Anonymous4: If it's from freefall, then link us to the comic it's based on. The fact that she's got brown hair and brown/white fur doesn't make her from that comic. It just means she's got brown hair and brown/white fur.
And who gives a shit if it's the first webcomic? The only thing that proves is that it was the first to take advantage of the Internet. Obviously there were comics way before then, so it's obviously not original.
Anonymous5(3): anon4, don't be an ass, freefall.purrsia.com IS THE FUCKING LINK. enter that into your browser. freefall IS A COMIC.
also, if it weren't for webcomics, then the whole idea of rule34 itself might never have come to be.
THAT is why you show respect. webcomics were the start of internet slease
Killamajig: I'm pretty sure people were drawing porn of Disney characters long before there were webcomics.
It's even arguable that the Greeks started it with images of their mythological sex scenes.
ChaosWolf: Gomenasai is right...
The first online comic was Witches and Stitches, which was published on CompuServe in 1985. It was followed by T.H.E. Fox, which was published on CompuServe and Quantum Link in 1986.
Other online comics followed in the early '90s. Where the Buffalo Roam was published on FTP and usenet in 1991, Doctor Fun was published on the web in September 1993, NetBoy began publishing on the web in the summer of 1994 and NetComics Weekly from Finnish Comics Society was started in mid 1994. Among the longest-running webcomics, some of which are still being published, are Rogues of Clwyd-Rhan (a Dutch comic that started in November 1994) The Polymer City Chronicles (March 1995), Art Comics Daily (March 1995), Argon Zark! (June 1995), Kevin and Kell (September 1995), Slow Wave (November 1995), and Eric Monster Millikin (Fall 1995). The term "webcomics" was used as early as April 1995.
The late nineties saw the number of webcomics increase drastically. Melonpool first published in April 1996. In 1997, Goats appeared (in April), followed by Sluggy Freelance (in August), Roomies! (in September), Piled Higher and Deeper (in October), User Friendly (in November). Penny Arcade and Pokey the Penguin began a year later.
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Someone fails bad.
freefall is the very first webcomic EVER.
so show more respect anon1, or I'll rape you again.
And who gives a shit if it's the first webcomic? The only thing that proves is that it was the first to take advantage of the Internet. Obviously there were comics way before then, so it's obviously not original.
also, if it weren't for webcomics, then the whole idea of rule34 itself might never have come to be.
THAT is why you show respect. webcomics were the start of internet slease
It's even arguable that the Greeks started it with images of their mythological sex scenes.
The first online comic was Witches and Stitches, which was published on CompuServe in 1985. It was followed by T.H.E. Fox, which was published on CompuServe and Quantum Link in 1986.
Other online comics followed in the early '90s. Where the Buffalo Roam was published on FTP and usenet in 1991, Doctor Fun was published on the web in September 1993, NetBoy began publishing on the web in the summer of 1994 and NetComics Weekly from Finnish Comics Society was started in mid 1994. Among the longest-running webcomics, some of which are still being published, are Rogues of Clwyd-Rhan (a Dutch comic that started in November 1994) The Polymer City Chronicles (March 1995), Art Comics Daily (March 1995), Argon Zark! (June 1995), Kevin and Kell (September 1995), Slow Wave (November 1995), and Eric Monster Millikin (Fall 1995). The term "webcomics" was used as early as April 1995.
The late nineties saw the number of webcomics increase drastically. Melonpool first published in April 1996. In 1997, Goats appeared (in April), followed by Sluggy Freelance (in August), Roomies! (in September), Piled Higher and Deeper (in October), User Friendly (in November). Penny Arcade and Pokey the Penguin began a year later.