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Post by GK Sierra on May 21, 2014 7:04:00 GMT
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Post by feraldog on May 21, 2014 7:07:21 GMT
... What is that armless fanged frog-creature?
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Post by foresterr on May 21, 2014 7:14:25 GMT
When the fairy looks straight forward, she suddenly looks completely inhuman. Any other position her eyes are in, I get nothing special. Interesting ;-)
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Rymdljus
Full Member
Beautiful songbird
Posts: 207
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Post by Rymdljus on May 21, 2014 7:54:29 GMT
... What is that armless fanged frog-creature? That's a common European gooblewuddlybunny. It naturally occurs from the northern half of France to western Russia, and from Estonia and Denmark to Bulgaria and northern Italy. Edit: That makes no sense.
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sotha
Full Member
Posts: 113
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Post by sotha on May 21, 2014 8:04:54 GMT
Frogbox is going to the party too! He's pretty awesome.
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Trism
Full Member
Blink and you'll miss it.
Posts: 125
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Post by Trism on May 21, 2014 8:06:12 GMT
... What is that armless fanged frog-creature? That's a common European gooblewuddlybunny. It naturally occurs from the northern half of France to western Russia, and from Estonia and Denmark to Bulgaria and northern Italy. Certainly not to be confused with the western reticulated European Gobblewuddlybunny that was more local to French coastline, and was hunted to extinction by the natural predator of the Gobblwuddlybunny, which is of course the Splunge, in 1782.
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Post by foresterr on May 21, 2014 8:21:34 GMT
and was hunted to extinction by the natural predator of the Gobblwuddlybunny, which is of course the Splunge, in 1782. The Splunge, being the highly specialized predator that it were, of course went extinct from starvation soon thereafter.
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Rymdljus
Full Member
Beautiful songbird
Posts: 207
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Post by Rymdljus on May 21, 2014 8:23:29 GMT
That's a common European gooblewuddlybunny. It naturally occurs from the northern half of France to western Russia, and from Estonia and Denmark to Bulgaria and northern Italy. Certainly not to be confused with the western reticulated European Gobblewuddlybunny that was more local to French coastline, and was hunted to extinction by the natural predator of the Gobblwuddlybunny, which is of course the Splunge, in 1782. I agree. The western reticulated European gobblewuddlybunny was quite similar to the common European gooblewuddlybunny, though the western reticulated European gobblewuddlybunny was more purplish in hue and had slightly larger teeth. Also, this particular specimen appear to be not extinct. It could be cgi, of course.
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Post by keef on May 21, 2014 8:40:39 GMT
Isn't she a bit polite for a fairy? (could change soon of course)
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Post by Angry Individual on May 21, 2014 9:18:22 GMT
That thing makes me nervous.
Light it on fire, Annie.
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Post by Gotolei on May 21, 2014 10:18:20 GMT
That thing makes me nervous. Light it on fire, Annie. Clearly the most logical course of action. Seriously though what the heck is that thing.
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Post by sidhekin on May 21, 2014 11:53:15 GMT
Aww, 'ave mercy, lads; clearly 'e's 'armless!
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Post by arf on May 21, 2014 12:24:56 GMT
Aww, 'ave mercy, lads; clearly that thing is 'armless! They said that of tyrannosaurs.
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Post by alpacalypse on May 21, 2014 12:34:14 GMT
That frog thing may or may not haunt my dreams
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Post by ctso74 on May 21, 2014 13:23:10 GMT
I believe that's the Canvey Island Monster, but I don't get the "long way from home" statement. So, the tall tales will be about Annie. It will be fun to hear about her adventures, from another point of view. A "Randy Disaster"-dramatic point of view, I'm betting.
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lit
Full Member
Posts: 201
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Post by lit on May 21, 2014 13:49:52 GMT
Isn't she a bit polite for a fairy? (could change soon of course) Maybe she's not quite a fairy. She's not quite like any of the other fairies we've seen.
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Post by TBeholder on May 21, 2014 15:27:58 GMT
Here's your fame, Annie. Isn't she a bit polite for a fairy? (could change soon of course) That's just Red.
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yhbc
Junior Member
Posts: 83
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Post by yhbc on May 21, 2014 15:35:31 GMT
Tom confirmed on twitter that he is a Canvey Island Monster.
The armless frog thing, that is. Not Tom.
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Post by TBeholder on May 21, 2014 15:40:14 GMT
Tom confirmed on twitter that he is a Canvey Island Monster. The armless frog thing, that is. Not Tom. Thank you for the clarification. First one, that is.
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Post by goldenknots on May 21, 2014 15:44:44 GMT
Tom confirmed on twitter that he is a Canvey Island Monster. The armless frog thing, that is. Not Tom. Well, so far as we know, anyway. :)
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Post by nero on May 21, 2014 16:09:30 GMT
That frog does look really creepy in the last panel. He probably saw Annie and Ysengrin fight all those creatures.
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Post by warrl on May 21, 2014 17:07:41 GMT
Tom confirmed on twitter that he is a Canvey Island Monster. The armless frog thing, that is. Not Tom. Well, so far as we know, anyway. Tom draws rather better than I would expect of an armless fanged frog thing.
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Post by Daedalus on May 21, 2014 17:22:34 GMT
This entire thread so far - I started cracking up in the middle of class. Thanks for that (disapproving face).
But yeah, that 'frog' :/ so oddly hostile-looking
Hopefully the 'tall tales' are Coyote exaggerating Annie's stories, and inserting himself in: Coyote's writing realtime fanfic, as it were. That would be hilarious.
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Post by fish on May 21, 2014 17:29:35 GMT
Oh! Is this going to be a chapter where we don't see Annie but only hear about her? Or maybe we'll see her, but only from the point of view of a forest creature? The fairy was basically featured on the title-page so she's probably gonna be the protagonist for this chapter. Can't wait, can't wait! Perhaps something happened that requires the help of the forest medium and now this fairy is late to Annie's "press conference". Hey, whats this? I was a little bit right! This feels nice.
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Shire
Junior Member
Posts: 77
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Post by Shire on May 21, 2014 18:27:38 GMT
Well, so far as we know, anyway. Tom draws rather better than I would expect of an armless fanged frog thing. Hey, that's racist. I'm sure Canvey Island Monsters have very dexterous feet with which to draw.
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Post by goldenknots on May 21, 2014 19:26:50 GMT
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Post by Intelligence on May 21, 2014 19:52:33 GMT
Aww, 'ave mercy, lads; clearly that thing is 'armless! They said that of tyrannosaurs. But tyrannosaurs actually have arms, just small ones...
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Post by Purgatorius on May 21, 2014 19:57:21 GMT
I thought it was a real enigmaria, or the creature behind them, that inspired Dr Disaster.
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Post by AluK on May 21, 2014 20:06:03 GMT
Well, so far as we know, anyway. Tom draws rather better than I would expect of an armless fanged frog thing. Seeing that Tom frequently depicts himself as hands-less, I wouldn't discount this hypothesis yet - we might be into something, here.
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Post by TBeholder on May 21, 2014 20:38:57 GMT
Tom draws rather better than I would expect of an armless fanged frog thing. Hey, that's racist. I'm sure Canvey Island Monsters have very dexterous feet with which to draw. Or prehensile tongues.
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