Okay, I found a good webcomic. It’s rare, but I found one.
But it’s got furries.
Lesbian furries.
Lesbian furries having sex.
But it’s a REALLY GOOD COMIC.
And it’s DAILY.
http://www.yquestionmark.com
Okay, I found a good webcomic. It’s rare, but I found one.
But it’s got furries.
Lesbian furries.
Lesbian furries having sex.
But it’s a REALLY GOOD COMIC.
And it’s DAILY.
http://www.yquestionmark.com
You just go ahead and pretend like the google search for “lesbian furry webcomic” isn’t your homepage.
the writing seems pretty good. This is probably a comic I would’ve found a while ago if the characters were human.
The art’s kinda weird though, it’s competently done but I can’t tell what’s going on in half the panels.
Wait till we tell Matt Wilson. It’s colored like Return to Sender!!!!!!!!
I wanted to say it was bad but then I ended up reading the whole thing
Romantic comics(and this is definitely of the type – whether it’s straight or gay or lesbian or furry seems to make little difference) all seem the same to me. Not that I refuse to read them, since they can be pretty good, but the plots always work out to something like:
Person A is down on luck or having trouble coping with certain problem, meets person B. Love etc., problems are resolved over course of series. For more complex plot add additional characters, repeat.
Or possibly the opposite: they fall into despair, but that’s such a highly depressing ending that you don’t see it very often.
Either way, it’s a pretty addicting kind of genre to follow.
Romantic comics are definitely addicting. There are a lot of webcomics I continue to read just because I want to see the main characters just make out and be done with it, regardless of the (often bad) quality of the comic.
One prime example is Questionable Content, which has played with the chemistry of the two characters for a few YEARS now, who obviously like each other, blah blah blah. Pisses off me and a whole lot of other people, but it keeps us reading it.
NO WAY YOU LIE