Hsu and Chan

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Chan (left) and Hsu (right) in a panel from the February 2005 (EGM #188) strip "Trouble at Port!"
Chan (left) and Hsu (right) in a panel from the February 2005 (EGM #188) strip "Trouble at Port!"

Hsu and Chan is a comic created by Jeremy "Norm" Scott that appears in the video game magazine Electronic Gaming Monthly. It follows the misadventures of the brothers Hsu and Chan Tanaka, who own and operate a company called "Tanaka Bros. Game Development" (which specializes in knock-offs of popular titles such as Gran Turismo: Comic "Hsu and Chan in: Chan Turismo!").

After three years with EGM, Norm contacted Slave Labor Graphics Publishing about making a standalone, full-length Hsu and Chan comic book. Slave Labor agreed, and seven issues of the comic, as of 2005, have been published. A collection of these first five (along with extra bonus material) was released in 2004 and is titled Hsu and Chan: Too Much Adventure.

Tanaka Bros. Game Development has other, less seen employees, including Arnie, a ground squirrel bearing a striking resemblance to Sonic the Hedgehog, Gila Mobster, the brutish Charmander parody who can be seen wearing a black Fedora with a lighter grasped in the end of his tail, and Chernobyl, the radioactive chipmunk who is a take on Pikachu.

Contents

[edit] EGM strip vs. Slave Labor comics

Since the EGM strips are typically one page long, they are self-contained stories that parody a specific video game (usually the game on that month's cover of EGM). The Slave Labor comics, on the other hand, are considerably longer and more reliant on plot. The Slave Labor comics are also less video game-centric and feature Hsu and Chan battling supernatural foes and their arch-rivals at the competing video game company, Yamamoto Games, Inc.

It should also be noted that Norm's naturally wordy dialogue seems to be slightly toned down for the EGM strip (a necessary compromise given the single page nature of the strip). In the Slave Labor comic, the characters are much more verbose.

Despite the separate focuses of the two different strips, they exist within the same universe. That is to say, if someone in the Slave Labor comics were to lose a limb, that limb would also be missing in the EGM strip.

[edit] Spin-offs

The first comic to spin-off from Hsu and Chan was Game Critter Super-Squad!, which ran in EGM's now-defunct sister magazine, GameNOW.

[edit] Video game parodies

See also: List of Hsu and Chan Comics

The following games have been featured in the Hsu and Chan EGM strips:

[edit] Other works

Norm has also made other comics, such as The Otters and Violence Man!, both of which can be found on his website.

[edit] Reference

Scott, Norm. (2004). Hsu and Chan: Too Much Adventure. SLG Publishing.

[edit] External links