![]() ![]() In addition to the proliferation of "sexkcd" strips, the math/science strips have also declined in quality. I haven't read xkcd for probably close to a year.) If you really want to know, it's #631.) (I say "for enjoyment" because I did continue to read for several more months to watch the train wreck, but eventually, even that amusement paled. ![]() (I'm not providing a link because it is extremely NSFW and doesn't have even a vestige of humor to make up for its coarseness. Relationships and sex have always been a theme of XKCD, but strips on this topic have gotten progressively creepier and more disgusting, culminating at last in the infamous "TGI Friday's" strip, the point at which I stopped reading for enjoyment. (I am also a nerd.) However, over the years, the quality of XKCD has significantly degenerated. I used to love XKCD, chiefly for obscure jokes about esoteric topics. The book will no doubt delight XKCD fans. He added a little commentary to a few strips and included some coded messages, which I didn't bother decoding. Munroe selected the best of XKCD from the first 500 or so comics. ![]() XKCD: Volume 0 is the first collection of XKCD strips. ![]() It features primarily stick figures and typically focuses on "nerdy" topics such as science, math, science fiction, Firefly, and the like. XKCD, for the uninitiated, is a webcomic "drawn" by Randall Munroe. ![]()
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