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Nanase Gecko, Nanase Gecko, does whatever a Nanase Gecko does...

Seriously how did I not think to reference Spider-Man while drawing this it was only my game of 2018 and features a guy who crawls on walls

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Anonymous

Nerve wracking

egscomics

I looked it up beforehand. What I read claimed that both spellings are accepted, but "wracking" is considered technically incorrect.

Anonymous

I agree, Dan. The phrase implies that your nerves are on a rack, i.e. one of those medieval torture devices, being stretched to the limit.

Anonymous

I was pretty much right in how Sarah would have to communicate where Nanase moves, it's very tedious when you have to just eyeball it.

Anonymous

But it's a 2D space! and they're both facing the same direction! You can use the four cardinal directions of gaming! (up, down, left, right) and the other person will know what you mean, so long as the writer doesn't want to make the obligatory "no, you're other left!" joke!

Anonymous

Maybe it was a good thing you didn't reference Spider Man. What you came up with looks really good and works well in this context. There's a sort of awkwardness that is appropriate for a Twister-like puzzle, and having her limbs spread out like that also looks very lizard-like (particularly in the second panel).

Stephen Gilberg

Is it bad that I would totally hug Reptiliananase if she let me?

Kevin Wright

The magic is having to work really hard to get her outfit to fit around that tail. :)

Taran1s

Go NanaGecko!

extantCadence

Apparently, David, it’s specifically in that case that it can be spelled both ways. The meaning is the same. As in, when used as a verb to figuratively refer to the use of that torture device, both ways are correct and are effectively the same.

ZekeStaright

Gottsta Make That Mulla

Matt R

Getting serious Gex flashbacks

Viktor

Specifically, Spider-Man has a very distinct silhouette, that doesn’t look at all like a human or a lizard. I agree that what Dan came up with is a much better option.