20-something college SJW hipster. That or it's part of vision of a utopia where kids will be trusted to supervise the kids of strangers.
 
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