UPDATING OCCASIONALLY (FOR NOW)

9 thoughts on “540 – Trick Hello

  1. Called it, she figured he’d do this, if by choice or by zombie voodoo. I’m sure the “friendlier” questioning will start soon, if she doesn’t just kill him out-right. Or just add him to the herd.

  2. This turn of events is a surprise only to Eustace. And, maybe, Eustace’s subconscious. After all, this way he doesn’t have to actually risk actually attacking Suzie, which gives him a greater chance of survival than actually attacking her. I wonder what he was promised/threatened with?

  3. Not to nit-pick, but since sights are on target, finger should be on the trigger. Especially this close.
    The usual rule is “keep finger straight and off trigger until sights are on target”.

  4. Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)

    Not to nit-pick, but since that was current philosophies regarding trigger discipline have evolved.
    Of course, it will depend on who you get/got your training from.
    Experiments have determined that the fraction of a second to go from finger off the trigger to finger firing when appropriate is insignificant, and the risk of firing unintended is greatly reduced.

  5. Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)

    I did the google thing and I believe I saw how you reached this conclusion … but there are two parts to it – One should not omit the second part.
    “Trigger Finger Discipline: · The practice of keeping your finger “off the trigger” until your sights are on target AND YOU ARE READY TO DISCHARGE THE FIREARM.” (Caps are my own)

  6. She wants him alive so she can question him; otherwise, he’d already be dead. 💀

  7. Good discussion on trigger discipline!
    His skin is very pale / gray. Is this malnourishment, or has he been poisoned with a mind-control drug? I would have to go back and look a t all various of skin tone.

  8. Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)

    Now can we satisfy my curiosity? Colt, Smith & Wesson, Ruger, or other timeline variant?

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540 – Trick Hello

Suzie hearkening back to the last time Eustace was faked out. She probably regrets not being able to sneak the Lawn Ranger into the bedcovers to be the victim of the stabbing.

And with that, it's Episode 23 time! Welcome back to the Ranch, everyone!

The importance of divergence…

This week’s comic features some talk about technology and what should and shouldn’t be possible according to the characters’ knowledge, in particular on the topic of “active camouflage” — which in layman’s terms could best be described as being able to disappear into the background a la The Predator, or Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak. If you google it you’ll come across some videos of people claiming they’ve already made it happen. These videos tend to be, to put it kindly, “unverified.” I don’t know if you reading this are old enough to remember when the claims of cold fusion made headlines back in 1989, only to fizzle under peer review and remain–so far as anyone knows–unrealized nearly 30 years later. But technology has a way of blindsiding even the most prescient of futurists and science fiction authors. What if I write a comic like today’s where Rosa claims active camo isn’t possible, and tomorrow I read the real-world headlines that active camo is real? Well, first I’d be waiting for the cooling off period cold fusion went through (pun intended), but if indeed it turns out to be a real, repeatable, verifiable tech, then I look kind of foolish that I had a tech-savvy character say otherwise, right? That’s when divergence becomes important. How to best explain the concept? Well, most settings where superheroes exist in our modern world tend to set a divergence point somewhere shortly before, during, or after World War II, which not coincidentally was the point in our world where superheroes started appearing in popular media. Human history progresses normally up until the point of divergence, but after that point all bets are off. As exercises in alternative history this can be fascinating in of itself and also allow for positively Kirbyesque flights of fancy, but a very practical reason is entwined in this process as well. For Zombie Ranch, I have taken a snapshot of our world as it existed in the early 21st Century and started riffing on it from there, which means now I don’t feel burdened by the need to continually update based on current real-world technological advances. Instead, the advent of the zombie apocalypse gives me the freedom to say, for example, that Tech Aspect A is further along now than we may ever know in our own lifetimes, but Tech Aspect B remains stagnant or retrograde even though we in the real world might tomorrow be enjoying its benefits (or cursing its problems). Divergence allows for an uncoupling of the reality you require for your story from the reality you’re living through, and I feel is nearly mandatory when you’re dealing with a modern or near future setting. Will active camo be a thing on the battlefields of tomorrow? Is it already a thing, just not available to the public? Will it just prove completely unfeasible to implement? As a certain wizard of Middle-Earth once said: “even the very wise cannot see all ends.” Diverge, and you can just fit your ends to justify your means.