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This page from "Dr. Grordbort's Crash Landing" goes hard.
Fun fact: "Dr. Grordbort's Crash Landing" is the second-shortest comic by page count (3 pages), but tied for the shortest by panel count (9 panels) with "The Insult That Made a 'Jarate Master' Out of Sniper."
Something I think about a lot is how the art style of the comics has evolved over time. The image on the left is a page from Comic II, "Unhappy Returns," and the image on the right is from Comic VI, "The Naked and the Dead." It went from very sketchy lines to very polished.
"...except Heavy, who lives in some remote log mansion in the Dzhugdzhur Mountains." That's canonically where he lives in the comics. That's some damn fine continuity-following from the writers.
(Comic II: Unhappy Returns; Page 65)
Comic I: Ring of Fired; Page 61
The statue outside Demo's mansion is still missing its head, a callback to the WAR! comic.
@tf2dove Comic VI: The Naked and the Dead
Page 48
Take a moment to look at the details on the third page. The illustrator, Maren, did a good job on them, plus it's fun to spot all the easter eggs.
Merasmus and Saxton Hale are the only characters in the series who have broken the fourth wall. That's probably the only thing those two have in common, other than being associated with the mercenaries.
It actually makes sense that none of the robots have recognized Soldier up until now. Gray did create the bots to look and act like the mercs, so Soldier never really stood out to a basic AI.
Do you think that Soldier is trying to brag about how his his robot disguise is, or does he genuinely get scared if he looks in a mirror while wearing it?