Good to know on the Time Travel bit. I'm really looking forward to it. And now I finally know what you mean about gaining subs and losing subs. I just had my first experience of losing a sub today when I posted my comic's second page. I did gain a few more subs today, but I noticed my number dropped from 11 to 10, and I was taken aback about how my comic could have left a good enough impression for someone to subscribe to on the first page, but then the second page left such a drastic impression to unsubscribe from me immediately (especially when there wasn't really any dramatic change in tone or pacing between the two pages). I'm not mad at all, but I'm just left very confused about the difference between a mere two pages in my comic (and yes, I have updated on schedule, with the first page last Monday and the second page today, the Monday after).
Part of me thinks that the reader may have been under the impression that I'm spoiling the story by giving out seemingly critical information on that page that seems to resolve some of the story issues as opposed to the description of my comic. I guess there's no easy way to tell my audience that I'm not being so cut and dry with my story, and these 'revelations' aren't exactly what they seem to be. I guess that could be my only fault, but since this prologue is a future scene to show how high the stakes are to draw people in, some information is going to be given, since I'll have to branch off of that scene and tell the rest of it when I get to the end of my comic. I couldn't really see another way to present my information, but I'm hoping that readers who stick with it will by the end that not everything is going to be as black and white as it appears. I'm really trying to get people to be interested in knowing how the journey got to this point, rather than merely being interested in the destination (even though, like I said, the destination isn't as obvious as what I've shown, since there is still more to come in the future scene of my prologue).