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Apr 2020

The most relevant stuff I've researched I think have been:

  • Medical drugs (anxiolitics mainly. I went for lorazepam thanks to a medic friend's advice) and its consequences if they're overused

  • Long term, almost complete isolation's consequences (which I discussed with a psychologist friend. Cheers for my very smart friends who help me out a lot lmao) (I obviously did my own research on both of these topics)

I tend to focus way more in characters and story than in worldbuilding. Now I really need to do research about military training tho.

Generally I'll google stuff or use Wikipedia.
Like I've been doing a lot of research into mythologies and the like, so for most of that I google stuff till I find some decent websites or use the reputable links on Wikipedia.

My latest weird research was 'the most valuable rock music records'. Did you know that a vinyl of Prince's The Black Album from 1987 has been sold for $27,500?

Other searches I've recently done: 'how to make a hickey', 'how quickly hickeys fade', 'how to make hickey fade faster', 'what counts as slander' and 'sunday lunch recipes'

I dig RPG gaming books as a quick reference and idea generators.

I did spend a fascinating few hours picking a city engineer's brain once. Asking all about different hidden factors that weigh into city design. That was cool.

I once researched "the worst fighting stance possible" just for the sake of a joke.......It was absolutely worth it.

This evening, I researched different shapes of antique and medieval pickaxes.

As a generality, my comic researches are less weird that my non-comic research :laughing:

@33rdCenturyCaveman I used to own a book on homosexuality in medieval Scandinavia. Or at least there was a chapter on that? Long time ago. But interesting subject.

Yeah, on one hand accusing a Viking of being catcher was deadly insult. On other hand, being a bottom was associated with practice of magic, Odin's purview. On one hand there was overriding need for every fertile man and woman to do their part. On other hand people cared less what you did when you were older.

Names of pills, average heights...
I think the wildest thing I ever searched for was how long it takes for a body to decomposed and how the melt finger tips... And how to obtain weapons and how much force you have to use to tear someone's head off (It's about 9500 Newtons).

I always enjoy researching really mundane things done in the past such as when soap was invented and how people did the laundry, you learn a lot about how difficult some things used to be and how dirty people were..
I've also had to research skin diseases which doesn't have very fun pictures loll.

Whenever I go on Wikipedia to look up one thing I get stuck for hours learning random stuff, but most the time it does end up with something new I can work with for my stories.