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The Guild One-Shots #2

The Guild: Tink

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Felicia Day returns to her Internet and comics sensation The Guild with a story spotlighting the Knights of Good’s most mysterious member, Tinkerballa!

While some of the other Guild members have gotten a little too involved in each other’s offline lives, Tink has fiercely guarded her privacy, and the Knights of Good still know almost nothing about her. When they begin to pry, the Guild gets more than they bargained for-but is any of it true? Joining Felicia Day for these tall tales are Kristian Donaldson, Jeremy Bastian, Wellinton Alves, Tim Seeley, and Adam Warren!

Comic Book

First published January 1, 2011

434 people want to read

About the author

Felicia Day

46 books127k followers
Actress, New Media Geek, Gamer, Misanthrope. Voracious reader.

Felicia Day is a prolific multi-hyphenate. She's the New York Times Bestselling author of "You're Never Weird on the Internet (Almost)" and the creativity book "Embrace Your Weird", and she recently wrote the Audible series "Third Eye" that won "Best Audio Drama" at the Audie Awards in 2024. She has appeared as an actor in numerous television shows such as “Supernatural”, “Eureka” and “The Magicians” and she can be heard as a voice actor in such shows as "Adventure Time" and "Monster High."

She is perhaps best known for her work in the web video world. Felicia co-starred in the internet musical sensation “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog” which won an Emmy. She also created and starred in the seminal web series “The Guild” which ran for six seasons, won numerous awards for web video excellence, and spawned a hit comic book series with Dark Horse Comics. Recently, her outfit from the show was added to the Smithsonian American History collection as an example of early web media pioneering.

Felicia produced dozens of shows with her former digital company Geek and Sundry, including Wil Wheaton’s “Tabletop” and the RPG sensation “Critical Role”, and currently streams, writes and acts for her audience of six million fans across socials as she attempts to slow down now that she's a mother. (She is failing at it, badly.)

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5 stars
59 (44%)
4 stars
39 (29%)
3 stars
23 (17%)
2 stars
3 (2%)
1 star
9 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Nathan Haines.
213 reviews7 followers
September 1, 2019
Eh it was pretty dull. The whole comic boils down to 'I don't want to tell people I game with things about myself'. Probably would have given it one star had it not been for a couple witty frames behind the narration
Profile Image for Srinivas.
12 reviews
May 23, 2015
A great companion to the hit web series "The Guild". Though it is Felicia's first attempt at comics, it's funny and retains much of the web series' humor and helps flesh out the characters a bit more.
Profile Image for Sarah.
452 reviews12 followers
April 28, 2014
It was great to see how Tink tricked all of her fellow Guild-ies! I love the fun backstories and Tink's sarcasm is always welcome
Profile Image for Kay ☾.
1,280 reviews21 followers
April 1, 2019
Saw this in a bargain bin for 50 cents and liked the color. Had no idea this was based off of a show or anything. Even if you don't know anything about the show or the other characters, this was a good issue and the dialogue was hilarious.

Art work isn't the best though but the funny dialogue makes up for it.
Profile Image for Laura.
1,611 reviews129 followers
October 2, 2021
You can be anyone you want on the internet. Tink exploits that to an almost sociopathic level.
Profile Image for Tarot.
593 reviews65 followers
Read
November 21, 2018
4 stars

My review of The Guild vol. 1

Whereas the first volume of The Guild shows Codex's life before the first season of the web show and is done by one artist, the second volume focuses on the backgrounds of the other five members of The Knights of Good, hence the title, with each one-shot done by a different artist. As expected of a good prequel, they tie-in people, events, and conversations in the show.

First up is Vork and his grandfather, who turns out to be a crazy old hell-on-wheelchair wild child and bears an identical albeit more wrinkled resemblance to Vork. I found this story a little boring, honestly, because it raised more unanswered questions about Vork's past. How did he end up living with his grandfather? What happened to his mother and father? Why is his way of living so reserved, the complete opposite of his grandfather? I know it's meant to just be a funny little piece of his past, but I couldn't help wondering if more could've been explained. The art is good with a strong likeness to Vork in the show.

Next is Tinkerballa, which is my favorite one-shot because, hell, it's just so Tink. The guildees tell each other the version of Tink's past that she told each of them privately to get them to stop asking her personal questions and just play, which all turn out to be mashed-up references to books (I love Jane Eyre!), movies, and other games. Her place looks like mine! The reason she wants to remain a mystery to everyone is hinted at the end of the one-shot and revealed at the end of season 5, which came out before this comic. I think this piece has the best art because it's crisp and dynamic, changing depending on which version of Tink's fake pasts it's illustrating.

Then comes Bladezz and his sister Dena, who I like even more now because she really shows off her nerdiness and sarcasm. The origins of "Finn Smulders" is revealed! I'm glad it shows how their parents' divorce affected them, which is a big life event that didn't come up in the show that often. The art is good too with plenty of sibling fights.

Clara seems more funny in the show than she is in her one-shot; her laziness and bad parenting are a parody of people who actually game so much they neglect everything else, which is strangely amusing in the show but isn't here. I think it's because this shows she's been ditzy and self-absorbed her whole life, it's not something she became after The Game. I also felt the art was the weakest of the five; it was too cartoony and didn't look much like the characters compared to the other comics. But I thought it was hilarious her husband "Wiggly" was in juvie and had a "gangsta" phase!

Last comes the tale of the smitten "Hind-Jew" Zaboo and his fiercely protective mom, Avinashi, leading up to his first out-of-game encounter with Codex in season 1. I felt this was the most creative of the one-shots because of the choose-your-own-adventure-style EXP panels that let you see what level of stalker you are compared to Zaboo. The art was good and fit the characters well.

What I like most about The Guild comics is that they're true to the characters, who represent many in the gaming community -- the insecure nice girls, the anal-retentive rule-enforcers, the mysterious vixens, the inappropriate teenage boys, the reluctant parents, the bullied eccentrics. And when you mix them all up, some crazy-fun high jinks can ensue in- and out-of-game!
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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