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Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Ghost Teller

Ghost Teller

Grim Repear Ghost Teller

Ghost Teller (Manhwa)

Other Titles: ê·€ì „ê”Źë‹Ž / Gwijeongudam

Creator: QTT / QTT_US

Find at: Webtoon (app), Naver (website)
Languages Available: 
✓Korean (Official)
✓English (Official)
✓Thai (Fan Translated)
✓Indonesian (Fan Translated)
Animation: Yes
Sound/Music: No

What’s more terrifying than ghosts? It’s when ghosts gather to tell scary tales about humans.

Plot
A ghost girl (Cheonyeo Gwishin lit. Virgin Ghost Girl), a grim reaper (Joseung Saja), a nine-tailed fox (Gumiho), A headless man (possibly a nod to Ireland's Dullahan) a man with one horn (Dokkaebi), and a child carrying a cursed straw doll, all competes to tell the scariest tales about humans. Each episode is divided into 3-5 parts and are unrelated. Most stories focuses more on psychological horror than supernatural ones. It is to insinuate that these fragile humans, according to the underworldly storytellers, are more capable of inflicting true terror than the ghosts themselves.

Artwork
The first thing you’ll notice about this webtoon is the artwork. It's light colors are well blended. Faces and expressions are beautifully drawn. Some characters in the story might resemble the story tellers. It could be a deliberate attempt to explain their background story.


Docchan's Ratings: 
Creep Factor 💀💀💀💀 (4/5)
Horror Factor đŸ˜±đŸ˜±đŸ˜± (3/5)
Plot 😭😭😭😭😭 (The feels!)
Verdict: Docchan Recommends! Must Read!

Images Gallery
Some images might contain spoilers please read at your risk!

Ghost Teller main characters
Intro Episode of Ghost Teller

Ghost Teller Episode 3 Photographer
Episode 3 - Story of the Photographer
Ghost Teller Episode 1 Story of a Woman
Episode 1 - The Story of a Woman

Monday, September 18, 2017

The Origin of Webtoons

The Origin of Webtoons


How and When Webtoons started?

The origin of webtoons and how it changed reading comics forever.

About Death by Sini & Hyeono
About Death by Sini & Hyeono
In 2000, Scott McCloud introduced a term called “Infinite Canvas” in his book “Reinventing Comics”. He suggested that webcomic creators could make a Web page as large as needed to contain a comic page of any conceivable size. This infinite canvas would create an endless amount of storytelling benefits and would allow creators much more freedom in how they present their artwork. The concept had not taken off since webcomics were primarily presented in the form of comic strips, which fit easily on a screen. It was not until three or four years later that his infinite canvas would be realized.

The word “Webtoons” originated from South Korea back in 2003 when the Korean web portal Daum (parent company of Kakao Talk) started a webtoon service for free. It popularizes the infinite canvas or commonly called long strip format. It was followed by Naver (parent company of Line) in 2004. In 2005, Naver launched Line Webtoon. Back then, most webtoons were in Korean language and were largely unknown to international audiences. It wasn’t until 2010 when English translations of webtoons were released and slowly gains readers throughout the world.

In 2011, the animated horror Bongcheon-Dong Ghost and Ok-su Station Ghost by horror writer Horang became viral as a horror challenge and prank among netizens. Because of its readability and meshing flash animation into comics, it created a thrilling sequence by sequence atmosphere that ended in a jump-scare.
bongcheon-dong ghost by horang
Mommy wants your hug!

 The popularity of webtoons grew as more and more comic web and app services like Line, Tapastic, Spottoon, and Lezhin became a medium in which artists and creators can post their stories for free and reach more audiences. The creation of Patreon has also ensured that artists can get paid directly from readers without any major corporation to take a larger pay cut. Unlike manga, which relies heavily on fickle Japanese audiences and magazine producers, webtoon creators have more flexibility and much freedom to express their creativity with more diverse and accepting audiences from all over the world.

Saturday, September 16, 2017