>>105509477>>105509477not the anon you're talking about but I am the anon that brought up sonic so allow me to explain.
I won't deny that Sonic comics can have cathartic moments but the problem is that those moments usually don't have real time to breath properly.
Sonic is also missing what you called "wacky shit at home". those moments are yes exaggerated but they're exaggerations of common problems everybody has. they're basically satire of real life and that helps the audience to emphasize on a very human and intimate level with the characters.
have you ever seen a story where super-genius Tails just isn't able to program his VCR or to upgrade his antivirus and ends up making a mess? No, and that's why Tails remains a naive super-genius and nothing really more. a cool character none the less, but not really "a person"
I think this can be easily justified by the fact that the two comics just decided early on to be different genres.
Duck comics have always been (thanks to Carl Barks) wacky and comedic SOL stories set in an exaggerated version of our really real world, with cities, cars, slums, governments and even wars. Rosa and other authors started from there to build an even deeper and more complex world. (While Sonic Comics can't even give its planet a name anymore)
Sonic comics, on the other hand, decided to be basically supergero comics and followed those rules, with multiple universes, bigger than life threats, and characters that look pretty bombastic but usually don't have that much space for human developement outside of some specific issues, like an origin story.
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