"While the story includes hours of animation, and thousands of relatively static panels, the overarching experience is actually more similar to reading a book. There's a good deal of dialogue between characters, as they chat to each other over the internet during their adventure. The result is an unusual media hybrid. Something that reads like a heavily illustrated novel, frequently interrupted by cinematic Flash sequences, and sometimes even interactive games. It's a story I've tried to make as much a pure expression of its medium as possible."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Andrew Hussie, September 7, 2012
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Homestuck
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Homestuck
10 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Homestuck →
Related Quotes
"Creating it was a lot like being the Dungeon Master of an RPG involving thousands of people, dealing with a similar b…"
"Homestuck was just: Problem Sleuth plus a little more of a story, try adding a dialog system, try adding Flash animat…"
"Today marks exactly seven years from the day Homestuck began. And Act 7’s single-page installment marks the end of th…"
"It’s something I've never seen before. It’s like a book or a comic, only it's not a book or a comic... it’s something…"
"Homestuck ended this April as one of the most wildly successful and passionately loved comics online."
"As a grown up this is not something I ever got into or could understand, but its youthful fanbase was clearly enthral…"
"Homestuck starts with a kid stuck in his house. And for the first couple hundred pages that's all it seems to be -- b…"
"The four main characters in Homestuck have the most relatable internet friendships I've ever seen in fiction. It's a …"
"In in its own weird way, Homestuck is a lot like James Joyce's Ulysses, where only the strongest, most dedicated read…"
"The sad and obvious truth of the matter is that art, once formalized or mechanized, is no longer art; and the few art…"