The F.A.Q. is still a work in progress. If you have any questions that should be added, please post them in the F.A.Q. thread in our forum, and we’ll get right on it!


1. Who are you?

2. What is the process you go through to make this comic?

3. When are you going to ink and colour the comics?

5. Are you going to do a joke about [insert favorite monster or gaming situation here]?

6. Is [insert character name] based on [insert real life person’s name]?

9. I’ve written a story/script, and I’m looking for an artist. Will you use it for a comic?

10. Where can we meet you? Do you do conventions?


1.Who are you?

I’m Rich, the guy who draws the strip. . I’m a storyboard artist working in Halifax, Nova Scotia on children’s television shows, including Inspector Gadget, The Doozers and Lunar Jim. I’ve got some personal projects happening as well, including YAFGC, a music video, and a few other webcomics that update less frequently.

2. What is the process you go through to make this comic?

I come up with the basic situation (Beholder is checking out a Goblin girl), and then a punchline comes to me. In the case of comic #1, it was purely visual since I think visually and tend to pace these comics like my storyboards, even thinking out the stories animated or as though they were live action. Then I plug in the buildup to the punchline.

So, for another example… Lewie the Lich. A powerful undead. It amuses me that he’d be sort of henpecked by a matronly orc – that he’s reduced to using his MAGNIFICENT SUPERNATURAL POWERS to do something mundane, like clean up her garden. So, where is Gren going to meet this character? At her lairwarming party as Mrs. Bloodhand introduces her to the neighbors. Then I just have to steer the dialogue towards the punchline and know I have 1, 2 or 3 panels to do it in.

Once I start drawing them, the characters take over. I don’t know what they’re going to say exactly before hand, nor exactly how they’re going to react until I scribble them into the situation. In the Lewie the Lich intro comic, I didn’t know if Gren was going to be amused, afraid, or disgusted with him until I was actually drawing the panel and SHE told me how she would react. It seems that Gren isn’t scared of much. At least, not at this point.

On one or two occasions, my punchline changed as I was drawing the comic. I thought it would be funny if Nike the Harpy described how they hauled the peeping previous tenant out of the hole and tore him to bits and ate him, all giggly and innocent, and Bob would then say a polite “well, see ya’ later, then!” and get the hell out. But Nike changed her mind while I was drawing her and became all lascivious!

The story is rather organic this way. The next bunch of gags depend heavily on what’s going on in the current one. Although, sometimes I need to do buildup comics to get to a punchline. Arachne needed to haul Gren out of the lair after the party so I could have her gone while Bob went to check out the Harpys. That was a gag borne of necessity. And once Chimera showed up, I didn’t know how to get rid of him! He just got funnier and funnier and I nearly forgot about Gren and Bob!

So, no script. No thumbnails. No basic planning. I let the characters act through my pencil and they tend to tell me where they’re going and what they’re up to. And I must say, sometimes I’m a little shocked by their behaviour!

3. When are you going to ink and colour the comics?

The short answer is, I have no plans to. The comic is done for my own recreation during slow points at work, on pieces of copy paper with whatever pencil I happen to have in my hand when inspiration strikes. If I were to try to sit down in front of Photoshop and clean and retype every panel, it would suddenly become a chore and wouldn’t be any fun for me anymore… consequently, it would probably stop.

At some point I may pick up a few of them or a couple of my favorites and ink and colour them, but it’s got to be fun. I started a comic that was carefully rendered and typed in FLASH, but since I don’t have continuous 24 hour access to a computer, and they’re time consuming to create, it too has stumbled to a halt.

As long as YAFGC stays scribbly, I can grind ’em out faster than you can read ’em!

5. Are you going to do a joke about [insert favorite monster or gaming situation here]?

Maybe.

The format of the story and jokes is fairly fluid. They tend to form themselves based on what has come before and where they’re going; also, and most importantly, these things come from my brain and my own experiences. So while something ‘so and so’s’ character ‘such and such’ said when some monster or other made whatever threat might make so and so laugh his butt off, you really had to be there. And until Gren, Arachne, Bob or whoever is in that particular situation and that particular circumstance, don’t expect to see it.

At the time of this writing, the comics have been drawn two months in advance of their scheduled posting dates, so I’m afraid even if I did take your suggestions about what would make a funny character or a funny situation, it wouldn’t appear for some time to come anyway. Sorry!

6. Is [insert character name] based on [insert real life person’s name]?

The short and simple answer to this is always ‘no.’ The more complicated one is ‘sort of.’ When I create characters for this comic, I usually think of a hole that needs to be filled and come up with something that serves that purpose; eg: A suitor for Gren who is ridiculously repugnant… an Otyugh! They’re gross to look at and they eat poo! An older character who’s got some clout in the caverns and can introduce Gren around to other important characters… an Orc noblewoman, Mrs. Bloodhand! It’s only natural for these characters to be born of my own experiences, and so naturally some icons
will appear from RL. But they happen somewhat subconciously. Turns out that Gren Razortooth does have my wife’s figure; we noticed after someone asked this very question.

So if there’s anyone else out there who sees themselves in my comics, I didn’t do it on purpose, honestly! Well, except Lewie the Lich’s name. See above question.

9. I’ve written a story/script, and I’m looking for an artist. Will you use it for a comic?

Sorry, but no. Or rather, yes, but for my usual freelance professional rates (e-mail beholderking [at] yafgc [dot] net for a quote), and if I have space in my work schedule. My comic websites are for my own stories, and I have more concepts in the queue already than I have time to get to.

10. Where can we meet you? Do you do conventions?

We don’t get out much, but we have done a few cons in the last couple of years. Our current plans are this year are just Hal-Con, here in Nova Scotia, and our 2015 schedule is entirely undecided as of yet.