Rumors of War is a Sprite Comic written and illustrated by Nick Foster, and can now be found at RumorsOfWarComic.com. (It previously disappeared from its home at norvendae.com following a botched/irreparable Wordpress update.)
Rumors of War follows the travels of a group of adventurers and is somewhere between an Alternate History and a Historical Fantasy, inspired by Classical Mythology and set during the The Time of Myths. It could adequately be described as a Situation Dramedy. Or perhaps a Forensic Drama with magic (in mythical Greece!).
Though the comic has been on hiatus since July 2011, there are over five hundred pages online, composed of thirty-three chapters and five-and-a-half story arcs. The pages themselves are formatted to resemble screen caps from an SNES-era video game, and so the action is carried by questions, questions, mysteries, talking, questions, questions, questions, and more questions.
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- Action Girl: Elysia and Illyra are shown capable of defending themselves in the comic — this is extended to Occela and Aleska since the inclusion of the vignettes. See also, Mysterious Waif, below.
- After Action Report: Chapter 3 includes a more literal AAR presented by one of the characters in the form of a journal. In a grander sense, Rumors of War could be seen as the "Story After Action Report" of a Dungeons and Dragons campaign with Egregious amounts of Artistic License.
- After the End: The stories take place after the Trojan War devastated the kingdoms of the Aegean Sea.
- Alternate History / Historical Fantasy
- Amazon Brigade: The main cast. They even have The One Guy Nenshe. (Unless you count Obadai, Lumino, and Thiago...)
- Anachronism Stew: The setting is a progressive, magical, Bronze Age society. A Wizard Did It helps somewhat.
- Ancient Greece
- Artistic License: A Sprite Comic with a Classical Mythology backdrop. License and registration, please.
- As Long as It Sounds Foreign: Many of the character and place names. See Naming Conventions below.
- Attention Deficit Creator Disorder: Webcomic not enough? The creator also juggles a blog and a full-time job. Finally came to a head in July 2011 with the birth of the author's niece. The comic has been on hiatus since then.
- Bloodless Carnage: You won't find a drop of blood in this webcomic, true to the JRPGs that helped to inspire it.
- Break the Haughty: Most of the cast go through these moments regularly to prevent their heads from getting too large. Occela seems mostly immune, if only because her status as Cloudcuckoolander / Mystical Waif prevents her from ever getting particularly full of herself. See below: Passive-Aggressive Kombat (See also: Jews Love to Argue)
- Catch Phrase:
- Elysia — "I don't do weddings/festivals/etc." Also Once an Episode.
- Nenshe
- "I try/I do try/I do so try/I try hard to do so." He wants you to know how hard he works.
- "Nothing is free." He had to work to deprive you of your hard-earned rewards.
- Occela — "I don't know what that means." A Shout-Out.
- Classical Mythology: Borders on this and Mythopoeia.
- Cold-Blooded Torture: Implied to have been used on Benito by Meteon. Devoted father who did what he had to do or Designated Villain?
- Con Man: Nenshe probably qualifies, being of the Hustler variety. Chapter 3 sees him preparing for a Short Con, and chapter 5 sees his plan in action. How well it works remains to be seen. He might very well be a budding Manipulative Bastard.
- Deadpan Snarker: Most of the main cast, to varying degrees. Particularly noticeable in Elysia, Illyra, and Nenshe.
- Devil in Plain Sight: Manaus. Comes complete with a Kubrick Stare In the Hood.
- Ensemble Cast / Rotating Protagonists: Combined with Two Lines, No Waiting and Time Skips to create a Cast-Go-Round.
- Face Stealer: One features in the first storyline, taking Couric's place, and is probably responsible for the disappearance of Penelo.
- Five-Man Band: All of the characters are pretty smart, so the divisions between the party roles are more like hairline fractures. Starting in year two, their roles become more flexible, with Elysia and Occela swapping roles as The Hero and The Chick when the viewpoint characters change.
- The Hero: Elysia, Action Girl.
- The Lancer: Nenshe, Anti-Hero Type 3.
- The Smart Guy: Obadai, The Obi-Wan.
- The Big Guy: Illyra, Class 5, and The Ladette.
- The Chick: Occela, Occela, Occela. Also Elysia (see above notes on The Hero).
- Four Philosophy Ensemble
- Nenshe, The Cynic
- Elysia, The Optimist
- Illyra, The Realist
- Occela, The Apathetic
- Frothy Mugs of Water: Under the effects of the lotus-tainted food, Illyra and the others experience giggle fits, scattered conversation threads, and an increase in hunger.
- Genius Bruiser: Illyra, thanks in large part to Waif Fu.
- Genre Savvy: Obadai displays a curious understanding of the role he plays, and seems to know well enough that he wants to stay as far from the action of the story as possible.
- Greek Mythology (See also: Classical Mythology)
- Heroes-R-Us: The Order of Orion appears to fill this role, with the main cast being members. The conditions of their recruitment, and their duties within the Order have yet to be revealed. We mostly see the cast during their downtime, or when responding to personal threats or stuff that apparently isn't covered by the Order.
- Heroic Fantasy (Sword and Sandal): What happens when a group of Knights Errant and their Hitchhiker Heroes join forces with a Reasonable Authority Figure and settle down in one town?
- In the Hood: Manaus, introduced in Chapter 8 (returning in Chapter 12, and Chapter 20!) is this. Due to the quirks of the character's sprite, his eyes being the only thing visible is a creepy stare.
- Journey to the Center of the Mind: Nenshe appears to be on one through chapters 26, 28, and 30.
- Kubrick Stare: It's hard to tell because it's just a sprite, but you can bet Manaus, sports one of these.
- Left Hanging is in frequent use with this comic. Stuff happens, the villain is foiled, the characters learn a valuable lesson, but there are lots and lots of things left up in the air.
- Literary Allusion Title: Probably. "And when ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars, be ye not troubled: for such things must needs be; but the end shall not be yet." --Mark 13:7
- Loads and Loads of Characters: We go from 2 to 7 characters on page three of issue one. The author freely admits that more characters will be introduced in the first story arc only to disappear by the second and that there will be more new characters then, seemingly having appeared out of nowhere. Given that all the characters share a text box, sorting out who says what can be notoriously difficult.
- Your only saving grace at this stage in the comic seems to be that the character who owns the first line of dialogue that appears in the box of a given panel raises their hand. It has been noted that this makes reading the comic feel somewhat like watching a movie with subtitles: look down to read what's been said, then look up and figure out who said it.
- There's also a cast page. (Recently updated to include nineteen named characters so far.)
- Hallmark of stories set in Ancient Greece. Adventures were rarely undertaken by a single hero (Heracles is an obvious exception — except that he also traveled with his lover, for whom the city of Abdera is named).
- Lotus Eater Machine: Being based on Greek Mythology, the comic uses actual the lotus. (Well, food that's been secretly tainted by the lotus, anyway.)
- Low Fantasy: Treads a fine line between Low Fantasy and Heroic Fantasy (Sword and Sandal variant) with some strong Wuxia influences.
- Marijuana Is LSD: Averted with the lotus-tainted festival food.
- Mental World: We get a glimpse at Nenshe's mixed-up mind in the fifth arc. Included are mental projections of his teammates that serve as different accents to the voices in his head, and falls somewhere between Happy Place and Black Bug Room.
- Mind Screw: While low levels of Mind Screw exist in the dialogue throughout the comic, Nenshe takes a Journey to the Center of the Mind in the fifth arc, hallucinates, and talks to himself using his teammates to represent the different voices in his head.
- Mysterious Waif: No fewer than three, though it's difficult to tell due to the medium, Elysia, Illyra, and Occela all examples of mystical waifs.
- Mystical Waif: See Mysterious Waif, above.
- Mythopoeia: Generally a cross between this and Classical Mythology.
- Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Manaus.
- Naming Conventions: Named characters and places in the story have names with no more than 6 letters or symbols. This is a Shout-Out to the Hello, Insert Name Here feature of many early games that wouldn't allow more than 6-8 letter names.
- The Order: The Order of Orion, natch. Overlaps with Heroes-R-Us.
- Parental Substitute: Obadai seems to fill this role with respect to the teenaged Elysia.
- Passive-Aggressive Kombat: Practically the only way the characters have of interacting with each other. See also: Jews Love to Argue
- Reasonable Authority Figure: The Order of Orion seems to be this, at least from the perspective of the characters. Also a great example of what makes the comic an Anachronism Stew. Adventurer's Guild?
- RPG Mechanics Verse: Attack and damage rolls (along with some Standard Status Effects) make their first appearance in Chapter 6. They appear sporadically throughout the chapters, roughly Once an Episode.
- Sacred Hospitality: When Meteon and Elysia trade harsh words in Chapter 6, he tries to invoke this trope. It goes downhill after that. In the next chapter, we find out that Elysia is a priest of Hestia, so for her, Sacred Hospitality is Serious Business.
- Shoo Out the Clowns: When he isn't haranguing Elysia, Obadai seems curiously absent during the main action and drama of the story.
- Soap Wheel (see Two Lines, No Waiting, as well): The plot moves forward with regular jumps in time, and the characters are left to explain what happened in the meantime. The third story arc (Chapters 13-18) expands on the events that followed the first story arc (Chapters 1-6).
- Sprite Comic: Played with. The sprites themselves are original creations but the backgrounds are ripped from RPGMaker. It straddles the line between Sprite Comic and Pixel Art Comic and uses sprites to evoke the tone and style of old school console games.
- Strip Archive: The comic updates every day with an occasional bonus page at the end of the month, so there's plenty of comic for new and old readers to trawl.
- The One Guy: Nenshe is shaping up to be one of these when placed alongside Elysia, Illyra, and Occela.
- The Time of Myths: Hinted at but not shown. The characters reference monsters and gods, but none have appeared in the story thus far.
- Time Skip: One occurs before each new Story Arc, taking the characters ahead a couple months. See also: Webcomic Time.
- Trickster Mentor: Obadai exhibits quite a few of the qualities associated with the Trickster Mentor, among them his regular antagonism towards Elysia. His treatment of her is complex, as he also seems to fill the role of Parental Substitute.
- Two Lines, No Waiting: The first Story Arc assembles quite a few cast members, then splits to follow Elysia and Nenshe as they go about separate activities. Elysia goes on a routine information-gathering trip only for it to get hijacked by a mystery, while Nenshe goes about recruiting some fellow adventurers, which he does in the way that seems most natural to him.
- The second story arc follows a similar pattern of alternating between events that either the whole party, Elysia and Obadai, Occela, or Illyra.
- Webcomic Time: Each Story Arc spans a few days in comic-time but takes several months to play out in real-time, and each Story Arc begins a few months after the last one ended.
- Weird Trade Union: The Order of Orion appears to be a mash-up of several things: geographical/explorer's society, entrepreneur's guild, adventurer's guild. This in a time when the common-folk thought the sun was a chariot driven across the sky by a god. See also: The Order
- Whole-Episode Flashback: Chapters 13, 15, and 17 show scenes that took place after the events of the first story arc.
- World of Snark
- Wuxia: Strongly influenced by Wuxia and The Time of Myths.