Jump Leads
A British Sci-Fi comedy webcomic inspired by shows like The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy and Red Dwarf, Jump Leads is the story of Thomas Meaney and Richard Llewellyn, trainees in the Lead Service - a sort-of self-appointed "Reality Police" who travel to parallel Universes and ensure everything is occurring as it should. They've hit a bit of a problem, however - a disastrous set of circumstances during their first field training exercise have left them stranded in a broken JumpShip, aimlessly jumping from one random Universe to the next. But with Meaney trying hard to return to the career he loves and Llewellyn content to meander aimlessly through existence, getting back to Lead H.Q. continues to look like an impossible task...
Jump Leads is created by Ben Paddon and illustrated by "JjAR". Rather than having a single writer, Jump Leads has a TV Series-esque writing team, with different writers writing the scripts for different issues. Paddon is the lead writer, with the rest of the team being Euan Mumford, Paul Varley and Andrew Taylor (plus guest writers).
Nine issues have been completed so far, with the tenth issue currently underway. The issues so far are:
- Training Day, written by Ben Paddon
- It Came From Space!, written by Ben Paddon
- Trojan Horse, written by Euan Mumford
- Just Dropping In (4-page mini-issue), written by Ben Paddon
- Who Wants to Rule the World?, written by Paul Varley
- The Travellers (4-page mini-issue), written by Benjamin "Pooka" Maydon
- Rogues and Scallywags, written by Ben Paddon
- Waterworld, written by Kris Carter (who also provides the art for this story)
- The Cult of Meaney, written by Andrew Taylor
- The Voyage Home, written by Ben Paddon, Euan Mumford, Paul Varley and Andrew Taylor
Training Day
- Deadpan Snarker: Llewellyn
- Military Maverick: Captain Lucas, and Llewellyn.
- Sacrificial Lamb: Captain Lucas
- Shout-Out: Robert Llewellyn, Colm Meaney, Joss Whedon, George Lucas
- Take That: "About as exciting as watching Footballers Wives"; "I believe some of you will be travelling to dimensions where Christina Aguilera has somehow achieved a successful music career".
- Ted Baxter: Captain Whedon. Heck, he practically says as much:
"I'm Captain Whedon. I'm very important and, as such, completely justified in my arrogance."
- The Obi-Wan: Captain Lucas
- Wide-Eyed Idealist: Meaney
It Came From Space!
- And You Thought It Was a Game: Inverted: Meaney and Llewellyn think the alien attack is real, but the whole thing is actually a historical recreation.
- Deus Ex Machina: Turns out there's no danger at all.
- The Napoleon: Newman
- Shout-Out: Alan Tudyk and
GillianRichard Dean Anderson, among others.
Trojan Horse
- Deus Ex Machina: The Body Surfing aliens have a Weaksauce Weakness which saves the life of the host.
- High-Class Glass: the monocle that Meaney finds. Subversion in that monocles are only worn by the lower classes in this universe.
- In Medias Res
- Mundane Solution: Silk
- Puppeteer Parasite: The Iob
- Shout-Out: Leonard Nimoy and Lisa Ryder, among others.
Just Dropping In
Who Wants to Rule the World?
- Contractual Genre Blindness: General Gray has this in spades.
- Deus Ex Machina: They were never in any danger, redux.
- Harmless Villain: Gray, to the point that the world's governments don't even try to capture him any more after they've foiled his plans.
- Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: Subverted - the guards use tranquiliser darts, which improves their aim because they don't have to worry about taking human lives.
- Just Between You and Me: Averted: this is one of the few errors Gray won't commit. No sense in a "before I kill you, let me tell you my plan" if you aren't going to kill them. The heroes can't have it all their own way.
- Locking MacGyver in the Store Cupboard: Deliberate. Gray wants the crew to escape their holding cells "Somewhere between Step 1: Build highly complex volcano island base and Step 3: Profit!" so he won't have to work out the details of his plan.
- Mike Nelson, Destroyer of Worlds: With taking it over rather than destroying it. Gray has taken over the world once already, found the experience of running it boring, and abdicated power. But he still loves trying to take over the world. So he now invents ludicrously flawed plans for his bids for world domination.
- Not So Harmless: At the end of the issue, with reverse-engineered universe-jumping technology within his grasp, Gray decides to start conquering other, parallel worlds - and this time, he's going to do it properly.
- Shout-Out: All to James Bond: Moore to Roger Moore; General Donald Gray is a double reference (Charles Gray played Blofeld in Diamonds Are Forever, Donald Pleasence played Blofeld in You Only Live Twice), while Gray's chief scientist Dr. Llewelyn (note lack of second double-L) is the late Desmond "Q" Llewelyn. Also, Meaney introduces himself to special agent Jane Moore as "Meaney. Thomas Meaney."
- Victory Is Boring: as Gray discovered after he took over the world on his first attempt
The Travellers
Rogues & Scallywags
- Deus Ex Machina: You know one's coming.
- Shout-Out: Imprisoned "Freelance" dimension-hopping Mercenary Hayter is named for voice actor David Hayter who played Solid Snake in the Metal Gear Solid video series (but looks more like an aged Christopher Eccleston).
Waterworld
The Cult of Meaney
The Voyage Home
General
- The Multiverse: The central premise of the comic.
- Obstructive Code of Conduct: Survive at all costs, as opposed to, say, sacrificing your life to save a universe from disaster: there are an infinite number of universes, and only so many trained operatives.
- Up the Real Rabbit Hole: related to the Obstructive Code of Conduct line above.