Difference between revisions of "Superguy"

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== Status ==
 
== Status ==
  
Superguy had lapsed into inactivity for a while, but in 2016, Eric Burns began writing new stories semi-regularly, and has been joined by more authors since. Both new posts and the archives can be read via the [http://archives.eyrie.org/cgi-bin/superguy Superguy Autocollector]. The FAQ is available [http://archives.eyrie.org/superguy/TEB/Frequently-Asked-Questions.gz here], and to sign up for the list, or just to learn more, check out the [http://lists.eyrie.org/mailman/listinfo/superguy Superguy Info Page].
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Superguy had lapsed into inactivity for a while, but in 2016, Eric Burns-White began writing new stories semi-regularly, and as of 2023, there are several active authors. Both new posts and the archives can be read via the [http://archives.eyrie.org/cgi-bin/superguy Superguy Autocollector]. The FAQ is available [http://archives.eyrie.org/superguy/TEB/Frequently-Asked-Questions.gz here], and to sign up for the list, or just to learn more, check out the [http://lists.eyrie.org/mailman/listinfo/superguy Superguy Info Page].
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== See Also ==
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* [[000SUPERGUY]]
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* [[:Category:Superguy]]
  
 
== Footnotes ==
 
== Footnotes ==

Latest revision as of 17:57, 21 August 2023

Superguy is the other shared universe superhero writing group from before the dawn of the World Wide Web, the DC to the LNH's Marvel (unless it's the other way around). It predates the LNH by about three years. Where the LNH originated on Usenet, Superguy originated on the academic network BITNET, though it currently inhabits a mailing list.

While both Superguy and the LNH revolve around superhero parody, there are considerable differences: Superguy focuses on more general superhero parody rather than specific comics parody; it lacks the LNH's basis in computer terminology and Usenet; it has more satirical use of real-world figures; and it often directly lifts concepts from other media, fanfiction-style, rather than creating trademark-friendly parodies[1].

Nonetheless, the two groups share several authors in common, notably Dave Van Domelen and Mike Escutia.[2]

Shared History

In 1996, Dave Van Domelen's LNH series Dvandom Force and Chris Meadows's Superguy series Team M.E.C.H.A. crossed over in a storyline known as the Grand Tour, together with several other writing groups Meadows was involved in. The storyline revolved around DeFacto V recruiting minions from both the Looniverse and 000SUPERGUY in order to return to his original timeline. Many elements from RoboMACs 2163 stuck around as long-term parts of Team M.E.C.H.A. after this crossover.

Mike Escutia also wrote a brief LNH/Superguy crossover, Auld Acquaintances, and after finding that he preferred writing in that universe, moved several of his characters over to that world in Stolen Hearts.

Birth of a Villain introduced a net.villainess called Vector, who was also the name of an villain from Dave Van Domelen's Superguy series, Crazy Guy. He wrote a brief cameo from that series' heroes, Jack and his squirrel sidekick Louie, to comment on this, but other writers picked up on them. They were later explained as Jack and Louie's LNH counterparts, Chinese Guy (AKA Bruce) and Lenny the Squirrel. Later, counterparts of four Dvandom Force members were brought to the Superguy multiverse in Exarchs and its sequel New Exarchs.

Status

Superguy had lapsed into inactivity for a while, but in 2016, Eric Burns-White began writing new stories semi-regularly, and as of 2023, there are several active authors. Both new posts and the archives can be read via the Superguy Autocollector. The FAQ is available here, and to sign up for the list, or just to learn more, check out the Superguy Info Page.

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Lampshaded when Wayne the Invid Inbred jumped universes during the Grand Tour.
  2. The first writer to work in both groups was T. M. Neeck, creator of Doctor Stomper – who, though not one of the more prolific Superguy authors, actually wrote more for Superguy than he did for LNH!