Draconia Chronicles

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Rating Summary

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Background
It was brought up on the BWW forums and I volunteered.

Downfall
Not good to begin with, but the webcomic turns truly bad when it becomes a My Little Pony lookalike comic (no exaggeration).

Story and Plot
Summary by the author:

"Since time immemorial, Dragons and Tigers have been at war. While the war’s original cause or causes have been buried under the blood of countless generations of warriors and civilians alike, an unending thirst for revenge drives both sides now, and each side seeks to vanquish and perhaps even eradicate the other from the face of the earth. Through a rather large cast, The Draconia Chronicles regularly shifts focus from one camp to the other, and to various factions within each one, to illustrate both the solidarity and divisiveness of the conflict."

The "About" page provides the story in more detail if you're interested, but it's obvious that the plot is of no real importance and this is just meant to be a cheesecake animu comic. The all-female cast is a dead giveaway.

Art review
The art was originally passable black and white animu with greyscale shading; figures had good body proportions and showed proper motion. Unfortunately the faces were the weak point; they looked too human to suit dragons or tigers and their features were too small in proportion to the rest of the figures. The "bosoms" on the dragon figures also looked ridiculous as well:



The webcomic became colorized starting with Chapter Three. While the tigers do look better in orange, for God knows what reason the author decided to make the dragons in a variety of pastel colors a la My Little Pony! I mean, this is supposed to be a harsh story about war and violence and intrigues and betrayals and all of a sudden everything looks like Candyland! This is obviously where this webcomic truly jumps the shark.



But things manage to get even worse. I mentioned how the faces looked too humanlike for the animal-type characters in this scenario.

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Writing review
The story depicts a few pages of what the tigers are doing, then what the dragons are doing, then back to the tigers, and so on.

Author biography
The author describes himself:

"RazorFox (real name Danny Valentini) is a largely self-taught cartoonist who has been drawing since 1995. Starting off as an aspiring comic writer in 1994, repeated failed attempts to secure the services of an artist drove Danny to pick up a pencil and learn to do it himself. Initially influenced by the works of Fred Perry (creator of Gold Digger and Legacy) and Rumiko Takahashi (creator of Ranma 1/2 and Inu-Yasha), Danny specializes in an anthropomorphic-flavored manga style which has been described as that of classic 1980s anime.

Danny’s works have been published by such companies as White Lightning Productions, Antarctic Press, Shanda Fantasy Arts and Angry Viking Press, in addition to self-publishing the Draconia Chronicles calendar series since 1999. His artwork is mainly a hobby, albeit a very passionate one, while he supports himself through an undisclosed-yet-perfectly-legit full-time job which pays his bills."

Don't quit your day job, bub.

Conclusion
On the "About" page, the author describes how in 1999 he came up with a dragon-themed calendar for the year 2000, the Chinese Year Of The Dragon, and they proved to be a surprise hit. (If the artwork were as mediocre in the calendars as it was in the webcomic, "absolutely shocking" would have been a more appropriate term.) With more demand for calendars, the dragons needed an enemy to fight, and in the Chinese zodiac, the tiger was the enemy of the dragon, so that became the calendars' theme and the decision was made in 2005 to create an actual webcomic with that theme.

The

Links

 * Razorfox's Twitter page
 * And his FurAffinity page
 * And his DeviantArt page
 * And his Patreon page