Rec Arts Comics Creative

  • Hcc
  • Lnh
  • 22

Legion of Net.Heroes Volume 2 #35

"Opposites: Spots and Stripes" by Saxon Brenton Click here to read issue
[LNH][Contest] Legion of Net.Heroes Volume 2 #35 HCC8 ___ ___________________________ [A Silver Age-style roster of characters in the form of a series of mug shots in little circles runs down the side of the title page:] Roll call for this issue: o Occultism Kid! o Hell Catalyst!

[LNH][Contest] Legion of Net.Heroes Volume 2 #35  HCC8
     
___  ___________________________
| |-|                             
| |-| []                        /                #35
| | | [] egion of                   'Opposites: Spots and Stripes'
| | | []__ [] []   []  []       / (Part of High Concept Challenge #8)
| | | [___][ []et.[]__[]eroes    
| | |      [] ]   [ __ ]       /    written by and copyright 2010
| |-|      [] []   []  []                  Saxon Brenton
| |-|___________________________/
| | 
| | 
| | Cover shows a number of LNHers reeling in surprise, pain or perhaps 
| | just drama as overlays of two different colour schemes - one of 
| | spots and the other of stripes - clash unevenly down the centre of 
| | the illustration.  The overlays have almost-but-not-totally washed 
| | away the original hues of the Legionnaires, but they bear no 
| | relationship to the shapes of the things they are bringing colour to.
|_| 
     
     
[A Silver Age-style roster of characters in the form of a series of mug 
shots in little circles runs down the side of the title page:]
     
Roll call for this issue:
  o  Occultism Kid!
  o  Hell Catalyst!
  o  Twitter!
     
with appearances by:
  o  Captain Capitalize!
  o  Fearless Leader!
  o  The Hooded Hood Win
  o  Innovative-Offense Boy!
  o  Irony Man!
  o  Johnny Stomper!
  o  Limp-Asparagus Lad!
  o  wReamHack!
     
These are just some of the super-powered do-gooders who belong to an 
organisation that thinks that running around with your underwear on 
the outside is acceptable as a fashion statement.  They are: the 
Legion of Net.Heroes!
     
                    @%%%%%%%%%%@
     
     Luke Nzikal arrived home in suburban Net.ropolis after a long day at 
the office, intending to unwind with some online gaming before dinner.  
He'd already doffed his coat and tie as he'd left work, and now
begrudged 
only enough time to change out of his starched button down shirt in favour 
of a more comfortable t-shirt before settling down in front of his TV and 
logging on to a session of Clown Incursion.
     The premise to the game was simple.  Actually working your way 
through it was more difficult since it required a modicum of strategic 
thinking.  The world had been invaded by evil extradimensional clowns with 
terrible Lovecraftian abilities.  It was up to players - who belonged 
either the faction of robot pirates or of zombie ninjas - to stop the 
invasion.  However pirates and ninjas hated each other, and with all other 
factors being equal would get almost as much experience points from 
knocking off their rivals as they would from destroying the clowns.  
Players therefore had to gather information about each clown incursion 
and carefully assess whether they could afford to go it alone, or whether 
they needed to make a temporary alliance with their enemies.
     Luke's pirate character Rustbeard was scouting a temple complex 
rumoured to be a base of clown cultists when he encountered a slurping 
horror.  More and more of these dangerous beasts had been turning up as 
random encounters recently, and their presence was a fairly solid 
indication that there was a breach into the non-Euclidean realm of the 
clowns somewhere in the area.  But was it a small breach close by, or a 
large breach at a greater distance?  Was it possible that the recent 
loss of contact with harbour city of Davenport was related to this, and 
a major incursion was underway further down the coast?
     Rustbeard drew his wheel lock blaster and fired at the horror, 
which sidestepped the robot's attack with its ability to 17-and-a-half 
dimensional shuffle.  However the pirate had enough experience fighting 
these creatures to recognise the manoeuvre and prepare an appropriate 
counter-counter attack, drawing his vibro cutlass and making a broad 
slice through a few of the most probable areas where the creature would 
rematerialise.
     Luke frowned with concentration, then went "Wha?" as the picture 
started to go wonky.  The image seemed to be loosing resolution.  No, 
not *seemed*.  The image was losing resolution; becoming more pixilated 
as the creatures and objects on screen became blockier.  The gamer 
stared at the picture, and with both befuddlement and a knee-jerk 
irritation wondered what was going wrong with his TV.
     Then with a blinding flash of insight, Luke realised that they 
weren't pixels at all.  
     They were spots.
     He understood now.  He understood *everything*!
     
                    @%%%%%%%%%%@
     
     Twitter frowned as she compared the two blouses.  As any woman will 
tell you there's something almost elementally pleasurable about going 
shopping.  In Twitter's case there was also something of a novelty factor, 
since up until recently her lack of control over her powers had kept her 
from being able to buy her own clothes at all.  "What do you think?"
she 
asked HellCat.
     Hell Catalyst looked up from the shoe display she'd been inspecting 
and gave careful thought.  "I'd go for the blue one for casual.  The 
lacey teal one looks more formal."
     Twitter considered this.  "Hm, yeah."  And then a thought
occurred.  
"Although maybe something in spots."
     HellCat blinked in surprise.  "Spots?  No, I don't think spots
are 
for you."
     Twitter massaged her temples.  "No, I don't think so either, But 
someone around here does," she said, glancing around.
     What happened next was not so much an explosion, since that implies 
a physical concussion leaving devastation in its wake.  Instead the flash 
of colour left everything and everyone covered in spots - and the only 
devastation that that caused was one of good taste.  There were cries of 
surprise and consternation from around the store.
     "No, no, no!" said HellCat.  "This is *not* the fashion
statement I 
was looking for!"  She held up her arm to examine the patterns across the 
back of her hand and on her sleeve.  The spots were in different patterns 
and different combinations of colours.  Then she asked, "Uh, Twitter, 
are you okay?"
     "Spots!, They're everywhere, they're taking over the entire
world!" 
Twitter said, rubbing her eyes and beginning to speak in the rapid fire 
blurt that she typically dropped into when she used her super speed.
     "Well, it does kind of makes everything look like a Roy Lichtenstein 
painting..." began HellCat, but she was brought up short when Twitter 
stopped squeezing her eyes shut and looked at her with that almost 
creepily intense stare she sometimes got.
     "Not out here," Twitter said, flicking her hand to indicate the 
clothing store.  "I mean inside my head!"  Her eyes darted about as if

he was looking for something.  "Someone's got a supervillain level 
monomania about spots."  She vanished.
     Hell Catalyst glanced around.  She couldn't see any afterimages, 
so she guessed that Twitter had moved out onto the street with her super 
speed.
     Twitter reappeared.  "Come on, he's outside," she said, then

vanished again.
     Hell Catalyst followed her.  Twitter was standing on the curb, more 
or less in one place, but all jittery and visible mainly because of 
persistence of vision.  "Look at this place, it's cover in spots,
isn't 
it great?"  She blinked.  "No wait, supervillain plot so spots are
bad, 
arrgh!"  To HellCat she said, "Sorry I'm having trouble
focusing."
     "Just take your time," replied HellCat, reaching out with her own

power to influence other people.  "Take deep breaths if you have to." 

She glanced around, taking in the scene.  "So where is
'he'?"
     The city street was in a state of pandemonium, of course.  However, 
a far bigger problem was that it was also all but unrecognisable.  
Nothing had actually changed shape, but the spots that covered everything 
made them look different enough that it would take a while that the 
pattern recognition abilities of people to be able to easily comprehend 
what they were looking at.  Confusion was inevitable.  And as if to 
emphasise the point, at that moment two cars collided.  
     "He headed off that away," Twitter said, pointing northward. 
"He 
looked like a guy, but he was a couple of stories up so it was kind of 
hard to tell,  He seemed to be levitating on a field of Kirby Spots...  
Dots!,  I mean Kirby Dots."
     "So he's definitely left the area?" asked HellCat, gazing
out over 
the rooftops.
     Twitter shrugged.  "The overwhelming sense of spots being great is 
fading, and all I'm getting now is the people around here being ticked 
off with spots."
     Hell Catalyst took out her communicator and called back to the 
Legion of Net.Heroes HQ.  "HellCat here.  Guys, we've got a bit of a 
situation in Greystanes.  We're in High Street and everything's been 
redecorated with spots, and I mean *everything*, even the sky.  Twitter 
thinks the source may be moving north from here.  Can you do any 
tracking from your end?"
     "Well, now there's a coincidence," came the voice of
wReamhack.  
"We're getting reports that the north side of the harbour has been
covered 
in stripes.  Hold up a second, we've tapped into the CCTV cameras so that 
Multi-Tasking Man can plot a vector."
     Hell Catalyst looked at Twitter.  "You think maybe they're
teaming up?"
     Twitter shook her head emphatically.  "The mind I felt hasn't got

room for anything other than spots."
     "Okay," said wReamhack as he came back online. "Confirm
that.  Two 
guys, one with a aura of spots, the other with stripes, and they're 
moving towards one another at speed."
     "Okey-doeky," said HellCat.  "Listen guys, if it wasn't
obvious 
already, we think they could be moving in for a fight scene.  You might 
want to some heavy hitters there to break them up and keep them from 
doing collateral damage."
     "Limp-Asparagus Lad!" interjected Twitter suddenly.  "He can
try 
and keep them calm with his powers."
     "There's an idea," agreed wReamhack.
     "Have you got the spot guy's starting point?" asked Hell
Catalyst.
     "Uhm, yeah.  Not far from you, as a matter of fact."
     "Okay, gimmee, and we'll go check it out."
     The two of them texted down the address and made their way there.  
When they arrived they discovered a house that had one of the walls 
burst open, and a police cordon.
     "Wow, look at that!" said Twitter, who rushed over at super speed

and examined the hole.  "It's as though the wall wasn't just
decorated 
with spots, but turned into spots and lost its cohesion."
     One of the cops raised his voice and called, "Hey, this is a crime 
scene."
     Hell Catalyst showed him her ID.  "Legion of Net.Heroes," she
said.
     He raised an eyebrow.  "What, are you the Spotty Sisters, or 
something?" he snarked.
     .oO( Oh dear, ) thought HellCat, and turned her powers onto him.  
In a bright voice she said, "You know, it would be a really peachy keen 
idea to let the Legion of Net.Heroes onto the scene so that they can 
solve this problem as quickly as possible."
     "Hey, yeah.  It would be, wouldn't it?  The guy who's
already here 
could use your help."
     "Oh, I'm sure he could," HellCat gushed.  "Thanks for
everything."
     Once they were inside the found the other Legionnaire crouched down, 
examining the remains of a television with an exploded screen.
     "Oh, hi there Occultism Kid," said HellCat.
     "Hello, Hell Catalyst," said the trenchcoat wearing mage,
glancing 
over at the two women.  "Got zapped by the Spot Lord, huh?" he said, 
not without sympathy.
     " 'Fraid so.  We were shopping when the spots went down, and even

changing into costume hasn't helped fix this fashion disaster.  Whatcha 
got here?" she asked him, as Twitter impulsively moved forward to take 
a look at the way the TV screen, but only the screen, had shattered 
outwards across the carpet.
     "Well, there's a *lot* of retcotheric energy related to our two 
antagonists.  But that isn't too much of a surprise, since they look like 
they're literally a Lord of Spots and of Stripes.  Anyway, I was kind of 
hoping that there was some sort of artefact here that one of them might 
have been drawing power from, like a battery..."
     "Or even a portal that could be shut down, cutting off the power 
flow," said Twitter offhandedly as she examined the TV, causing Occultism 
Kid to look at her in surprise.
     "Oh, right.  You must be Twitter," he said.  "Hold up a
moment."
     There was a second's pause, and then Twitter blinked in surprise.  
With a touch of chagrin she said, "Oops.  Sorry, I keep forgetting not 
to do that.  Neat trick, by the way."
     Hell Catalyst was confused.  "What?"
     "Blocked my mind from being read telepathically," answered
Occultism 
Kid.  To Twitter he added, "You might want to be careful about that.  I 
won't lie to you and say it wasn't at least partly about personal
privacy.  
But I also know a number of occult secrets - some of them really gut 
churningly horrible stuff.  That's not really something I'd want
anybody 
stumbling on by accident."
     "Er, okay," said Twitter, somewhat disturbed.
     He smiled reassuringly.  "Hey, I'm not mad or anything," he
said, 
perhaps a little too quickly.  "I just worry about people ending up on 
the pointy end of good old 'things that humans weren't meant to
know'.  
Human sanity can be a fragile thing sometimes."  He ahemed and 
changed the topic.  "Anyway, what we have here seems to be a direct 
manifestation of one the Lords of Spots, using a human to incarnate 
itself into a physical form.
     "Just a second," said HellCat.  " 'Lord of Spots'.
 You mentioned 
that a second ago.  Is that anything like the Lords of Order and Chaos?  
Or that other one... The one involved in the affair with the undead 
gorillas in the subway?"  [_Legion of Net.Heroes Volume 2 #4-5 - Footnote
Girl]
     "The Lord of Art," supplied Twitter - who even by accident was
able 
to telepathically retrieve the memory faster than HellCat could.
     "That's it," agreed HellCat,  "The Lords of Art and
Nature."
     "Something very much like that," said Occultism Kid.
     "Uhm," went Twitter, who had by now slowed down to the point
where 
she was able to think about the notion for herself, rather than just 
have the information randomly flash through her mind.  "So how many of 
those groups are there?"
     Occultism Kid shrugged.  "Scores of them.  As many as the 
Looniverse's Drama field can bear.  Look, the force of Drama thrives on 
conflict, yes?  And one form of conflict is the dynamic antagonism 
between cosmic dualities.  Everyone knows about Good and Evil, and Order 
versus Chaos.  They're very high level ones of course, among the 
universal dualities.  Spots versus Stripes are lower down the scale.  
Much lower.  They're one of the parochials, after all.  But they can 
still cause a lot of trouble when they manifest in the material world 
and starting butting heads with each other."
     "Oh, poopy.  And here we were thinking it was simple supervillain 
monomania," said HellCat sardonically.  "So, what ideas do we have for

stopping them?"
     Occultism Kid stuffed his hands in his pockets and looked 
thoughtful.  Twitter began to pace around the room.  "We can't cut off

their power supply," she said.
     "Correct," agreed Occultism Kid.  "Their power seems to have
been 
internalised.  We could wait until the human bodies burn out from 
overload, but there are issues of 'protect the innocent' and the
amount 
of collateral damage that would be done in the meantime."
     "Could you... I dunno... exorcise the power from them?"
     "Possibly," he said, "But they're packing a *lot* of
power.  
They'd have to be overpowered and restrained..."
     "Oh, that shouldn't be too difficult," HellCat said. 
"All we have 
to do is call up Kid Kirby or Cheeezarr.  It's not like the Legion 
doesn't have powerful members."
     "Ooo! Ooo, ooo, ooo!" went Twitter, who started bouncing up and
down 
in a very good impersonation of Kid Enthusiastic.  "I know, we use their 
power against them!"
     "Pardon?"
     "Look, it's about conflicting opposites, right?  The clash of two

types in a dynamic antagonism?  But that's not the only way that 
opposites interact!  Black and white can mix at the boundary to make 
grey.  And then there's synthesis!  The classic yin-yang symbol, where 
each half complements the other, and they have a bit of the other within 
themselves.  Can you do something to make them cancel each other out 
rather than going all matter-antimatter explodey?"
     "They'd still have to be restrained in one place, probably in
some 
sort of magic circle," mused Occultism Kid.  "But on the plus side, it

would be a lot quicker than trying to build up a separate charge of 
energy to neutralise them both."  He looked at Twitter, "You know, I 
think that might be a workable plan."
     
               @%%%%%%%%%%@
     
     A hasty quarter hour later:
     Fearless Leader took a skycycle and flew up to where Limp-Asparagus 
Lad was floating several hundred metres away from the sparring Lords of 
Spots and Stripes.  Fortunately 'sparring' was all they were doing - 
dancing around each other and making occasional feints as they tested 
each other's strength.  So far Limp-Asparagus Lad's drama dampening 
powers had been able to ensure to that at least, and kept the two from 
escalating into a full-on no-holds barred fight scene.
     Occultism Kid had expressed relief and gratitude for that after he 
had realised how much power the two Lords had.  He'd taken mystic 
soundings to estimate their power levels in order to be able to properly 
delineate the energy strictures of his own spell - and discovered that 
they were at minor cosmic level.  If they'd been allowed to fight one 
another, or even been engaged for subdual by some of the more powerful 
LNH members, then they were packing enough power to shatter the 
Looniearth!
     As he made his way towards Limp-Asparagus Lad, Fearless Leader 
noted that they'd already done enough damage.  There was a several 
square kilometre zone of the suburbs along the north shore of the 
harbour which had been evacuated, and within which the landscape had 
been twisted into some piece of strange abstract art, or in a few 
locations simply disintegrated.  There were also a few news helicopters 
hovering out beyond the edge of the air exclusion zone that had been set up.
     Fearless Leader pulled up next to L-ALad, who briefly nodded to him.  
"How're things holding?" Fearless Leader asked.
     "Quite well, actually," replied the Man of Dull.  "They do
not seem 
to be interested in much more than directly opposing each other, and I 
am keeping that to low level antagonism.  They also don't seem to want to 
use the ground or buildings as cover, the way humans would." 
     Fearless Leader nodded.  "That would make sense.  If they're
cosmic 
principles and even their indirect fallout can reshape the landscape," 
and here he made another glance at the twisted land below them, "then 
incidental obstacles aren't much of a hindrance to them, and they'll 
simply ignore everything else."  He raised an eyebrow.  "That may be
why 
you've been able to sneak in so close and dampen them down: it's not 
within their mindset to consider anything other than their direct 
opponent when fighting."
     "For which I am duly appreciative," said Limp-Asparagus Lad, 
straight faced.
     "Have they dropped any useful pieces of information while they've

been bombasting at each other?"
     "They haven't been bombasting at each other," said
Limp-Asparagus 
Lad.  "They haven't been talking at all."
     "Really?  Huh, well, that's kind of creepy.  Oh well.  Look, 
Occultism Kid is about to start his big yin-yang spell.  We're going to 
try and drive those two over to the magic circle that he's laid out on 
the basketball courts at Blueberry Fields.  Keep your powers focused on 
those two during the time the others are herding them to the trap, then 
cut off the moment Occultism Kid says he's starting the spell.
     "Understood."
     Fearless Leader activated his communicator and said, "We're right

to go."
     "Roger that," came the voice of Innovative-Offense Boy from the 
other end.  "Beginning operation now."
     There was a roar of jets as Johnny Stomper's StomperRobo came in 
on a flat trajectory and crashed tackled the Lord of Stripes, dragging 
him several kilometres towards the target area.  The Lord of Spots 
followed, as expected.  However about three quarters of the way there 
the Robo disintegrated into lines of vector graphics as the Lord of 
Stripes used his abilities against it.
     The Lord of Spots moved forwards to take advantage of this 
distraction, only to be caught by the same tactic as Irony Man grabbed 
him and began to drag him along as well.  CAPTAIN CAPITALIZE likewise 
joined the fray, in a somewhat successful attempt to get the Lord of 
Stripes closer to where Occultism Kid needed him.
     The Lord of Spots dismissed Irony Man with an omnidirectional burst 
of spots that acted like a repulsor ray (how ironic).  The net.hero was 
sent flying backwards, but circled around, looking for another avenue 
of attack.
     And throughout it all, the two Lords stayed eerily silent, not 
engaging in any sort of supervillainous banter at all.
     
                    @%%%%%%%%%%@
     
     At ground level Innovative-Offense Boy lowered his binoculars with 
a shake of his head.  "It *@?>*% well looks like we've reached the
point 
of diminishing @=!@# returns," he said to Occultism Kid.  Into his 
communicator he said, "Okay guys.  Pull the %$(&} back.  We're
going to 
'[#@/ well try for the second +#*' plan."  Then he looked at
another 
Legionnaire, who was standing beside Hell Catalyst.  "Looks like
you're 
#?/}* well up, Hood."
     <( Very well, )> said the Hooded Hood Win.  She threw wide her 
hands in a dramatic gesture and announced, <( She Who Must Know demands... 
Wh'oo'd Win in a contest between the avatars of the Lord of Spots and
the 
Lord of Stripes in a race to their allocated positions in Occultism Kid's 
magic circle. )>
     For nearly two whole seconds nothing seemed to happen.  <( They are 
resisting, )> said the Hood Win through gritted teeth.
     "You want to #*&@!ing well burn a plot device?" asked
Innovative- 
Offense Boy.
     "No, here they come," said Occultism Kid as the two Lords
suddenly 
made a beeline for their respective halves of the huge yin-yang circle. 
"NOW!" he yelled, punctuating the exclamation with a slicing motion to

indicate that everybody should halt trying to affect the two Lords with 
their abilities; he didn't want any other superhuman powers present and 
interfering with the spell of synthesis.
     As Innovative-Offensce Boy relayed that order over the communicators, 
Occultism Kid activated the spell.  Once again there was a pause as 
nothing seemed to happen, but as soon as the two cosmic principles 
within its bounds began to throw their spots and stripes against each 
other, the circle began to glow as the energy was siphoned off.  The 
lines of the yin-yang pattern of the circle began to throb.  The Lords 
appeared  to ignore this, until a critical point was reached.  From 
then on the circle was no longer absorbing any free energy that had 
been let loose within its bounds - it was now actively leeching power 
off from the two of them.
     Now the Lords of Spots and Stripes struggled to free themselves from 
the magical trap that they found themselves in.  It didn't do any good.  
They lashed out with explosions of spots and cutting rays of stripes, but 
these were simply whisked away to the edges of the circle where they were 
absorbed.  The pattern inscribed on the ground began to pulse with greater 
vehemence.  The two prisoners tried to move to the edge of the circle and 
perhaps force their way through the barrier, but they discovered that 
they had each gravitated to the eye at the focus of each half of the 
yin-yang symbol and could not leave that spot.  And then the circle began 
to spin.
     "Whoa!" went Twitter.  She had been up close examining the glow
of 
the circle, but now jumped backwards to join the other few LNHers standing 
beside Innovative-Offense Boy.  The spin of the rotating circle made a 
menacing whoosh-whoosh-whoosh noise as it sped up, despite the fact that 
the only physical things within it which were moving the two Lords.  Power 
was streaming out of them, and now for the first time they could be heard 
making a noise as they yelled in outrage and then screamed in fear.
     Their terror did not impress Occultism Kid.  "Those bodies do not 
belong to you," he said in a brokes-no-nonsense tone of voice. 
"Begone, 
and do not return!"
     The rapidly rotating circle was now glowing too brightly to look at 
directly, and then with a mighty clap of thunder there was detonation.
     When people could see again the circle was no longer glowing or 
rotating, and two figures were lying unconscious on the ground.  Occultism 
Kid stepped forward to take the pulse of the closest man.  Other 
Legionnaires moved forward to check the other; Twitter got there first, of 
course.  "Still alive, but very weak," observed Occultism Kid." 
He looked 
at Innovative-Offense Boy.  "A job well done, I would say."
     "You're not finished just yet," said Hell catalyst, as the
paramedics 
moved it to take the unconscious men to hospital.  Occultism Kid was 
confused.  "What else besides cleaning up is there?" he asked.
     "Some of us aren't interested in going about in spots or stripes
for 
any longer than is necessary," she said, pointing to one spotty hand.
     Occultism Kid rolled his eyes.  "May the Sera.pin-numbers have mercy. 

There's always *something*," he said ruefully.
     
     
=========Character credits:
     Captain Capitalize, Hooded Hood Win and wReamHack created by wReam 
(Ray Bingham).
     Fearless Leader created by Dvandom (Dave Van Domelen). 
     Innovative-Offense Boy created by uplink (John Scheibeler).
     Irony Man created by Doug Moran.
     Hell Catalyst created by Jeff McCosky.
     Johnny Stomper and Occultism Kid created by Josh Geurink.
     Limp-Asparagus Lad created by wReam and owned by Saxon Brenton.
     Twitter created by Rob Rogers.
     
Authors notes:
     Written for the 8th High Concept challenge: Opposites.
     Kind of unfocused as a story.  But Twitter is always fun to write, 
and she's even more hyper here than she was in _Beige Midnight_ for
 reasons that I suppose one day Rob and/or myself will have to get around 
to explaining in detail.  (Actually, an early idea was to team Twitter up 
with Writers Block Woman, and see how Mouse coped with *two* women whose 
powers made them somewhat scatterbrained.
     
--
Saxon Brenton   University of Technology, city library, Sydney Australia
     saxon.bren...@uts.edu.au     saxonbren...@hotmail.com
"These 'no-nonsense' solutions of yours just don't hold
water in a complex
world of jet-powered apes and time-travel." - Superman, JLA Classified #3
  
   		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
If It Exists, You'll Find it on SEEK. Australia's #1 job site
On Apr 25, 2:46 am, Saxon Brenton <saxonbren...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> [LNH][Contest] Legion of Net.Heroes Volume 2 #35  HCC8
> ...
> Authors notes:
>      Written for the 8th High Concept challenge: Opposites.

High marks for using actual opposites within the story.  More opposite
than a Christian saint and a talking duck, I'll have to admit.

>      Kind of unfocused as a story.

The heroes seemed highly focused to me, and the battle was exciting.

It would have been nice to have a visual effect for when spots and
stripes battle... but I suppose that's the sort of thing that mortal
eye was not meant to see.
Scott Eiler
Scott replied:
>>   Kind of unfocused as a story.
>
> The heroes seemed highly focused to me, and the battle was exciting.
> 
> It would have been nice to have a visual effect for when spots and
> stripes battle... but I suppose that's the sort of thing that mortal
> eye was not meant to see.
 
[Before I get into the reply proper, I'll just note: AAAaaargh!!!  I was 
so busy trying to finish the story off and post it yesterday afternoon 
that I COMPLETELY FORGOT to have Occultism Kid make the throwaway comment 
about plaid versus paisley among the other paraochial level dualities.]
 
Okay then.  Perhaps I'm being overly picky, but my gut feeling is that 
I only used the concept of opposites as a way of picking a theme villain 
and hanging a superhero story on it, rather than exploring the concept.  
If it had of been longer I probably would have had more emphasis on the 
two Lords, and perhaps got into their headspaces.  As it is the story 
*does* work better than the last time I did a HHC entry which didn't 
*quite* manage to focus on the concept (LNHv2 #31 - the 'kitbashed hero' 
with Unity, W.I.L.B.U.R., and Limp-Asparagus Lad). 
 
I agree that the fight scene works well (something of a pleasant surprise, 
because it was the last bit written and was literally being worked on 
while I was doing my Sunday desk shift yesterday).  However for the most 
part the I think it works because it's mostly got lots of good character 
interaction.  All three leads were fun to write for one reason or another.
 
-
Saxon Brenton
Daleks not only don't have noses, they don't a sense of humour.  So if 
you trap one in a Monthy Python skit they will predictably self-destruct 
in confusion and fear.
  
   		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Browse profiles for FREE! Meet local singles online.
http://clk.atdmt.com/NMN/go/150855801/direct/01/
Saxon Brenton, author
On Sun, 25 Apr 2010 07:46:06 +0000 (UTC), Saxon Brenton wrote:

> Authors notes:
>      Written for the 8th High Concept challenge: Opposites.

Just under the wire! (Well, Tom's was even juster.)

>      Kind of unfocused as a story.  

I thought it needed a bit more conflict; as it is, the first plan they come
up with works just fine.  That said, what there was was well-written.

Also, I'd like to have seen more Luke at the end!

> But Twitter is always fun to write, 

And fun to read!

> and she's even more hyper here than she was in _Beige Midnight_ for
>  reasons that I suppose one day Rob and/or myself will have to get around 
> to explaining in detail.  

Ohoho really.  Yes, that'll have to be soon, so I can use her. >>c

> (Actually, an early idea was to team Twitter up 
> with Writers Block Woman, and see how Mouse coped with *two* women whose 
> powers made them somewhat scatterbrained.

More Mouse is always a treat. <3

> [Before I get into the reply proper, I'll just note: AAAaaargh!!!  I was 
> so busy trying to finish the story off and post it yesterday afternoon 
> that I COMPLETELY FORGOT to have Occultism Kid make the throwaway comment 
> about plaid versus paisley among the other paraochial level dualities.]

Now *that*'s just silly.

> Okay then.  Perhaps I'm being overly picky, but my gut feeling is that 
> I only used the concept of opposites as a way of picking a theme villain 
> and hanging a superhero story on it, rather than exploring the concept.  
> If it had of been longer I probably would have had more emphasis on the 
> two Lords, and perhaps got into their headspaces.  

There was a hint of that in the story, with their eerie quiet during the
battle, but as you say, it wasn't explored.

> As it is the story 
> *does* work better than the last time I did a HHC entry which didn't 
> *quite* manage to focus on the concept (LNHv2 #31 - the 'kitbashed
hero' 
> with Unity, W.I.L.B.U.R., and Limp-Asparagus Lad). 

That one also had the "lack of conflict/first plan works" problem.

> I agree that the fight scene works well (something of a pleasant surprise, 
> because it was the last bit written and was literally being worked on 
> while I was doing my Sunday desk shift yesterday).  However for the most 
> part the I think it works because it's mostly got lots of good character 
> interaction.  All three leads were fun to write for one reason or another.

Oh, definitely.  All good characters.  (For some reason, I imagine Hell
Catalyst as a few pounds heavier than Catalyst Lass.  No idea why.)

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, perhaps because it's
cute.
Andrew Perron
On Apr 26, 6:07 am, Andrew Perron <pwer...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Sun, 25 Apr 2010 07:46:06 +0000 (UTC), Saxon Brenton wrote:
> > Authors notes:
> >      Written for the 8th High Concept challenge: Opposites.
>
> Just under the wire! (Well, Tom's was even juster.)
>
> >      Kind of unfocused as a story.
>
> I thought it needed a bit more conflict; as it is, the first plan they come
> up with works just fine.

Yeah, there was that too.  I can't claim any superiority in
suspenseful conflict-writing, though.  Usually Andrew has to prompt
me, "I thought it needed a bit more conflict..."
Scott Eiler
Saxon Brenton wrote:

>      The Lord of Spots dismissed Irony Man with an omnidirectional burst 
> of spots that acted like a repulsor ray (how ironic).  The net.hero was 
> sent flying backwards, but circled around, looking for another avenue 
> of attack.

Ah, looks like Irony Man is still a member of the LNH!  (Granted there's 
nothing to indicate in this appearance of whether it's Toony Stork or 
someone else in the suit...)

Which brings me to a question I'd like to ask the group.

Beige Midnight won't resolve the Irony Man plot... at the end he'll 
still be an LNH'r and still be a jerk and still be guilty of a whole lot 
of crimes...

So my question is, What should happen to him?

Should he go to prison (some cushy white collar criminal prison?) and 
have one of his employees be the new Irony Man... (and considering that 
the end of Beige Midnight is two years ago, he could have completed his 
sentence by now...)

Or should he just get a slap on the wrist... and remain an LNH'r?

I think I prefer the whole going to prison and having a new guy replace 
him myself... although I don't have any plans to write Toony in prison 
stories...

Arthur "Any thoughts about this?" Spitzer
On Apr 26, 7:02 pm, Arthur Spitzer <arspit...@earthlink.net> wrote:

> Ah, looks like Irony Man is still a member of the LNH!  (Granted there's
> nothing to indicate in this appearance of whether it's Toony Stork or
> someone else in the suit...)
>
> So my question is, What should happen to him?

My own fiction started (well, one source) with my viewpoint character
inspired by 1980s Iron Man comics, enough to go neutralize all the
weapons *he'd* ever worked on.  And he was a Reagan-era defense
contractor who'd worked on the MX Missile.  Hijinks ensued.
http://www.eilertech.com/1988/me1.htm#mewars

So, judge Toony Stark and Irony Man accordingly.
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010 00:02:51 +0000 (UTC), Arthur Spitzer wrote:

> Saxon Brenton wrote:
> 
>>      The Lord of Spots dismissed Irony Man with an omnidirectional burst 
>> of spots that acted like a repulsor ray (how ironic).  The net.hero was 
>> sent flying backwards, but circled around, looking for another avenue 
>> of attack.
> 
> Ah, looks like Irony Man is still a member of the LNH!  (Granted there's 
> nothing to indicate in this appearance of whether it's Toony Stork or 
> someone else in the suit...)

I wondered if he'd asked you about this. 

> Which brings me to a question I'd like to ask the group.
> 
> Beige Midnight won't resolve the Irony Man plot... at the end he'll 
> still be an LNH'r and still be a jerk and still be guilty of a whole lot 
> of crimes...
> 
> So my question is, What should happen to him?
> 
> Should he go to prison (some cushy white collar criminal prison?) and 
> have one of his employees be the new Irony Man... (and considering that 
> the end of Beige Midnight is two years ago, he could have completed his 
> sentence by now...)
> 
> Or should he just get a slap on the wrist... and remain an LNH'r?
> 
> I think I prefer the whole going to prison and having a new guy replace 
> him myself... although I don't have any plans to write Toony in prison 
> stories...

Hmmmmmmmm.  I'd like a "Trial of Irony Man" story, where, at the end,
he is
acquitted but gives up the role voluntarily and passes it down to someone
new.

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, or a more ironic variation on
the
above.
On Tue, 27 Apr 2010 06:53:54 +0000 (UTC), Scott Eiler wrote:

> http://www.eilertech.com/1988/me1.htm#mewars

BTW, this URL doesn't work.

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, skaploom
On Mon, 26 Apr 2010 21:47:09 +0000 (UTC), Scott Eiler wrote:

> On Apr 26, 6:07 am, Andrew Perron <pwer...@gmail.com> wrote:

>> I thought it needed a bit more conflict; as it is, the first plan they come
>> up with works just fine.
> 
> Yeah, there was that too.  I can't claim any superiority in
> suspenseful conflict-writing, though.  Usually Andrew has to prompt
> me, "I thought it needed a bit more conflict..."

It's weird, too, because I'd expect to be the one on the side of increasing
character interaction and the like.  Instead, I'm all "More arguing and
hitting things, please!"

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, just goes to show.
Andrew Perron
In article <uuKdncr0b-0CtEvWnZ2dnUVZ_vedn...@earthlink.com>,
Arthur Spitzer  <arspit...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>Which brings me to a question I'd like to ask the group.
>
>Beige Midnight won't resolve the Irony Man plot... at the end he'll 
>still be an LNH'r and still be a jerk and still be guilty of a whole lot 
>of crimes...
>
>So my question is, What should happen to him?
>
>Should he go to prison (some cushy white collar criminal prison?) and 
>have one of his employees be the new Irony Man... (and considering that 
>the end of Beige Midnight is two years ago, he could have completed his 
>sentence by now...)
>
>Or should he just get a slap on the wrist... and remain an LNH'r?

     Given how Marvel dealt with the matter, I'd suggest a few potential
paths.  For those who avoided Iron Man lately, in a nutshell Tony erased his
own brain to keep Norman Osborn from getting at the secrets in his head, but
did it in a very careful way with micro-repulsor blasts so that the brain
itself would be intact.  Then he had friends upload an "innocent" backup
copy
of himself into his blanked brain.  This isn't as implausible as it might
seem, since the whole plot of Iron Man: Hypervelocity involved a backup copy
of Tony's mind running a suit of armor.  (It would have been cooler if the
Hypervelocity version was what got re-uploaded into Tony's brain, mind you,
but Fraction isn't that good.)

     1) Reductio ad absurdem.  Toony decides that he needs to excise the
parts of his brain that were responsible for his vile deeds, and sets about
doing so with a ball peen hammer or some other similarly crude instrument.

     2) Baldfaced reboot.  Tony Stark gets a reboot of some sort every so
often (Teen Tony replacing Evil Tony, merged post-Heroes Return Tony
replacing Teen Tony, Fraction's backup copy, etc).  Just say that offscreen
Toony did a clean install.  Maybe give him some compatibility issues with old
drivers.  (Perhaps literally...give him a chauffeur character like Happy
Hogan and have them not get along, for an incompatible driver.)

     3) Inversion parody.  Fraction's story had Tony getting progressively
more mentally handicapped until he was effectively brain dead.  The parody
could go the other way, with Toony trying to force a limit break or something
by boosting his brainpower over and over again in the hopes of being able to
think his way out of the situation.  Flowers for Alt.gernon sort of thing,
perhaps.  

     Dave Van Domelen, figures any of these could be made somehow ironic as
well.
> My own fiction started (well, one source) with my viewpoint character
> inspired by 1980s Iron Man comics, enough to go neutralize all the
> weapons *he'd* ever worked on.  And he was a Reagan-era defense
> contractor who'd worked on the MX Missile.  Hijinks
ensued.http://www.eilertech.com/1988/me1.htm#mewars
>
> So, judge Toony Stark and Irony Man accordingly.

Please make that link http://www.eilertech.com/stories/1988/me1.htm#mewars
.
Andrew Perron replied to Arthur Spitzer commenting on Saxon's story:
>> Saxon Brenton wrote: 
>>>      The Lord of Spots dismissed Irony Man with an omnidirectional burst

>>> of spots that acted like a repulsor ray (how ironic).  The net.hero was 
>>> sent flying backwards, but circled around, looking for another avenue 
>>> of attack.
>> 
>> Ah, looks like Irony Man is still a member of the LNH!  (Granted
there's 
>> nothing to indicate in this appearance of whether it's Toony Stork or 
>> someone else in the suit...)
> 
> I wondered if he'd asked you about this. 
 
Uh, no.  I didn't.  As it was I barely remembered to ask Rob whether Twitter 
survived Beige Midnight.  As I said, the fight scene was wriiten at the last 
minute last minute, and I was just kind of desperately thinking up strong 
guys who could fly to use as cameos.
  
  
Then Dvandom wrote:
>  Given how Marvel dealt with the matter, I'd suggest a few potential paths.

 
[options deleted]
 
Or perhaps something snarky something like this?:
 
LNH-HQ.  Catalyst Lass walks over to Teen Toony (the teenaged version of 
Toony Stark, Irony Man, the altter who died in the act of saving the Legion 
from one of Hex Luthor's backup plans, in the process gaining redemption 
for himself).  "Heya, Toony!"
 
TT looks up from the membership forms he's filling in.  "Hi, Cat."
 
Cat: "I just wanted to tell you that it's peachy keen that you're
taking 
up residence in this timeline as a replacement for your now deceased alt.self.  
Welcome aboard."
 
TT: "Thanks.  It'll be a big set of shoes to fill, but I'll do my
best."
 
Cat: "I'm sure you'll do great."
 
TT (to himself as Cat walks away): .oO( Thank goodness the other LNHers 
don't realise I've faked my own death by uploading my mind into this 
teenaged clone I made of myself. There's just too much baggage associated 
with the things I had to do to help save the Looniearth during Beige Midnight 
to be able to maintain my identity as the original Toony Stark they knew. )
  
  
-
Saxon Brenton
Daleks not only don't have noses, they don't a sense of humour.  So if 
you trap one in a Monthy Python skit they will predictably self-destruct 
in confusion and fear.
  
   		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
New, Used, Demo, Dealer or Private? Find it at CarPoint.com.au
http://clk.atdmt.com/NMN/go/206222968/direct/01/
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010 04:40:19 +0000 (UTC), Saxon Brenton wrote:

> TT (to himself as Cat walks away): .oO( Thank goodness the other LNHers 
> don't realise I've faked my own death by uploading my mind into this 
> teenaged clone I made of myself. There's just too much baggage associated 
> with the things I had to do to help save the Looniearth during Beige Midnight 
> to be able to maintain my identity as the original Toony Stark they knew. )

Oooooh, you could have him steal the plan from Hex (preventing him from
using it), making it a play on the young-Lex-Luthor story from the early
'90s as well.

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, where he was dating the
Matrix
Supergirl.
On Apr 26, 5:02 pm, Arthur Spitzer <arspit...@earthlink.net> wrote:

> Should he go to prison (some cushy white collar criminal prison?) and
> have one of his employees be the new Irony Man... (and considering that
> the end of Beige Midnight is two years ago, he could have completed his
> sentence by now...)
>
> Or should he just get a slap on the wrist... and remain an LNH'r?

I think he should be acclaimed as a hero at the end of Beige
Midnight, which eats away at his conscience.  He should try to
confess his crimes... and find that the more he admits to being a
jerk, the more people celebrate him as a hero, making him feel
like a phony, worthless, miserable human being trapped inside
the shell of a hero - a hell of his own making.

He is Irony Man, after all...

-Easily-Discovered Man Lite
-After Beige Midnight, plans to let
it all hang down...
Andrew Perron wrote:
> 
> Hmmmmmmmm.  I'd like a "Trial of Irony Man" story, where, at the
end, he is
> acquitted but gives up the role voluntarily and passes it down to someone
> new.
> 
> Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, or a more ironic
variation on the
> above.

Any ideas on who should be the new Irony Man, if that happens?

Arthur "Pick a name" Spitzer
EDMLite wrote:
> On Apr 26, 5:02 pm, Arthur Spitzer <arspit...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> 
>> Should he go to prison (some cushy white collar criminal prison?) and
>> have one of his employees be the new Irony Man... (and considering that
>> the end of Beige Midnight is two years ago, he could have completed his
>> sentence by now...)
>>
>> Or should he just get a slap on the wrist... and remain an LNH'r?
> 
> I think he should be acclaimed as a hero at the end of Beige
> Midnight, which eats away at his conscience.  He should try to
> confess his crimes... and find that the more he admits to being a
> jerk, the more people celebrate him as a hero, making him feel
> like a phony, worthless, miserable human being trapped inside
> the shell of a hero - a hell of his own making.
> 
> He is Irony Man, after all...

Actually that could probably work...

I might not even have to change the plot...

I could just have a scene where a couple of clueless reporters videotape 
Irony Man doing something with his hands that they think saved the 
Looniverse...

> 
> -Easily-Discovered Man Lite
> -After Beige Midnight, plans to let
> it all hang down...

Arthur "But you'll have to finish Beige Countdown #9-8 first" Spitzer
Saxon Brenton wrote:
>     Then Dvandom wrote:
>>  Given how Marvel dealt with the matter, I'd suggest a few potential
>> paths. 
>  [options deleted]
>  Or perhaps something snarky something like this?:
>  LNH-HQ.  Catalyst Lass walks over to Teen Toony (the teenaged version
> of Toony Stark, Irony Man, the altter who died in the act of saving the
> Legion from one of Hex Luthor's backup plans, in the process gaining
> redemption for himself).  "Heya, Toony!"
>  TT looks up from the membership forms he's filling in.  "Hi,
Cat."
>  Cat: "I just wanted to tell you that it's peachy keen that
you're
> taking up residence in this timeline as a replacement for your now
> deceased alt.self.  Welcome aboard."
>  TT: "Thanks.  It'll be a big set of shoes to fill, but I'll do
my
> best."
>  Cat: "I'm sure you'll do great."
>  TT (to himself as Cat walks away): .oO( Thank goodness the other LNHers
> don't realise I've faked my own death by uploading my mind into this
> teenaged clone I made of myself. There's just too much baggage
> associated with the things I had to do to help save the Looniearth
> during Beige Midnight to be able to maintain my identity as the original
> Toony Stark they knew. )
>   


I think that probably doesn't go far enough... we need something that
combines every comic book trope Tom Russell hates to explain why Irony Man
isn't responsible for his actions...

Arthur "The Composite Irony Man" Spitzer
On Thu, 29 Apr 2010 23:25:47 +0000 (UTC), Arthur Spitzer wrote:

> Andrew Perron wrote:
>> 
>> Hmmmmmmmm.  I'd like a "Trial of Irony Man" story, where, at
the end, he is
>> acquitted but gives up the role voluntarily and passes it down to someone
>> new.
>> 
>> Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, or a more ironic
variation on the
>> above.
> 
> Any ideas on who should be the new Irony Man, if that happens?

Well, there's the Ironic Woman, of course.  We could have a Steel parody
(John Henry Irony?), or possibly a merged Steel/War Machine parody. (Note
that WM showing up in the new Iron Man movie makes this actually topical!)

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, I mean, Jim Rhodes was in the
first
one, but...
On Thu, 29 Apr 2010 23:54:59 +0000 (UTC), Arthur Spitzer wrote:

> I think that probably doesn't go far enough... we need something that
> combines every comic book trope Tom Russell hates to explain why Irony Man
> isn't responsible for his actions...

An alien shapeshifter guided by a prophecy who was mind-controlled into
thinking he was Irony Man, and who raised the clone in a VR simulation,
only for the original Irony Man to body-jump into it?

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, VR counts as an illusion.
On Apr 28, 11:29 am, EDMLite <robroger...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Apr 26, 5:02 pm, Arthur Spitzer <arspit...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
> > Should he go to prison (some cushy white collar criminal prison?) and
> > have one of his employees be the new Irony Man... (and considering that
> > the end of Beige Midnight is two years ago, he could have completed his
> > sentence by now...)
>
> > Or should he just get a slap on the wrist... and remain an LNH'r?

I'm confused.  Hex Luthor was president so why would Irony Man go to
jail because he let gave Hex Luthor authority over the LNH?  Didn't
Ultimate Ninja go to jail because he tried to oppose Hex's takeover of
the LNH?  So Irony Man could just claim that he was going along with
Hex because legally Hex had the authority.

> I think he should be acclaimed as a hero at the end of Beige
> Midnight, which eats away at his conscience.  He should try to
> confess his crimes... and find that the more he admits to being a
> jerk, the more people celebrate him as a hero, making him feel
> like a phony, worthless, miserable human being trapped inside
> the shell of a hero - a hell of his own making.
>
> He is Irony Man, after all...

Exactly.

By the way, I saw Iron Man 2 today.  Can't believe the first one
hadn't come out when Beige Midnight started.

Martin
On Sat, 1 May 2010 12:09:11 +0000 (UTC), Martin Phipps wrote:

> I'm confused.  Hex Luthor was president so why would Irony Man go to
> jail because he let gave Hex Luthor authority over the LNH?  Didn't
> Ultimate Ninja go to jail because he tried to oppose Hex's takeover of
> the LNH?  So Irony Man could just claim that he was going along with
> Hex because legally Hex had the authority.

I think it's less "authority over the LNH" and more "helping Hex
mass-brainwash thousands of people".

Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, just sayin'.
On 28/Apr/2010 Rob Rogers wrote about the fate of Irony Man:
> I think he should be acclaimed as a hero at the end of Beige
> Midnight, which eats away at his conscience. He should try to
> confess his crimes... and find that the more he admits to being a
> jerk, the more people celebrate him as a hero, making him feel
> like a phony, worthless, miserable human being trapped inside
> the shell of a hero - a hell of his own making.
> 
>  He is Irony Man, after all...
  
I like this version.  It's much more twisted than my idea, and 
yet avoids grim'n'gritty.  I'm impressed.
   
-
Saxon Brenton
  
  

 
 		 	   		  
_________________________________________________________________
Need a new place to live? Find it on Domain.com.au
http://clk.atdmt.com/NMN/go/157631292/direct/01/