drive: the scifi comic

drive: the scifi comic, more commonly referred to as simply Drive, is a weekly webcomic created by Dave Kellett.

drive: the scifi comic
Author(s)Dave Kellett
Websiteofficial Drive site
Current status/scheduleUpdating semi-monthly
Launch dateAugust 15, 2009[1] (first post)

Drive began as a "Saturday Sci-Fi" storyline on the popular webcomic site, Sheldon.

The strip is inked in shades of blue and is typically organized into several rows of panels per page.

Plot synopsis

Drive is a space opera that takes place in the year 2401. The strip tells the story of the second Spanish Empire — a galactic empire—and its war with a race called "The Continuum of Makers".

The story follows the crew of the Machito, who have been press-ganged into a unique mission by an Emperor they despise. But their mission ripples out in ways neither they nor the Emperor could imagine, to impact the fate of both warring races.[2]

Characters

Nosh: The Machito's Science Officer. Nosh is a Veetan (a burly, yet pacifistic Alien race) who learned to speak English while in Russia.

Skitter: The Machito's Pilot. A small alien with amnesia—and a gift for guiding a ship through "pinched space" that could give the Empire an advantage in its war with the Continuum-achieved by sensing gravity wave movements through his mohawk head-crest. Nosh gave Skitter his working name.[3]

Fernando ('Nando) Cruz: The Machito's 14-year-old head of engineering, and member of "La Familia" (the Empire's Spanish Royal Family).

Cuddow: A Fillipod (an insect-like race) from the planet Tesskil. Cuddow was the senior adviser to Tesskils leader. He joined the crew when he fled the planet during a Continuum attack.

Captain Taneel: Described as an "unhappy grandmother captain," she is in charge of the Machito.[4]

Orla O'Malley: A xenobiologist assigned to the Machito by the Emperor, and also secretly a member of "La Familia".[5][6]

Emperor Cruz: Member of "La Familia" who committed regicide by killing his uncle to take up the throne. Commands the Human/Veetan empire and "La Grande y Felicissima Armada" (the Navy).

Los Tres Primos: A trio of "La Familia" cousins who have rebelled against their upbringing and strive to bring equality to the downtrodden people of the Empire. They move in secret using a stolen ship- piloted by another member of Skitters' unknown species.

Enemies

The Continuum Of Makers: A race of highly-intelligent aliens who value their inventions (which they refer to as "spirits") above all else. As such, they have declared humanity guilty of "spirit-theft" for using the Ring Drive salvaged from one of their crashed ships.

The Vinn: A collection of alien races united by an artificial parasite that gives each Vinn a tattoo-like patch over one eye along with several other biological enhancements. Vinn are determined to spread across the universe as part of an ongoing search for "the Missing Gods" that led to their creation.

3D representations

Some fans have made three-dimensional renderings of the spaceships featured in the comic.

In January 2010, Patrick Johns, the author of the webcomic Stickfodder, posted the first of such renderings to his Flickr account[7] and, subsequently, to Dave Kellett's Sheldon Talk forums.[8] In response to the forum post, Dave Kellett encouraged other 3D artists to "take a crack at it."[9]

Three months later, a Drive fan with the screen name Maxwell posted a rendering of the Emperor's ship to the Sheldon Talk forums.[10]

In May, 2010, visual effects student Dan Taubert created a 1-minute animation that features several Drive ships at a Denny's in the sky as well as the Emperor's ship and the Machito in space. Taubert published the progress of his DRIVE 3D Visualization project to his personal website, while he posted the final animation on Vimeo.[11][12]

Critical reception

On his way to Comic-Con 2010, Gary Tyrrell, author of the webcomic blog Fleen, indicated the first collection of Drive comics (Drive – A Hero Rises) was a must-buy saying it would be "purchased by [him] and probably should be by you." He also indicated he has been "digging" Drive and "[couldn't] wait to get [his] hands on this first collection."[13]

In a review of Drive published on September 19, 2010, Jeff Kapalka of The Post-Standard newspaper out of Syracuse, NY, described the strip as having "taken [...] time to set up [the] universe and populate it with a variety of interesting individuals. The story is serious. The characters are hilarious." He also praised Kellett in the crafting of this comic saying, "It's a fine wire he's walking. Telling a continued story at a rate of one page a week is almost a lost art. Making it funny while not being able to reference modern pop culture makes it even more difficult. Kellett succeeds at both."[14]

Mike Braff, a columnist for Del Rey Books' Suvudu site, published a review of Drive on January 30, 2011. He spoke highly concerning the thought and planning Kellett has put into the comic saying, "Unlike most webcomics, which seem to be made up on the fly, . . . Drive definitely has a story to tell and I, for one, am excited to hear it." After giving a brief synopsis of the story, Mr. Braff went on to praise the workmanship of the narrative, indicating that, ". . .the ideas, themes, and environments presented in Drive are fantastic and make the universe feel very broad.[15]

gollark: Anyway, Nim:- is reasonably fast (even if certain libraries are beelike)- has nice syntax- has decent library existence- is able to bind to C stuff, which I have actually used in this because cmark-gfm is very fast- is fairly pleasant to write- has cool metaprogramming- has a compiler which mostly runs bearably fastthus I am using it.
gollark: `openring`, that is, which generates the "from other blogs" bit on my website.
gollark: Also, in the past I had to write about three lines of code to make a Go project faster, because despite Go's main thing being parallelism the authors did not bother to parallelize it despite it being trivially possible to do so.
gollark: Well, in my foolish youth I actually did use it a decent bit. I also used Apple products and was excited about Windows 10, so something.
gollark: LIES!

References

  1. Blog post: And now for something completely different... Archived January 2, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Webpage about Drive
  3. Drive from Nov 6, '10
  4. Drive from Dec 5, '09
  5. Drive from Apr 10, '10 Archived May 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  6. Drive from Oct 9, '10
  7. Stickfodder's flikr photostream
  8. Sheldon Talk Jan 16, 2010 Archived July 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  9. in News by Dave Kellett Jan 16, 2010 Archived January 21, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  10. in News by Dave Kellett Apr 10, 2010 Archived July 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  11. DRIVE 3D Visualization Archived May 28, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  12. DRIVE Animation on Vimeo
  13. Tyrrell, Gary (20 Jul 2010). "I'm Hurtling Through Space In A Metal Tube. How Are You?". Fleen. Archived from the original on 2011-02-03. Retrieved 2 Feb 2011.
  14. Kapalka, Jeff (19 Sep 2010). "Defeat the Empire, play a game in new comics". Syracuse. Archived from the original on 2011-02-03. Retrieved 2 Feb 2011.
  15. Braff, Mike (30 Jan 2011). "The FUNN-e-PAGES: Drive". Suvudu. Random House. Archived from the original on 2011-02-03. Retrieved 2 Feb 2011.
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