vultureX21 said:
Whether it is better or worse than Larson you can happily debate, I personally think it reaches a whole other level of complexity for the same reason you see it as inferior. Munroe doesn't always have to be funny, doesn't always need to do things the "traditional" way by including all the jokes in the panels, in many ways it is an evolutionary version of what Larson did.
Poor comedic timing isn't really "evolutionary". This isn't a matter of exploring new rhythms -- it's about having a tin ear. Ivy bondage is one of Munroe's better ideas, but he botches the execution by placing the ending as a caption rather than breaking the four-panel structure in order to segue naturally into it as its own little scene. It's stuff like that that creates the feeling that his graphic design is, well, chiefly accidental.
I think his tin ear for language is more problematic. Like, okay, check this one out: definitely one of xkcd's better
ideas for a pun, but its execution suffers because Munroe can't figure out the fact that "... that ass" completely collapse the double-entendre (and, therefore, the joke) of "tap that":
That's a botched joke, pure and simple. The idea of it is still kind of funny, but the execution's doing nothing for it.
Moreover, I don't think a comic that just doesn't do narrative captions can really claim to be Larson's successor. Looking through the archives, I just can't find any good examples of the caption telling a little story (Larson's signature thing, in my opinion). In this sense, the caption-comic
Monkey Fluids does a much, much better job of evoking Larson's rhythm and style, as is the often-childish but usually-more-funny-and-transgressive-than-xkcd daily
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal.
vultureX21 said:
Munroe is what he claims to be, a strange guy, and how amusing or throught-provoking you find him to be depends on what you think about his oddity.
I think his oddity is downright pedestrian. That's why Slashdot and Digg love him so much -- because he does just pretty much say the same geek things about the same geek topics. He had his own little endearing/offputting quirks, but now he's pretty much turned into a geeky guy who writes comics based on the same old geek memes in order to sell t-shirts to geeks.
-- Alex