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Jun 2020

My alien characters have unconventional "hair", that grow and shape the head roughly like human hairs would, but that have shape and size closer to a blade of grrass. I take care to draw the individual spikes in most shots, and render them differently from human characters hair. Flatting this area of the image is usually a pain in the ass because of the many sharp angled lineart corners it generates.

Cue the comment of a person thinking that my alien characters had regular human hair, and the spikeness was a case of bad art "anime hair" syndrome.

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    Jun '20
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    Jun '21
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That really sucks, especially when you're going through such an effort to portray your vision.


(I censor with pastel rainbow gradients rather than blackouts or whiteouts)
Maybe I'm being petty but I'm even more resistant to changing something if you're gonna have an attitude about it. :sip:

A friend once commented that I had ONE spelling mistake somewhere in my story, without mentioning anything else about it.
I had spend days writing/editing/Proofreading and fine-tuning it, but to then have the single spelling mistake that managed to survive being the only thing catching any attention was pretty annoying... xD

In my main series "The Action Fruit Society", I've gotten comments in the past of people saying things along the lines of "They're so cute." or "Are they going to fight the Veggietales?" Really annoying stuff because clearly some people can't seem to recognize that those characters are supposed to be unconventional yet mature in audience.

So far the worst comments in my series are from "Friens" bots.

Other than that I have received comment for my earlier versions that my main character (14 years old boy) is too weak for not acting like normal anime protagonist and he should not cry because he is a boy.

Usually in fiction, you have to suspend your disbelief to some extent, because the story relies on something that obviously wouldn't happen in real life. So when I get comments that point these things out, it can be pretty annoying.

"This isn't how real ninjas work," yeah no kidding, guess you're gonna have to deal with it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Oh man. this is so useless a comment sine we just don't have ANY realistic depiction of ninjas in any type of media, period. None of the ninjas work like what people think a ninja is.

Well... It was in her boudoir and a gentleman doesn't tell...

Even if it was the Lady doing all the pointing and giggling.

One person once corrected my use of "babe" to "baby."

It was a conscious use of an archaic term (spoken by a nasty raw-meat-eating hag). Just because you've only seen it used in rap music doesn't negate the origins of the word.
:rage:

Oh, but recently, I had a similar situation in my writing circle. Everyone started correcting my use of "pompon" and the best part - they all gave me a different spelling.
Pompon is the original spelling. I'm sticking with it. You won't convince me otherwise.

Learn to use google, people.

A commenter accused me of author's bias when I pointed out something they missed in my comic. Said thing had been visible in my comic for more than a few times by that point. To this day that comment still stings.

The small wall of text trying to give constructive criticism over how much my character cussed (I counted a grand total of four cuss words in that entire update) when it was actually completely relevant to the story ^w^" Like, the commenter was under the assumption that I just made him cuss so he'd look cool and edgy?? :upside_down::upside_down::upside_down:

I know it hadn't been explained yet why Shilo cusses so much, but it is an important aspect of his character development throughout the series. I mean, he's literally a creature from Hell who is drunken half the time, and was raised by giant demonic lizards in a forest. He's not exactly a "proper" gentleman. But that's important.

Because after he ends up being the caretaker of his unexpected adopted daughter, Genesis, you notice that he makes it a point to cuss less, drink less, etc. He is actively trying throughout the series to better himself as a role model. So although I didn't say anything rude to the original commenter, I did find it slightly annoying that they assumed I didn't know how to write a character just because he cussed.

Other than the spam, I haven't had any annoying comments (yet).

Whaaaa? You mean to say something fictional can happen in the fiction genre?! That's preposterous! :joy:


Also @phoenixrenaissance pastel rainbow is lit. I love using it for the lighting in gory horror scenes because it's so unsettling in contrast. Also, if it makes you feel any better, I usually censor text with cat emojis and audio with kitten meows.

I dislike receiving comments on minor typos on long pages. I've gotten a comment on a page that I was otherwise very happy with about a single period missing from one of the sentences. That was the comment, nothing else about the page, just about a minor punctuation error. :confounded:

On a different site I made a joke that a character can fire a bow with one hand while running away, which is obviously not possible in any realistic circumstance. This one-off joke became the source of constant nagging comments telling me to change it or remove it because of how unrealistic it is, for months. Instead I doubled down and had him do it several more times throughout the story >:slight_smile:

Because the characters where talking because plot is a thing, instead of having sex.

Years ago, 2 decades perhaps, there was a girl who drew great anime art. This was at a time before social media and communities gathered in forums (just like this one) more often. This was a small niche community for game making software and to see really good anime art style was so rare in this community that it stood out. But of course, you had that one person asking for some cartoon porn. I still shake my head about that to this day.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Any variation of when are the humans coming. Including when will the humans be build by the robots.

Some of PTS from humans.

Most can't exist if humans are around because they are considered dangerous.

There are no secret humans of cloning labs

Humans be GONE.

I don’t get a lot of comments however, which makes some people think they are clever for posting “First”, which I usually just delete.

I have got some misgendering of characters.

Not quite verbatim but "This would be so good if it was a hetero relationship like God intended it to be." (Actually, is this still minor? :thinking:)

I get those a lot of the time and I've taken to actually answer them with either congratulations or anything witty I can come up with. Sometimes, I've managed to get a conversation out of that :grin:

Fan theories can be wild.......XD.

Some people may have wrong theories, but is still fun to see how they reached those conclusions.

This commenter looks nearly illiterate, no wonder they just want illustrations of sex.

1 year later

Also when they comment, “Update Please!” When I just updated :sob:

My main character is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns. A few readers (mostly not from tapas) have felt the need to comment on how awkward they find this. :unamused:

I’m Filipino and English is my 3rd language. I know the meaning of “his” and “her” but I usually make a mistake with my characters pronouns when I write and thankfully my readers are very understanding when I make these mistakes. I’m very blessed. I hope your readers can try and understand your characters. Mine is clearly my mistake but yours is just created like that and readers are pointing out how they feel uncomfortable about it 🥲🥲

Yeah, and it could totally be that the people in question don't live somewhere where this is a common thing. I'm just not someone who would leave negative feedback if a critique wasn't specifically requested, so I find it a bit irking.

Complaining about the pronouns is really too much. They are not forced to read if they don't like the characters...
I have a related, but different problem. I am NB but at this point in my story, all the charcters already presented are cis. But (I suppose?) because of my identity, several people are confused about the gender of several of my characters, especially my main one (my profile pic on the forum). He is a he, but gets a lot of she and a few them.
I don't mind, and I know I don't draw very gendered. But it's peculiar. Sometimes it makes me feel that I'm unable to write binary characters :sweat_smile:. But no hard feelings.

If your series has anything remotely similar to a popular anime series, people will jump on you like you're the first person to draw inspiration from something else. This persists even if the similarities are minor and it's only for a short portion of the entire series.

It is unrelated to my current comic, but the most annoying comment I got happened at an anime convention when I was selling hair clips that I had made.

The clips in question: Angel wing hairclips (Gaia Online...that is how long ago this was). I carefully sculpted them to clearly be a matching pair that would sit on each side of the head. The pieces that went up for sale were resin-cast replicas because they were lightweight and durable.

A young woman walked up and scrutinized my clips. She took one of my business cards and I thanked her for stopping by. She gives me a look and says, "I can make these myself." I wished her luck in doing it.

A week later, I get an email from her. She wants to know how I made a mirror copy of the hairclip because she could not sculpt a matching pair, so I must have a special technique. I tell her that there is no such technique that I am aware of, and she will simply have to work to make both sides match. She got mad at me for hiding an easy technique, and told me that I was full of crap.

It is such a silly situation for such a trivial thing, but I still wonder if she ever figured figured out how to get her mirror copy without sculpting it...and I am still a bit miffed over it.

I get that all the time with customers, as a farmer.
They don't want to buy stuff that they 'can grow [them]selves', sometimes even call me a scammer, but they are unable to grow it, by lack of knowledge or doing very stupid things, thus, they ask advice to me! After calling me a scammer! :confused:
Good thing there are also some nice, grateful ones :heart:

As someone who has been pleading with some onion sprouts to keep growing, I definitely appreciate the work that goes into growing good things! X-D

I believe a lot of people have a hard time appreciating the experience and effort that goes into doing something. I always try to approach the artisan with a good deal of respect and if they are willing to impart any information because that is the kind of thing that you can't easily get!

(long story alert)
I visited a jewelry/cameo shop in Naples where an old man was in the corner, carving shells to make the cameos that created the foundation of the jewelry. As I watched people go in and buy the jewelry, no one noticed the man. I purchased some jewelry, then carefully approached and asked him if I could watch and ask questions, and he was great! He patiently answered questions, showed me the tools, let me watch, and seemed to enjoy the conversation. He even gave me a "faulty" cameo that he had given up on, then we talked about it and how I thought it was amazing, despite the flaws he was aware of.

Long story short, by being respectful to the master artisan, I walked away with a boatload of information on cameos that I could not have obtained anywhere else, and I bought the proper shell so that I can take a whack at it myself. I hope to show him if I can make it out there, and I really hope he is okay despite the pandemic.