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The character names are each dinosaur's [[genus]] (with the notable exception being "T-Rex", an abbreviation of the ''[[Tyrannosaurus]]''' full [[Binomial nomenclature|binomial name]]). Although other dinosaurs have been mentioned in the strip, they are [[Unseen character|rarely shown]].
The character names are each dinosaur's [[genus]] (with the notable exception being "T-Rex", an abbreviation of the ''[[Tyrannosaurus]]''' full [[Binomial nomenclature|binomial name]]). Although other dinosaurs have been mentioned in the strip, they are [[Unseen character|rarely shown]].


*[[Tyrannosaurus|T-Rex]] is the main character. He is a green, 27-year-old<ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001153.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - January 24 2008]</ref> ''Tyrannosaurus rex''. His character is portrayed as self-confident, but frequently shown up by other characters, especially Utahraptor.<ref>North, Ryan. (2003-03-20). [http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000036.html ''Dinosaur Comics'' #36]. ''[http://www.qwantz.com Dinosaur Comics]''. Retrieved on [[2008-09-14]].</ref> He is good-hearted, but occasionally shows signs of being egotistical or selfish.{{or|date=September 2008}} T-Rex appears to be stomping a log cabin and a woman in the third and fourth panels of the comic, respectively.
*[[Tyrannosaurus|T-Rex]] is the main character. He is a green, 27-year-old<ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001153.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - January 24 2008]</ref> ''Tyrannosaurus rex''. His character is portrayed as self-confident, but frequently shown up by other characters, especially Utahraptor.<ref>North, Ryan. (2003-03-20). [http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000036.html ''Dinosaur Comics'' #36]. ''[http://www.qwantz.com Dinosaur Comics]''. Retrieved on [[2008-09-14]].</ref> He is good-hearted, but occasionally shows signs of being egotistical or selfish.{{or|date=September 2008}} T-Rex appears to be stomping a log cabin and a woman in the third and fourth panels of the comic, respectively. In the past, he has kissed up Wikipedia.


*[[Utahraptor]], T-Rex's [[comedic foil]], appears in the fourth and fifth panels of the comic. He generally seems more skeptical and intelligent than T-Rex,{{or|date=November 2008}} and one early comic claims that one of his identifying features is that he "frequently debunk[s] [T-Rex's] theories."<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000036.html | work=Dinosaur Comics | last=North | first=Ryan |authorlink=Ryan North | date=20 March 2003 | accessdaymonth=18 November | accessyear=2008 | title=Dinosaur Comics #36}}</ref> Utahraptor is [[Homosexual orientation|gay]],<ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000004.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - June 24 2003]</ref><ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000103.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - February 04 2003]</ref><ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001128.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - December 12 2007]</ref> as North confirmed in the title of the [[RSS feed]] for the December 13, 2007 comic:<ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001129.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - December 13 2007]</ref>
*[[Utahraptor]], T-Rex's [[comedic foil]], appears in the fourth and fifth panels of the comic. He generally seems more skeptical and intelligent than T-Rex,{{or|date=November 2008}} and one early comic claims that one of his identifying features is that he "frequently debunk[s] [T-Rex's] theories."<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000036.html | work=Dinosaur Comics | last=North | first=Ryan |authorlink=Ryan North | date=20 March 2003 | accessdaymonth=18 November | accessyear=2008 | title=Dinosaur Comics #36}}</ref> Utahraptor is [[Homosexual orientation|gay]],<ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000004.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - June 24 2003]</ref><ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/000103.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - February 04 2003]</ref><ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001128.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - December 12 2007]</ref> as North confirmed in the title of the [[RSS feed]] for the December 13, 2007 comic:<ref>[http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001129.html qwantz.com - ''Dinosaur Comics'' - December 13 2007]</ref>

Revision as of 01:07, 23 December 2008

Dinosaur Comics
Author(s)Ryan North
Websitehttp://www.qwantz.com/
Current status/scheduleUpdated almost every weekday, off on Canadian holidays
Launch dateFebruary 1 2003
Genre(s)Humour

Dinosaur Comics is a constrained webcomic by Canadian writer Ryan North. It is also known as "Qwantz", after the site's domain name, "qwantz.com". It has been online since February 1 2003,[1] though there were early prototypes. Dinosaur Comics has also been printed in two collections and in a number of newspapers.[2][3]

Comics are posted on most weekdays. Each comic uses the same artwork,[4] with only the dialogue changing from day to day. There are occasional deviations from this, such as several episodic comics.[5] It has been compared to David Lynch's The Angriest Dog in the World comic, and also made references to it.[6][7] The strips take on a wide variety of topics, including ethical relativism,[8] the nature of happiness, the secret to being loved,[9] and more.

Cast

File:Early dinosaur comic.png
An early edition of Dinosaur Comics

Main cast

The character names are each dinosaur's genus (with the notable exception being "T-Rex", an abbreviation of the Tyrannosaurus' full binomial name). Although other dinosaurs have been mentioned in the strip, they are rarely shown.

  • T-Rex is the main character. He is a green, 27-year-old[10] Tyrannosaurus rex. His character is portrayed as self-confident, but frequently shown up by other characters, especially Utahraptor.[11] He is good-hearted, but occasionally shows signs of being egotistical or selfish.[original research?] T-Rex appears to be stomping a log cabin and a woman in the third and fourth panels of the comic, respectively. In the past, he has kissed up Wikipedia.
  • Utahraptor, T-Rex's comedic foil, appears in the fourth and fifth panels of the comic. He generally seems more skeptical and intelligent than T-Rex,[original research?] and one early comic claims that one of his identifying features is that he "frequently debunk[s] [T-Rex's] theories."[12] Utahraptor is gay,[13][14][15] as North confirmed in the title of the RSS feed for the December 13, 2007 comic:[16]

i received several dozen emails about utahraptor either being a girl or being gay in yesterday's comic! he is gay, guys. only he doesn't talk about it all the time, on account of having interests outside of being gay?

  • Dromiceiomimus appears in the third panel. She is generally friendly to T-Rex, answering either neutrally or with mild, friendly criticism. She has been a romantic interest of T-Rex's.[17]

Supporting cast

  • Several comics take place in a mirror universe. In this arc, the standard comic has been flipped horizontally, as if seen in a mirror. All of the dinosaurs, in addition to being literal mirror images, sport drawn-on goatees to demonstrate that they are the mirror-universe counterparts of the normal characters.[18]
  • God[19] and the Devil[20] make frequent appearances in the strip, speaking from off the tops and bottoms of the panels respectively, in bold and capitalized letters and with the Devil's font in red. They also speak with little or no punctuation and can be heard only by T-Rex. Topics of conversation between T-Rex and God vary, but the Devil and T-Rex mostly discuss video games and Dungeons & Dragons.[citation needed]
  • T-Rex's neighbors: families of raccoons and cephalopods who talk to T-Rex in unsettling tones, with capitalized italics.[21]
  • Morris: a tiny bug, lacking in self-confidence, who mostly appears on T-Rex's nose and speaks in lowercase letters.[22]
  • A fictionalized version of 19th-century poet Edgar Allan Poe first appears offscreen, supposedly relaxing on T-Rex's couch,[23] and later as a needy, annoying friend of T-Rex's, following T-Rex around and only wanting to talk about their relationship with one another.[24]
  • A fictionalized version of actor Patrick Stewart appears in several comics.[25]
  • A fictionalized version of Playwright and poet William Shakespeare appears in an intermittent series called "Literary Technique Comics."[26]
  • "Mr. Tusks" is an elephant affected by island dwarfism. He speaks only in the sixth frame and makes puns on the word "short" and its variants every time he speaks.[original research?] He is the Vice-Mayor of a fictional place known in the comic as Tiny Towne.[comics 1]

Scenery characters

These supporting characters almost never speak. Often, they are simply part of the scenery of the strip, and in later strips they are very rarely even acknowledged, despite their regular appearance.[original research?] They all appear in the strip while T-Rex is about to stomp on them. These characters are:

  • The tiny house in panel 3 (occupied in at least one strip)[27]
  • The tiny car in panel 3 (possibly occupied, and "slightly out of scale"[28][29])
  • The tiny woman in panel 4

Easter eggs

Every comic contains three hidden comments (easter eggs). One is contained in the alternate text, which can be accessed by holding the cursor over the strip and waiting for the title text tooltip to pop up, or through the image file's properties menu for browsers with a length limit. The second, which began appearing with the fifth comic, is found in the subject line of the "Comments" e-mail address. The third is found in the RSS feed of the comic and the archive page, being, essentially, the comic's title. Additional easter eggs have been left in some comics, such as the URL to God's ringtone (the Téléfrançais theme) hidden in the watermark of one comic[30] and an image steganographically hidden in a comic about steganography.[31][32] The image at the bottom of the webpage displaying the tiny woman and house changes according to the current season.

Recognition

Dinosaur Comics was named one of the best webcomics of 2004[33] and 2005[34] by The Webcomics Examiner.

Cracked.com named Dinosaur Comics one of the 8 funniest webcomics on the internet.[4]

Awards

In 2005, it won "Outstanding Anthropomorphic Comic" in the Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards.[35] Soon after, in August 2005, Dinosaur Comics was accepted into the Dayfree Press.

Japan English class

Dinosaur Comics was used by an English teacher in Japan for creative writing exercises. The project was similar to Penny Arcade's "Remix Project". The teacher, a friend of North's, used blank templates of the comic and had his students fill in dialogue. The results of this activity were posted to the Dinosaur Comics fan art page, and two phrases from the students' comics ("Am I bad man?" and "People is sometimes kind") were used in DC merchandise.[citation needed]

April Fool's joke

On April Fool's Day 2008, Dinosaur Comics was part of a three-webcomic prank involving Questionable Content and xkcd, where each comic's URL displayed another comic's web page. www.questionablecontent.net displayed the Dinosaur Comics website, www.qwantz.com displayed xkcd, and www.xkcd.com displayed Questionable Content.

See also

References

  1. ^ North, Ryan (1 February 2008). "Dinosaur Comics #1". Dinosaur Comics. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessdaymonth= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ "Q: Is Dinosaur Comics printed anywhere else off the Internet?
    It was in a few papers, but they tended to go bankrupt, so that was the end of that. There were a lot of university papers. If a university paper or a school paper asks to run the comics, I'm like, "Sure! Don’t worry about payment, just putting it in will be great." But for large papers I ask for a little bit of money. Then they go bankrupt." "North By T-Rex: Dinosaur Comics' Ryan North talks about bringing up his dino-baby in the world of webcomics."; Internet Archive link.
  3. ^ "HI MERCURY—I'm so happy you got rid of that stoopid comic! You might as well be running crap by Callahan in your paper as the never-funny Blecky Yuk-o. Maakies and Perry Bible Fellowship are keepers; Dinosaur Comics looks promising... ". http://web.archive.org/web/20070929090553/http://www.portlandmercury.com/portland/Letters?category=22120&issue=267907;
  4. ^ a b Swaim, Michael. "The 8 Funniest Webcomics". Cracked.com. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessdaymonth= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help) Cite error: The named reference "cracked" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - March 19 2003
  6. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - September 21 2004
  7. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - April 06 2005
  8. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - June 12 2003
  9. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - March 14 2003
  10. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - January 24 2008
  11. ^ North, Ryan. (2003-03-20). Dinosaur Comics #36. Dinosaur Comics. Retrieved on 2008-09-14.
  12. ^ North, Ryan (20 March 2003). "Dinosaur Comics #36". Dinosaur Comics. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessdaymonth= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - June 24 2003
  14. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - February 04 2003
  15. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - December 12 2007
  16. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - December 13 2007
  17. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - June 27 2003
  18. ^ qwantz.com - Dinosaur Comics - March 18 2003
  19. ^ first appearance: 128
  20. ^ first appearance: 465
  21. ^ T-Rex's neighbors appear in the following comics: 492, 493, 494, 500, 524, 681, 788, 888, and 988.
  22. ^ Morris appears in the following comics: 673, 674, 935, 942, and 1012.
  23. ^ 805
  24. ^ 806
  25. ^ "Patrick Stewart" appears in the following comics: 916, 1092, and 1299.
  26. ^ Shakespeare appears in the following comics: 958, 959, 960, 983, 1018, and 1066.
  27. ^ North, Ryan. (2003-02-04). Dinosaur Comics #4. Dinosaur Comics. Retrieved on 2008-09-14.
  28. ^ North, Ryan. (2003-02-13). Dinosaur Comics #11. Dinosaur Comics. Retrieved on 2008-09-14.
  29. ^ North, Ryan. (2006-05-30). Dinosaur Comics #784. Dinosaur Comics. Retrieved on 2008-09-14.
  30. ^ 399
  31. ^ 1023
  32. ^ Truth and Beauty Bombs :: View topic - (DC) Steganography
  33. ^ The Best Webcomics of 2004
  34. ^ The Best Webcomics of 2005
  35. ^ Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards
  1. ^ Mr. Tusks appears in the following comics: 1078, 1079, 1080, 1099, 1149, 1181, 1222, and 1250.

External links