Not if you want it to stay extra virgin
Also, he is a great writer with fantastic pacing.
Absolutely. Pretty much each one of his comics uses the right number of panels for the core idea, including the use of different sizes panels as necessary to improve the overall impact of each panel, and to control the pacing. Like this one.
PBF is still my favorite comic on the internet, about 20 years after it was first introduced to me.
Shotgun gauge is wonky, so it’s not a given that the number would just be a diameter in units they are familiar with.
Yeah, it’s not intuitive that bigger gauge numbers = narrower diameter unless you’ve specifically worked with wire or shotguns before.
That still makes no sense. Is the commenter surprised to learn that a 0.223 inch caliber is approximately 0.223 inches? That a .45 inch caliber is about .45 inches? Yes, that’s how units work.
Yeah, anyone who has biked in city streets will tell you that the buses are much wider than even the big SUVs.
That’s because he can draw with intricate detail when he chooses to, if the joke calls for it:
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/atlantis/
He even adds a ton of detail/shading to simple shapes to give it a more realistic look:
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/preserves/
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/shocked/
Or he sometimes juxtaposes simple facial expressions on more detailed drawings:
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/obscenery/
And it’s pretty great when he just adopts another art style:
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/executive_decision/
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/punch-bout/
https://pbfcomics.com/comics/prank-dragon/
He’s legitimately a great artist.
Science is a process for learning knowledge, not a set of known facts (or theories/conjectures/hypotheses/etc.).
Phlogiston theory was science. But ultimately it fell apart when the observations made it untenable.
A belief in luminiferous aether was also science. It was disproved over time, and it took decades from the Michelson-Morley experiment to design robust enough studies and experiments to prove that the speed of light was the same regardless of Earth’s relative velocity.
Plate tectonics wasn’t widely accepted until we had the tools to measure continental drift.
So merely believing in something not provable doesn’t make something not science. No, science has a bunch of unknowns at any given time, and testing different ideas can be difficult to actually do.
Hell, there are a lot of mathematical conjectures that are believed to be true but not proven. Might never be proven, either. But mathematics is still a rational, scientific discipline.