No, not to the point where you don’t read the dialogue, but maybe you’re just not getting the joke, or your sense of humor doesn’t jive with the author’s (and mine). I certainly don’t have the problems you do.
Oh, I get the joke alright. I just don’t find it funny. Not that I mind if other people enjoy it- what I’m saying here is that I personally don’t like it, and explaining why. Which I have a right to express, just like everybody else. It should be noted however, that I’m FAR from the only person who hates Belkar; so my points aren’t just some quirks of mine; they’re valid. It’s up to the author to decide if he cares enough to deal with them, though.
I think your roots as comic-book fan are showing. 8p See, I never got as bothered about “canon” and “in-story explanations” as comic-book people seem to be.
C’mon, Cid, that is hardly just a comic book thing. Ever seen Star Trek or Star Wars fan argue?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.
There’s a major difference between humor and cop-out. The diamond is an extremely minor piece of story, which is only in there because the actual D&D spell requires it. The author has never, to my recollection, used his fourth-wall-breaking to actually influence the plot in any major way, unless you count Elan’s abilities, which have more to do with being Genre Savvy than that.
I disagree; Roy’s resurrection IS a major plot point, and since the story operates on “D&D Universe” rules, the diamond WAS important, and the author’s solving of it by breaking the 4th wall WAS a cop-out, though I agree it was the first I’ve seen that really mattered. Of course, we can handwave this away- as I mentioned above (does anyone bother to read my basic comments?) I deal with OotS by separating the strip (with all its meta-jokes) from the story in my mind. I do not demand that anybody else do the same… but when I start having problems doing even that, I think it’s a sign that the author (who is, you know, just human) fumbled. I can assume that V got another diamond from the plane of Earth (as he suggested) instead; or that this entire strip didn’t happen. But as a reader, I’m not the one who is supposed to come up with excuses, the author is. And if it happens too often, it affects my enjoyment of it, and I’m sure, many other readers as well. We’ll see…
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. 
