• Smallletter@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I was 21 in 2008, and I’d been a fan of Ctrl Alt Del since near it’s beginning. I was a huge web comic fan in general, and I got intensely emotionally invested in them, even the silly ones.

    This strip hit me exactly as he intended it to. It resonated with me I guess because of my brother and sister in law going through a miscarriage shortly before. Either way, it had a powerful impact on me and I didn’t see this “tonal shift” as a problem. That’s kinda dumb if you ask me, lots and lots of comedies have serious moments.

    Anyway, I didn’t know this meme until a few years ago and it always makes me sad. It’s dumb, I know.

    I’m super sensitive to negativity, which is why I was always a lurker in reddit, I always got shat on whenever I shared anything, to the point that I’d just delete my account and hide from the internet for a while.

    • Square Singer@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Tbh, the “tonal shift” had been happening for a long time. This was not out of the blue at all. It was only unexpected for the “A comic must and can only be funny” crowd.

      • Serinus
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        1 year ago

        It felt more like he was trying to exploit the concept for attention and popularity in the most tone-deaf, transparent way possible.

        I still think it was more of a business decision than anything else.