Steve is about to run head first into the intersection of Finagle’s Law and Poe’s Law, “It is impossible to make something so obviously over-the-top that absolutely nobody will take it seriously, and exactly the worst possible person is going to take it seriously.”
@Red Rain: There’s a word for that specific kind of inner darkness: Edgelord. And this is about the time in a young man’s life where that sort of tendency can manifest.
Steve’s not crazy, he’s just acclimating to The System. I wonder for how many years he’s submitted a book report on Hamlet by comic book? If anything, I expected the comic to end with Hammerhead having a streetlight rendezvous with whatever Steve draws Jocelyn as.
Steve is about to run head first into the intersection of Finagle’s Law and Poe’s Law, “It is impossible to make something so obviously over-the-top that absolutely nobody will take it seriously, and exactly the worst possible person is going to take it seriously.”
Anyone notice how shes looking at steve?
@Red Rain: There’s a word for that specific kind of inner darkness: Edgelord. And this is about the time in a young man’s life where that sort of tendency can manifest.
Steve’s not crazy, he’s just acclimating to The System. I wonder for how many years he’s submitted a book report on Hamlet by comic book? If anything, I expected the comic to end with Hammerhead having a streetlight rendezvous with whatever Steve draws Jocelyn as.
Fun little arc, but it looks like we know Steve has a bit of a hidden darkness in him.
I feel like that’s a good disclaimer to have at the beginning of every violent piece of media.
* the author of this work is not a psychopathic killer — he just writes like one
Surely Steve’s comics will inspire potential violence in our children, even though it’s not supposed to be for children.
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE!