The comic is listed as "horror," but it's also a comedy and not something meant to be taken terribly seriously.
I originally tried to draw this page out three or four times by hand before giving up and doing it fully digital, the first picture that I did. Back then I was using my sister's old tablet and Gimp to draw the comic, and let me tell you I'm really glad that I now have Photoshop and my own, fully functional tablet. I had to go back to using Gimp for the first ten pages or so, and while I'm glad that I had the program in the past, see no future for it with me.
Sakai Masaki is a normal high school loser who longs for love, but he’s soon in over his head when a dream come true turns into a living nightmare.
This is the first comic that I worked on, mainly doing the art while Truman wrote it. It released on Smackjeeves as [T&G’s] Love Apocalypse from May 7th 2013 to August 9th 2015, totaling in 63 pages, plus extras. The first page is being released on the main character’s birthday: February 28th.
What does the revised Tapastic edition of Love Apocalypse include?
- A unified typeface in a comic style font
- Fewer typos
- Larger page size
- Minor revisions to the script
- Minor revisions to the tagline
- Minor revisions and cleaning of the art
- Minor characters that get a lot of explication in the extra pages
- Regular updates
- Definite length
- If you really want to you can read the earlier published version to see what happens
- Hindsight commentary
- Non-GMO*
- Gluten Free*
- Thrills, chills, and spills
- Naïve interpretations of Japanese culture
- Regular interpretations of Japanese culture
- A merging of certain aspects of Japanese and American culture
- Nerdy references
- Steadily improving artwork
- Bonus content?
I hope that you have a good time reading the comic, either for the first time or again in a new format.
*“Non-GMO” and “Gluten Free” mean that the reader won’t be dietarily exposed to GMO products or gluten as a result of reading this comic, not that there isn’t mention of it in the comic itself.
Note that some of the things listed as in the revised edition are common to the original, and are therefore not new.
Safe when used as directed
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