I saw the tweet about this one not being uploaded right before they go back to posting an hour later for daylight savings, I thought I was in some sort of temporal anomaly. Reposted webcomics are serious business.
This jump from the spacetime thingy being in London to their assumption that it must involve Jason because he’s british almost seems like Adam West Batman Logic to me.
I thought he called him TinTin because there was an old mid-20th-century TV show about a dog called that and he figured it was an old fashioned thing to call him, or something along those lines.
And wouldn’t be sensible to have someone work on what to do in case the hunch is wrong, even if she has no other tasks, because the hunch is never wrong.
You can tell that Doc was already doubting her from panel 2… on the other hand, well, she was actually wrong, so he might just have been aware that she’s not a great mathematician.
Is he that one english guy you know, or is he that increasingly suspicious one normal human in a facility chock full of superhuman abductees run by an organization that turns out to have ulterior motives on an increasingly regular basis. Who happens to be british.
If you want a decent villain, hire a Brit. We bring gravitas to the role and, occasionally (like Jeremy Irons in the dire Dungeons and Dragons film), we enjoy chewing up the scenery with over-acting too!
I saw the tweet about this one not being uploaded right before they go back to posting an hour later for daylight savings, I thought I was in some sort of temporal anomaly. Reposted webcomics are serious business.
I see Dina’s finally hit the post-Leliel Descent arc.
This jump from the spacetime thingy being in London to their assumption that it must involve Jason because he’s british almost seems like Adam West Batman Logic to me.
Panel 4 is glorious. Who needs science when you have Sokka’s instincts? I mean hunches.
Wait, did Walky call Jason “Tintin” (in the other ‘verse) because Dina first put the original breach in Belgium?
I think Walky just doesn’t know the difference between European countries.
True. He did also refer to him as ‘Babar’, who is a French elephant.
I thought he called him TinTin because there was an old mid-20th-century TV show about a dog called that and he figured it was an old fashioned thing to call him, or something along those lines.
Poor Jason, ever loyal, but so rarely trusted.
Joyce, just because something happened in London means it’s related to the one English guy you know. That’s how conservation of detail works.
And wouldn’t be sensible to have someone work on what to do in case the hunch is wrong, even if she has no other tasks, because the hunch is never wrong.
Please, someone give poor Dina a hug; she’s just had her greatest achievement nixed by a Hawaiian shirt-wearing Lothario and a ‘gut feeling’.
You can tell that Doc was already doubting her from panel 2… on the other hand, well, she was actually wrong, so he might just have been aware that she’s not a great mathematician.
Is he that one english guy you know, or is he that increasingly suspicious one normal human in a facility chock full of superhuman abductees run by an organization that turns out to have ulterior motives on an increasingly regular basis. Who happens to be british.
If you want a decent villain, hire a Brit. We bring gravitas to the role and, occasionally (like Jeremy Irons in the dire Dungeons and Dragons film), we enjoy chewing up the scenery with over-acting too!
Hunches, the only thing that matters…. .. wait isn’t this more of a lead not a hunch? A lead would be better to follow between two different results.
Of course it does. This is a comic.