Homestuck where can i read
Rating details. Sort order. Start your review of Homestuck Book One. Mar 23, Sage rated it liked it Shelves: reviewed , 4th-quarter-reviews. Homestuck is awesome, but it a little awkward to translate flash into paper.
You should probably save cash for the cosplay you will want to do after like, act 3 ANNND the first act is slow. So slow. It is the thing that separates the strong from the weak. Just kidding, the people who will actually read the thing from the ones who are just there for the trolls. It took me about one month not including the 3 week break I took after my computer restarted and I lost my place.
It's not as lo Well.. Kinda like how Dave talks. You will not get anything unless you read it. View 2 comments. Oct 22, doctor rated it it was amazing Shelves: fun-reads. First off, I'm extremely pleased to see that Good Read's has this on their website!! Four for you, Good Reads. Alright, let me say this much.
I know a few comic book shops here and there have this book for sale. If this is your first time coming across Homestuck and you say: "Hey, I want to read this! I say this because while everything is the same, the experience isn't. To be part of the Ah. To be part of the fandom and re-read the first act either way is glorious and much more enjoyable.
Act 1 first time around is something we all had to slog through finding hidden gems here or there , and to revisit it is a lot of fun. The transition to print is I mean, what were we expecting. I love how Hussie has URL's at the bottom rather than page numbers, and his footnotes at the bottom are quite hilarious and give you much insight. I could go on for hours about how much I love John, and Rose, and everyone. But I'll just let you all do that and not waste your time by fangirling.
Hell, we're even getting our own video game. Sep 11, Maxx rated it it was amazing. Homestuck is a very, very, very good book. It is a very awesome science Fiction E book. It comes in 6 acts i think this is act one. It takes place in a city, in a forest, in a town, and on a small island. This first book however is about a young boy named John who always goes on his computer and plays this game called Homestuck. The problem about this game is that it is in real life and can be very dangerous.
John in this book is playing with his friend rose in the game while rose can build a Homestuck is a very, very, very good book. John in this book is playing with his friend rose in the game while rose can build and control things johns there in real life. While all this is going on the worlds ending. This book does not have a resolution because if you read it on the computer its one of six i think. I really liked this book because i love sy-fi and this book is just great all together because of humor, action, suspense, and a little romance later when you get to other acts.
The type of reader that would like this book is a reader who loves sy-fi like myself and loves a little mixture of things. And thats why this book is rated five stars. Apr 14, Blue rated it liked it.
I didn't actually read the book version yet, but I did read the original online version, so I'll base my review on that for now. Homestuck is an awesome story, that unfortunatly starts a bit slow. There are hilarious parts, and it's where everything starts, but I have to agree that sometimes all of John's fooling around with the sylladex could be quite tiresome.
The humour makes up fo I didn't actually read the book version yet, but I did read the original online version, so I'll base my review on that for now. The humour makes up for it though!
It's sad that many people abandon the story because of the first ACT, because right after it, the story starts to build up to become great and deeper than one would imagine!
The music and animation are important and add a lot to the originality of Homestuck, what I hear is one of the disadvantages of the book version, but apparently the book version contains notes from the autor, so I am looking forward to get it too! I recommend the online version to anyone who is patient enough to enjoy a long and complex story! Dec 12, Beate rated it it was amazing Recommends it for: Homestuck fans. Shelves: comics , humor. As most people that have read Homestuck, I think the first act is really slow compared to the other ones.
One of the things I really liked was the humorous and interesting commentaries that Hussie had written on each page. It's difficult to recommend this to people that haven't read Homestuck before.
On one hand, those who don't like to read comics on a scree As most people that have read Homestuck, I think the first act is really slow compared to the other ones. On one hand, those who don't like to read comics on a screen or have problems getting trough the first act, it could be a good investment. On the other hand, you do lose something by not reading the web version. You don't get to experience the gifs, flash animations and games, and the music.
Plus,if you end up not enjoying the humor in the first act, you will not like it in the later ones. The safest thing for a non- Homestucker is probably to check the comic out a bit before you consider buying it. But for a Homestuck fan, I do really think it's worth getting. May 18, Francine rated it it was amazing Shelves: read-again-sometime , manga. I would recommend this book to my friends, but I don't think they'd be interested in this stuff But I sure as heck was!
Mar 25, Courtney Foss rated it it was amazing. This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. In the printed version of the comic, this contains the first act of Andrew Hussie's longer webcomic "Homestuck", in which in the beginning of act one, you meet John Egbert, a rather normal 13 year old boy, with a variety of interests that you see introduced in the first part of the story.
He likes pranks and silly things, along with rather corny and horrible Nic cage movies. He dislikes cake and his father's obsession with baking, along with the various amounts of Harlequins that his father has In the printed version of the comic, this contains the first act of Andrew Hussie's longer webcomic "Homestuck", in which in the beginning of act one, you meet John Egbert, a rather normal 13 year old boy, with a variety of interests that you see introduced in the first part of the story.
He dislikes cake and his father's obsession with baking, along with the various amounts of Harlequins that his father has collected.
Act one, you see John struggling to get a package from the mail, a birthday package in fact; which in a weird twist of events ends up in his father's car. As things keep moving that same day within the story, John ends up starting a game with a few of his friends online that pester him through a little program on his computer called 'Pesterchum' which is similar to that of a Instant Messenger.
Of course, as it later shows, the game proves to be more than a thirteen year old can handle and a lot more to deal with than many people thought. One thing I disliked with the start of homestuck was that it was rather slow paced and at first it seems really pointless to read, because of all of the strange and rather meaningless commands and actions done by John in the first place.
But as it picks up, the thing I did like was it eventually just gets so ridiculous that I wanted to figure out what was going to happen next and left me constantly surprised when I thought it would lead somewhere and yet it switched dramatically. I would probably recommend "Homestuck" to someone who has a lot of time on their hands and someone willing to read something online for quite some time, considering it's over pages and likely going to grow even further than it is now.
Oct 15, Maya Ben-dror rated it it was amazing Shelves: quarter-1 , comics-and-out-of-school. There are links to other websites. I get the feeling that, for Hussie, this formal experimentation is the most interesting part of comicking. Several hundred pages in, John uses some of the peculiar machinery burped up by Sburb to create a glowing blue apple, and then a meteor crashes into his house.
End Act One, and whew. According to Rose, who is still able to text him, similar disasters are striking Sburb players around the world. We get flash-forwards to a post-apocalyptic future where a mysterious figure, the Wayward Vagabond, relays commands to John in the past.
Got all that? Mordicai Knode, in an article for Tor. The thing is, I suspect Knode is right. I accept this and embrace my fogeyness. You just don't have time for this bullshit. Holy crap, Topatco actually sells all the self-consciously terrible merchandise advertised on the Sweet Bro and Hella Jeff site. John, the narrator, and the mysterious figure from the future are all arguing with each other in the narration text.
Or, all right, all the footnotes in Infinite Jest. The cross-cutting between multiple characters at different points in time reminds me of my second-favorite video game ever, Day of the Tentacle , the sequel to Maniac Mansion. My favorite video game ever is Maniac Mansion. Homestuck is more about the innumerable jokes, digressions, weird conversations, and running gags Hussie can spin off each new incremental progression in the action.
Right now, for instance, Dave is trying to shove a puppet down a garbage disposal, but is hamstrung by the fact that he can only give himself orders using a limited number of letters. This has been going on for pages. In the words of Enid Coleslaw, the movie version with the troubling sexual attraction to Steve Buscemi, it keeps going from bad to good and back around to bad again. The animated cutscenes are getting more ambitious.
The artwork remains at the same level of one-step-up-from-stick-figures sophistication, so Hussie wisely puts his effort into choosing strong images and cutting them together effectively.
Like a good low-budget anime series, Homestuck does a lot with limited resources. Act Two closes with a lengthy visit to the future as the Wayward Vagabond tries, sort of, to escape from his underground fallout shelter. That never happened, right?
Speaking of, an increasing number of pages are full-on animated sequences. Is Homestuck technically even a comic? Was it ever a comic? If you so choose, you can even enable an inline media player that legally streams the music directly from the source. You can try not to get lost exploring the twisted web of Homestuck 's discography, but it's inevitable.
The ideal outcome for this collection is that it keeps Homestuck alive for people who may otherwise have given up on it, so they can continue to support all the official channels going forward. If this project results in even one new fan hopping on-board who otherwise wouldn't have, I would consider that a success.
Including those in the collection would feel scummy. The main reason it exists is to prevent the technological decay of Homestuck , not to "stick one to the man" or some garbage. Need to read the Epilogues offline?
They made a book for that! It's literally just text! And speaking of books, go and check out Viz's line of deluxe Homestuck hardcovers. They have tons of author commentary you won't find in the collection because, again, I'm really not about harming these guys financially.
Go to Bambosh's github page to download the archive and read the detailed explanations and faq. Home » Comics » Homestuck: Unofficial Collection is Free Offline Browser Experience Homestuck, one of the truly unique webcomics that came out of the launch of the internet, is in danger of going away because much of it was animated using Adobe Flash, which is getting phased out by browsers by the end of this year. Enjoyed this?
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