Artist and writer Andrew Hussie is a reluctant father of internet fandom. His comic, Homestuck, published under the website MS Paint Adventures, followed a group of teens who accidentally brought ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. By the numbers, it's clear Homestuck is a big deal. A really big deal.
The full trailer from Hussie (with music from Clark Powell) can be found embedded below. As far as trailers go, this one is unique, to say the least! The majority of the trailer focuses on two girls, ...
A gaming Kickstarter raising six figures in less than a day is barely even newsworthy these days. But even if the new Homestuck Kickstarter isn’t breaking any funding records, it’s still unusual ...
Rewind to the Internet of 10 years ago and you’ll find an era that made sense for an odd, beloved webcomic like Homestuck. It debuted in April 2009 as a one-off lark from avid webcomic maker Andrew ...
MS Paint Adventures (MSPAA) began as a series of "crowdsource-your-own-adventure"-type stories, which Hussie wrote at the behest of his fans and readers. This worked well for earlier stories like ...
Almost six years ago, Andrew Hussie began another one of a series of webcomics on his website, MS Paint Adventures. These early comics were experiments in fan-sourced storytelling: He’d create and ...
In a new trailer that is simply named “Trailer,” Andrew Hussie has revealed a new visual novel he’s working on that isn’t Homestuck-related. The trailer itself is pretty chaotic. There’s a couple of ...
When I heard that a webcomic called Homestuck had raised three quarters of a million dollars on Kickstarter within 24 hours for a videogame version, I set out to research what it was. Three hours ...