just recently I saw a mention of Kill Six Billion Demons, and I thought, "oh, I remember hearing about that before, I should remember to check it out."
found the website, went "huh. that is not what I thought I was going to be looking at."
thought for a moment, realized that based on the title alone, my brain had sorted it into the same bucket as Dead Dead Demon's Dededede Destruction, which I also haven't read, but have seen a page or two of here and there.
anyway, seems like a good webcomic, art's a little Moebius-y.
OK I just finished the "Wielder of Names" chapter and that was pretty great. I like Maya very much.
something about the mode of storytelling feels very Mignola- and/or maybe somewhat Gaiman-ish. and it's got some real good "reluctant normal person endowed with cosmic power briefly embraces it, for friendship" moments already, and obviously I love that shit
now I'm caught up, which means I can't find out what happens next yet.
(I still like Maya very much.)
there's a page near the end of Book 5 (if you've read the comic you'll know which one) that made me yell out loud and immediately have to go rewatch Thor: Ragnarok just to get to the part of the fight on the Bifrost when "Immigrant Song" kicks in.
man, Thor: Ragnarok was way better than anything extruded by the Disney Content Morass had any right to be.
come to think, there's really been something in the zeitgeist for the past, oh, couple decades, hasn't there, about escaping cycles, letting go of comfort, and embracing change/uncertainty/apocalypse/transcendence. Ragnarok, KSBD, The Matrix, The Invisibles, even Destiny 2 are all on some level doing variations on this story.