How I Killed Your Master

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

"It is simple, Chan Sen. You can kill me and avenge your master, or you can listen to me and surpass him."

Liu Wong

A Kung Fu Wuxia Webcomic, written by Brian Clevinger and John Wood, drawn by Matt Speroni and lettering done by Jeff Powell.

A man seeks vengeance for the death of his master, Xu Li. The murderer, Liu Wong, offers him some tea and an explanation for his actions. This provides a Framing Device for the true story, of how Wong got to the level he's at today.

Notable for a consistently strong art style and dead-serious writing on-par with the greatest Kung Fu epics. You can find it here.

Tropes used in How I Killed Your Master include:

Master Fei: "It's been ten years since anyone spoke of my fights because no one has walked away from them in that time."

    • Also Liu Feng is said to have described his kung-fu style as simply "I don't know what it's like to hit a man twice."
    • And then there is the Tiger Knuckle School...

Liu Wong: No, you should let me pass too.
Bandit: Why would we do that?
Four rapid KOs later...
Liu Wong: It would have been the right thing to do.

Wong: You knew my father???
Master Fei: Obviously I did! His dying wish would not have been to send you to live with a stranger! No more talking!

Fang Lin: Do let me know if this kung-fu fight interrupts your playtime.

  • Color Coded for Your Convenience: The three factions vying for control over Xiao Chengzheng wear brown, yellow and blue, respectively.
  • Contrived Coincidence: Wong and Lin are talking about the three factions that want to get a hold of the governor's imperial seal so they can rule the region. Then, in the middle of the conversation, Wong just happens to pull the seal out of a well when he goes to get a drink. Then, while he's examining it, who shows up? The bandits Wong had fought twice before, who just happen to belong to one of the factions.
  • Curb Stomp Battle: Fei's fight against Ji Jiao and Ji Bao.
    • And if Fei isn't exaggerating, then Liu Feng's entire career was nothing but this. When you can say "I don't know what it's like to hit a man twice" and have that taken seriously, you're a guy who has kicked a lot of asses with very little effort.
      • After the Time Skip Wong has one of these to prove he's taken a level in badass.
        • And then the bandits come back to gang up and kick Wong's ass, indicating he should have taken a few more.
    • Meet Zhang.
  • Cynical Mentor: Master Fei views Wong as more of an annoyance than anything else.
  • Dumb Muscle: Zhang doesn't quite grasp the concept of sarcasm.
  • Deliberately Monochrome: The first chapter.
  • Does Not Understand Sarcasm: Zhang is very literal-minded.
  • Everybody Was Kung-Fu Fighting: It's Wuxia, what do you expect?
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: The story is the tale of how Wong killed Chan Sen's master, told in flashback by Wong to Chan Sen.
  • Fragile Speedster: Word of God states that Wong is a speed fighter while Fang Lin relies on her physical strength more than speed.
  • Genocide Backfire: Xu Li, fearing the fighting style of Wong's father, killed him and attempted to do the same to his son, even though the former took his secrets to his grave and the latter was completely ignorant of his legacy. Guess what drives Wong to learn Kung Fu now?
  • Genre Savvy: Chan Sen. Mildly. When Wong asks him to sit and listen, Chan Sen does. Someone's been reading Discworld.
  • Good Is Not Nice: Master Fei, along with the rest of the Five Dragons, dedicated his life to protecting those who couldn't fight for themselves. He's also an utter badass and an arrogant dick with a Hair-Trigger Temper.
  • Grail in the Garbage: Liu Wong pulls the governor's seal - which will grant its bearer a claim to rule the region - out of a random well when he goes to get a drink.
  • How We Got Here: The premise of most of the strip so far.
  • Hard Work Montage: One strip covers 29 days of running to get in shape.
  • Humiliation Conga: Wong's welcome at the Tiger Knuckle School. He arrives boasting to the headmistress about how he's a master of the Five Mantis Fists, then contemptuously dismisses the school's most accomplished student because she's a girl. He proceeds to get his ass kicked by every single student, one by one. In descending order of their skill. In old-age retrospect, he decides it was a humiliation he sorely needed.
  • Invulnerable Knuckles: Averted. A bandit's knuckles are shown to be reddened when he punches Wong, though this may be a previous injury.
  • Jerkass: Master Fei. Whether he turns out to have a heart of gold or just a heart of soul-crunching punches is still to be decided.
  • MacGuffin: The Imperial Seal, which all three faction leaders in the civil war need to be officially rule the province. Wong, having little to no knowledge of the surrounding situation, finds it accidentally.
  • Mighty Glacier: Zhang, of Meng Qi's merry little band. The man is huge. And apparently can't keep up with the gang when they're off running to rescue Fang Lin.
  • Mixed Martial Arts: The Divine Fist of the Unconquerable Sky, the style of Wong's deceased father, sounds like it's this. Wong's task in life is to recreate it since Dad took the secrets to his grave.
  • Nostalgic Narrator: The title should have tipped you off.
  • Oh Crap: Master Fei guards his family Kung Fu secrets jealously. Wong begins practicing them in secret. When Master Fei later strikes at Wong for clumsiness, the latter reflexively uses a very recognizable block.
  • One-Man Army: Zhang. Complete with lampshade hanging.
  • Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner: Fang Lin and Wong run into a bunch of bandits/

Fang Lin: I'll take the ugly one.
Wong: Which ugly one?

    • And later...

Meng Qi: Brother Zhang, our "Papers".

Wong: We're not together or anything. It's important that you don't imply that.

Brian Clevinger: Think of it as a kung fu movie. But a comic.