2960 Sing A Little Dream For Me.

Patreon
Subscribestar
Comic Vote
Reddit
Wiki
Presents List
Shirts & such.
Ko-Fi.

I’m sitting here trying to remember how the server clock works because I didn’t just switch to my surface after I was done drawing and it threw my ability to think off really badly.

Okay, I went back to duplicating my screens so now I can function in the writing space. I always forget what daylight savings time changes do in relation to the server. Either this page will post an hour early, or exactly on time… It’s a mystery to all. Or at least to me. Anyway, I don’t think it really matters if you’ve played Link’s Awakening or not at least in so far as the comic story is concerned. If you have chances a re you know without trying exactly what Carol sings in the final panel. If not you can look it up easily enough. The Wind Fish’s Ballad is one of the most famous songs in gaming history. The evergreen nature of Nintendo games means that it’s been relevant to some degree for 40ish years at this point. Generally I try to avoid pinning the comic to a specific point in time, but the fact of the matter is that the world is changing enough now that even the basics of life are growing more and more antiquated in the slow time world inside Between Failures. After two decades maybe it’s okay to just accept that I’m telling a story set firmly in a past that’s never coming back. In real life Thomas would be nearing 50. Extremely near, in fact. Most of the cast would be hovering around that age, give or take a decade. They will have lived through Covid, and all the other things we all did. I doubt I’ll ever get as far as that in their personal timelines, but you never know. I may do a manga style time skip where everyone comes back with new powers for the final arc. In any case the remake of Link’s Awakening sold around 6.63 million copies, so at least some of you have played that and some of you have played the original version and/or the Gameboy Color upgrade. Then there’s every Nintendo console it was sold on. Plus also some of you who emulated it other ways.
The actual game isn’t all that important. Maybe some people wouldn’t pick up on this unless I spelled it out but this is an illustration of how Carol is. Most people when challenged like this would argue, or act demure, and not want to actually demonstrate singing the melody. Carol just does it. And hopefully the art implies that the nails it without any warmup. She simply proves her talent with confidence and without hesitation. In the grand scheme of things, and in most other comics, this isn’t important at all really. In my comic these little things are the story. The moments you live and only remember as a hazy memory years down the road. Except since this is a memory tied to music it will live on in their minds in that special place music lives in all of our brains. The place that stays even when dementia takes away who we are. The song will come unbidden to them and a moment they shared will come alive again in their hearts. In that way a story told by other people becomes a story FOR other people, and it moves on across time.
I suspect most of you have never met anyone who reads this comic in real life. But somewhere out there thousands of people are also readers and are connected to you by way of my work. Even if you have no other common ground to stand one there might be this one connection that allows you to make more. It’s so simple and common we barely even think about it most of the time. The culture we share helps form the bonds of our society. Somehow I ended up making a niche little bit of culture for a relatively small group of humans that will almost assuredly never know they share that bond. I find that amusing.
I also find it amusing that even in places where readers gather the bond of enjoying the same webcomic isn’t even close to enough to stop fights from breaking out. Shared culture only gets you so far… XD
My life, in some ways, is like that meme of the guy standing in the corner at the party. Except it’s me at Walmart thinking “No one knows I make the B tier webcomic Between Failures.” That is probably a fate I have earned karmically.

Anyway, we’re one day closer to the celebration that is 20 years of this comic. Don’t let the anticipation interfere with your daily life until Friday. I know I’ll be struggling. Until then, keep an eye out for danger, and keep your stick on the ice.

7 Comments

The Ballad of the Wind Fish has always been a piece of music that’s been impactful to me, as has the story of not only Link’s Awakening, but several of the Zelda series. So, yeah, I get where Carol is coming from.

Also, holy shit, well done on that Koholint Island art. And the coincidence(?) that Carol looks a lot like Marin, especially in that dress.

Having owned and played the OG Link’s Awakening several times (mostly on that thing that let you play Gamepboy games on the SNES, I loved that thing), I didn’t even remember the song, although I remembered the visual of the scene of opening the egg. So I looked it up and the song is barely anything, considering the primitive hardware, and I’m not even sure how you would sing it. Even in the remake, it’s not much of a song, compared to the mountain of great music in the Zelda franchise. So I am shocked Carol can even remember it, much less replicate it. But on the other hand, I did start humming Super Mario RPG music earlier today, and I haven’t played that game in over 25 years, so…

No Thomas, you absolutely married the correct Graves sister xD

To the authors commentsry under the comic itself, I do find it funny that everyone here clearly shares a passion for the same thing and yet we are all so vastly different from each other xD life is so diverse in its experience but I hope we all want to one day be best friends in a small town somewhere.

I have, in fact, met three other Between Failures readers out in the Big Blue Room. One in my local (at the time) gaming shop, one in my worldbuilding/design group, and one chick I briefly dated.

One of my players, who I turned onto this comic, did a doodle of Neen giggling while a topless Carol gave her a boobhat for my DMscreen at the time, which led to the rest of them.

I could bet that all three of them could also sing the Ballad of the Wind Fish on command, too, though the last of the list would know it from the remake rather than the original (which I really liked, though I had to mod it to get rid of the DoF so it didn’t give me headaches…).

Which is to say that the little shared spaces are all the more important now that the large ones are broken.

There will likely never again be a shared social experience, outside of politics/major world events, the likes of, say, the Seinfeld finale. Like, COVID happened, but that was more a state-of-world change than something that happened *in* the world.

Meanwhile, to prove a point in a conversation, not a month ago I raised my voice in a restaurant to say “EVERYBODY LIKES TO SAY…!”

To which someone at another table shouted “SALSA!”

Even really big things like GoT don’t have the cultural penetration (even before the sputtering trip at the finish line). It can’t, in a fragmented media space.

The small, intimate, honest/sincere spaces are going to be the most powerful of them.

So: Cheers.

Leave a Reply to Jackie Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.