Sexy Losers

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Sexy Losers
One panel from Sexy Losers #200, featuring a parody of Elfen Lied.
One panel from Sexy Losers #52, featuring some of the main cast of the comic.
Author(s) Clay
Website http://www.sexylosers.com/
Current status Concluded for now
Launch date April 1999
End Date March 2006
Genre(s) Ribaldry

Sexy Losers was an adult webcomic by Clay, a Canadian living in Japan, who from 2001 to 2004 was known under the pseudonym "Hard." The strip has a significant following; its web hosting company's promotional material indicated that it received one million unique visitors in August 2003.[1] Before being hosted on its own from September 2003 and on, it was the most popular webcomic on Keenspace, getting over 10% of all page views.[2]

The strip, a satire of human sexual foibles, draws from themes generally alien to light comic fare, namely sex, fetishism, and sexual relationships. Though the author describes the comic as ribaldry as opposed to pornography, the strip does contain graphic depictions of sex acts, as well as full nudity of both male and female characters. A number of its jokes are drawn from recurring elements of pornographic or animated pornographic (hentai) films. One character, for instance, is a bukkake film actress. The strips stays true to its bawdy genre, and often attempts humour through the quirks of human sexuality intensified with shock value and depiction of taboos.[3][4] Clay cites the comic Heartbroken Angels by Kikuni Masahito as his largest inspiration in making the comic.[5]

The strip first appeared in April 1999 under the name The Thin H Line (see ecchi) as part of the monthly drawing contest Monthly Online Manga and then became a separate ongoing comic.[6] A number of comics during the first half year were "jam strips" in which artist friends would contribute a panel to a pre-written and laid-out comic, a practice that became less frequent when Clay moved to Japan in July 1999. In 2001 the strip was renamed Sexy Losers due to events in Clay's personal life and his wish to give the comic a less otaku-sounding name. It was at this time he began to use the pseudonym "Hard" for greater web anonymity, which lasted until 2004 when he returned to his real name.

There are several recurring story threads, which almost never intersect: "The Seduction of Madame X" (on BDSM), "Shiunji and the Suicide Girl" (on necrophilia), "Mike's Left Hand" (on chronic masturbation) and "Kenta's Horny Mom" (on incest and lesbianism) being the most prominent. Some of these threads involve character and plot development, others are variations on a theme (e.g., how Tauro fails in his attempts to seduce Madame X).

Though Sexy Losers hasn't been syndicated in print, individual strips have been published in manga magazines.[1] One of the jokes reached a wide audience when Maxim published an unauthorized and uncredited transcribed version of #230 in its December 2004 magazine. The scene had been described using the same setting and characters, and the punchline copied word for word.[7]

On March 28, 2006, after 244 strips, Clay announced the retirement of Sexy Losers.[8]

[edit] Legacy

The strip has been cited as a major influence among other webcomics, especially with other mature-themed titles. For example, other comics have borrowed some of the themes and the 4 Koma format the strip is presented in.

A specific Sexy Losers strip, which featured a play on Tentacle rape [2], was the inspiration behind the webcomic Ghastly's Ghastly Comic, which originally revolved almost entirely around tentacle monsters.[9]

The most significant contribution the comic made to popular culture has been the popularization of the onomatopoeia "fap" for the sound of male masturbation. While Clay did not invent it (the source is VIZ Media's translation of Heartbroken Angels), his use of "fap" has led it to become an almost universal term online. The term was first used in his third comic produced in April 28, 1999 and appears to be the first appearance of the term on the internet.[10] In a similar vein, Clay used the onomatopoeia "schlick" for the sound of female masturbation.

[edit] Notes and references

[edit] External links

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