Real Life (webcomic)

Real Life is an American webcomic drawn and authored by Maelyn Dean that began on November 15, 1999.[2] After having not been updated since December 10, 2015, the comic continued on September 10, 2018. It stopped updating again from July 16, 2019, and recommenced on June 15, 2020. The comic is loosely based around the lives of fictionalized versions of Dean and her friends, including verbatim conversations, as well as fictional aspects including time travel and mecha combat.[3] Characters regularly break the fourth wall. Real Life focuses on humor related to video games and science fiction, and references internet memes.[4]

Real Life
Strip from 2005-08-01
Author(s)Maelyn Dean
Websitehttp://www.reallifecomics.com/
Current status/scheduleActive
Launch date1999-11-15[1]
Genre(s)Exaggerated Reality

Development

Real Life launched in 1999 and became part of Keenspot shortly after. Mae switched to the Blank Label Comics collective in 2005[5] before going solo again in February 2010.[6] The Real Life website is currently self-hosted by Mae.

Year one of Real Life was published as a paperback by Starline Multimedia Inc. in 2004,[7] and a second book published by Lulu was released in 2008. A German translation of some portions of the webcomic has been made available on the website's archive.

Characters

  • Greg / Maelyn (Maelyn Dean[8]) - The main character of the strip, and a fictional representation of the author of the comic. She seems to vacillate between being the voice of reason and the voice in need of reason. She is also very fond of Pepsi cola, to the point of addiction, going so far as to import Mexican Pepsi because it contains real sugar instead of corn syrup. She used to work as a fuel jock at a small airport, but eventually attended and graduated from culinary school. She previously lived in Sacramento and Rancho Cordova, both CA, but moved to San Francisco - and moved again to Lockhart, TX,[9] but moved back to the California Area, where she is once again roommates with Dave and Tony. (In June of 2020, the author came out as transgender. Older comics before this point will feature Greg, and newer comics will feature Maelyn.)
  • Elizabeth "Liz" Dean (née Van Buskirk) - Maelyn's wife, and an avid cosplayer; most of the strips have her acting as straight man in contrast to Maelyn's antics. She started out as "Lizzy" to avoid confusion between the "Liz" that had already appeared in the comic and this new Liz. Eventually, the old Liz was phased out and now the new one is called Liz. Liz and Maelyn married in March 2005.
  • Tony Flansaas - The comic's resident evil overlord, and the fulcrum on which most of Real Life's more far-fetched story lines revolve. Has made many attempts over the course of the comic's existence to take over the world, and has even succeeded a couple of times.
  • Dave Reynolds - Resident powergamer and supernerd. While the real Dave's currently in the Navy, that doesn't stop him from showing up and adding some of his cynical, nerdy point of view to a strip. Dave rivals Tony in technical ability. However, whereas Tony seems to be a genius in all subjects, Dave's genius seems to lie mostly in computers. In one of the earlier comic strips, Dave upgraded his computer into a sentient being. The computer, PAL, went on to become a minor character in the strip, and was joined over time by several other technologically improved computers and consoles.
  • Crystal - Maelyn's girlfriend when the strip started, but they broke up in 2001. She is no longer mentioned or appears in the strip, but was an integral part of the first year of the strip.
  • The Cartoonist - Cartoonist Maelyn primarily appears in the strip to make an announcement, to answer questions that readers occasionally send her or to complain about a possible lack of ideas for the strip. Her appearance is differentiated from Comic Maelyn by a change of colours (light brown overshirt, black tee with white stripes), and slightly shaggy hair.
  • Harper Dean - a daughter of Maelyn and Liz. Born on July 29, 2011.[10]

Reception

Maelyn Dean won the "Outstanding Reality Comic" category of the Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards four times: in 2001,[11] 2003 (when her webcomic tied with Nowhere Girl),[12] 2004,[13] and 2005 (when her webcomic tied with The Devil's Panties).[14]

Collected editions

  • Real Life: The Year One Collection. Starline Multimedia Inc. 2004-08-25. ISBN 0-9746966-2-5 ISBN 978-0974696621
  • Real Life: The Greg's Notes Edition. Lulu. 2008

References

  1. Dean, Maelyn (1999-11-15). "1". Real Life Comics. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  2. Sjöberg, Lore (2006-09-01). "Real Life Comics, Remixed". Wired. Condé Nast Publications. Archived from the original on 2006-09-02.
  3. Horton, Steve (2008). Webcomics 2.0: An Insider's Guide to Writing, Drawing, and Promoting Your Own Webcomics. Course Technology. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-59863-682-6. One popular autobiographical webcomic is the appropriately named Real Life, by Maelyn Dean.
  4. Delafuente, Anna (2013-09-26). "Geek Parenting: Meet the Deans! (Part 1: Interview with Creator of Real Life Comics, Maelyn Dean)". Nerdy Minds Magazine. Archived from the original on 2015-09-19.
  5. Guigar, Brad (2005-06-22). "Dave Kellett and Maelyn Dean Join Blank Label Comics". Comix Talk. Retrieved 2017-03-17.
  6. Maelyn, Dean (2010-02-09). "Blank Label Comics". Real Life Comics. Retrieved 2017-03-16. I have officially tendered my resignation from Blank Label Comics.
  7. ISBN 0-9746966-2-5
  8. Dean, Maelyn (2008-08-15). "2055". Real Life Comics. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  9. Dean, Maelyn (2007-10-22). "Wagons East!". Real Life Comics. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  10. Dean, Maelyn (2011-06-29). "2856". Real Life Comics. Retrieved 2017-03-16.
  11. "2001 Winners and Nominees". Web Cartoonists Choice Awards. 2001. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  12. "2003 Ceremony". Web Cartoonists Choice Awards. 2003. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  13. "2004 Results". Web Cartoonists Choice Awards. 2004. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
  14. "2005 Results". Web Cartoonists Choice Awards. 2005. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
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