Today on Quantum Vibe: Looks like a highway map Strip 1456 - Click strip above to goto the next strip.
First Seen: Wed 2016-10-26
Story & Art: Scott Bieser - Colors: Lea Jean Badelles Sci-Fi Adventure Monday & Thursday.
To boldly go where no manic pixie dream girl has gone before.
Quantum Vibe
A thousand years in the future, humanity has colonized worlds in nearly
100 galaxies, thanks to Quantum Vibremonic technologies developed five
centuries earlier. Other new technologies have created various
off-shoots of humanity and extended life expectancies five-fold. The
story begins with how a mad scientist and his plucky assistant, along
with their robot friend, brought humanity to the stars, and continues
with the adventures of some unique people in fantastic places.
Project Is A Go! [ Sep 23, 2023 ]
The Kickstarter project for our coming Quantum Vibe: The Murphy Drive (Omnibus 1) Kickstarter project has launched. The campaign for this project will run from 9-21-2023 through 10-31-2023. This will be your chance to get your very own copy of this Omnibus edition.
Several other Quantum Vibe goodies are available for contributing to our campaign. More will be added during the campaign as it grows. So you'll want to stay tuned. Follow the link in this paragraph, or you can click on the project art so you can join the growing Quantum Vibe fans following our project.
Panel 1
Back aboard Causa Sui, Hugo, Murphy and Eithne look at the monitor screen. In the center section is a portion of the galaxy, with red ribbon graphics overlaid. Present-time Hugo in a cameo.
Hugo (cameo): Before long, I had finished my preliminary investigation:
Hugo (in panel): The gravitic interference definitely falls into patterns, which I've sharpened here.
Panel 2
Different angle on the trio.
Eithne: It looks almost like a highway map.
Hugo: Perhaps it is, after a fashion.
Muphy: What do you mean?
Panel 3
Closer 3-shot. Murphy looks surprised, but Eithne is perplexed.
Hugo: This is just a theory, but ...
Hugo: These are the sorts of space/time distortion patterns one might expect from widespread use of an Alcubierre-White warp-drive.
Murphy: Impossible!