Love and Tentacles: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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A comic by [[Humon]], of [[Niels]] and [[Scandinavia and The World]] fame. It takes place in an alternate universe in which humans coexist with the Tentacula, a race of, well, tentacle monsters ([[Fantastic Slurs|but don't call them that]]). The central characters are Tom (human) and Frida (Tentacula), a committed couple coping with the fact that their relationship challenges social norms--both the ones they encounter in public and the ones they have internalized in their own heads.
A comic by [[Humon]], of [[Niels]] and [[Scandinavia and The World]] fame. It takes place in an alternate universe in which humans coexist with the Tentacula, a race of, well, tentacle monsters ([[Fantastic Slurs|but don't call them that]]). The central characters are Tom (human) and Frida (Tentacula), a committed couple coping with the fact that their relationship challenges social norms--both the ones they encounter in public and the ones they have internalized in their own heads.


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=== Tropes used in this [[Web Comic]] include: ===
* [[Anything That Moves]]: Mona, Frida's coworker who is "sex crazy even by Tentacula standards".
* [[Anything That Moves]]: Mona, Frida's coworker who is "sex crazy even by Tentacula standards".
* [[Bizarre Alien Biology]]: Tentaculas have three different types of tentacles, and a split tongue. They also practice external fertilization, much to Tom's [[Squick]].
* [[Bizarre Alien Biology]]: Tentaculas have three different types of tentacles, and a split tongue. They also practice external fertilization, much to Tom's [[Squick]].

Latest revision as of 18:32, 28 January 2020

A comic by Humon, of Niels and Scandinavia and The World fame. It takes place in an alternate universe in which humans coexist with the Tentacula, a race of, well, tentacle monsters (but don't call them that). The central characters are Tom (human) and Frida (Tentacula), a committed couple coping with the fact that their relationship challenges social norms--both the ones they encounter in public and the ones they have internalized in their own heads.

Tropes used in Love and Tentacles include: