Well, Digger said “generally”. This is a specific case, an adventure in which unusual things happen. If this comic were about the normal life of a wombat – or of most average members of a given species – it would probably be terribly dull.
*sigh* You try to teach Shadowchild to figure out moral quandaries based on your perception of a world as beneficial as possible to everyone in it, especially you (slight and nearly inevitable hypocrisy noted), and it goes off half-taught. It would be unpleasantly ironic if it was the arrival of a monk (particularly the scholar-monks instead of one of the fighter-monks) that caused it to flee.
This is incredibly tangential, but I do wonder if the scholar monks ever use their fighter-monk skills to do library things like access books on the top shelf, notice imminent paper-avalanches, and catch origami dart memos out of midair (and that’s not even getting into the theory of L-Space).
“But generally you don’t face hideous moral quandaries on a daily basis.”
Um, Digger, where have YOU been for the last three hundred pages? lol
Well, Digger said “generally”. This is a specific case, an adventure in which unusual things happen. If this comic were about the normal life of a wombat – or of most average members of a given species – it would probably be terribly dull.
Apologies in advance for this …
… in that last pane, Digger seems to be looking … foreshadowing …
😀
Wow. Best. Pun. Ever. You know they’re good when they hurt. TekServer, you’re my hero.
TekServer – I’m torn between chortling and clawing my face. Well done 🙂
😀
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/digger-facepalm.png
ahhh, the inevitable tropeing has begun…
“Begun?” It’s been going on for a while.
Since that link is broken: http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/digger-facepalm.png
TekServer that deserves a double face palm and quite possibly a quiet groan as well
*sigh* You try to teach Shadowchild to figure out moral quandaries based on your perception of a world as beneficial as possible to everyone in it, especially you (slight and nearly inevitable hypocrisy noted), and it goes off half-taught. It would be unpleasantly ironic if it was the arrival of a monk (particularly the scholar-monks instead of one of the fighter-monks) that caused it to flee.
This is incredibly tangential, but I do wonder if the scholar monks ever use their fighter-monk skills to do library things like access books on the top shelf, notice imminent paper-avalanches, and catch origami dart memos out of midair (and that’s not even getting into the theory of L-Space).