Belkar is supposed to bother you,
To the point I won’t even read his dialogue anymore? I hope that’s not the intention.
and nothing says an author needs to stick to one style, especially when you have a comic that’s over 600 pages long. Hell, have you ever watched Fullmetal Alchemist? You’ve got cosmic horror and slapstick right next to each other. If it does both of them well, I find it to be more exciting and interesting than if they’d have concentrated on one or the other. Comedy without seriousness is fluffy, and super-serious shows are depressing and/or boring.
Didn’t I make that point above? But in anycase: what bothers me is not to have both humor and tragedy in the same story; that happens in real life as well. It’s the switch in realism that drives me nuts. For example: right now, we’re going into Vaarsuvius’s “damnation” plotline; that’s pretty serious, and even disturbing when we see him use a Necromantic spell to KILL ALL THE DESCENDANTS AND RELATIVES of the Black Dragon who tried to kill his family; Then, just a few strips later, when they find themselves without the diamonds needed to resurrect Roy, what do they do? Have Haley CLIMB OUT OF THE PANEL AND GET THE DIAMOND SHE WAS HOLDING IN THE CHARACTER PAGE! :thud: I know it’s supposed to be funny, but HOW do you explain that in-story?? My fear is that the whole epic, after a LOT of posturing, might be resolved by a similar gag: "Hey Bad Guys, the Author called and said you have to lose. " “Oh, OK then.”
:no2:
And the person the oracle predicted would die by belkar’s hand was himself, not Roy.
The Question was: “will I cause the Death of the one of the following people: (mentions Roy and other characters)?” and the answer was just “Yes.” Belkar did not name himself in the question.
The oracle was just trying to give Belkar a chance to defy the prophecy with some cop out “Well technically you killed Roy” story.
I reeeeally doubt it; the oracle HATES Belkar -rightly so, since he knew Belkar was going to kill him- and even went so far as to arrange things to have his death activate Belkar’s Mark of Justice punishment. I’m pretty sure he will be very happy when Belkar bites it.
Speaking of the Mark of Justice, the one hope I have about Belkar ever improving is that pretending to be good (as suggested by his hallucination of Lord Shojo) WILL cause him to really change, and he himself might be surprised by his feelings, ala Earl in “My Name is Earl”. After all, given that Shojo was a shrewd manipulator (but a good person) I see his ghost manipulating Belkar by appealing to his own bloodlust in order to get him to improve as a person. I’m not betting money on it, though.
Heck, even Final Fantasy, whose series WERE supposed not to have any intercontinuity, has ended having flame wars between fans over the silliest details. Black kettles and all that. 
