Today on Quantum Vibe: A bit of a challenge Strip 1949 - Click strip above to goto the next strip.
First Seen: Mon 2019-05-13
Story & Art: Scott Bieser - Colors: Gus Mendes Sci-Fi Adventure Monday & Thursday.
Creepy moves in darkness dares discovery.
Quantum Vibe
A thousand years in the future, humanity has colonized worlds in nearly
100 galaxies, thanks to Quantum Vibremonic technologies developed five
centuries earlier. Other new technologies have created various
off-shoots of humanity and extended life expectancies five-fold. The
story begins with how a mad scientist and his plucky assistant, along
with their robot friend, brought humanity to the stars, and continues
with the adventures of some unique people in fantastic places.
Kickstarter Success! [ May 13, 2025 ]
The Not-Safe-Space 2 Kickstarter Campaign has ended successfully. Thanks to all who pledged!
Now we get to wait 2 weeks while Kickstarter transmits the funds, and Scott can order the books, and send surveys to backers to get current e-mail addresses for the .PDF versions and mailing addresses for the physical books.
Panel 1
The super-flyer arcs through the city-scape.
Caption: Another half-hour later we were back in our own flyer.
Diana (from flyer): Man, you could've cut the tension leaving that agrobola with a knife.
Areum (from flyer): Do you think they might actually find a way to detect whatever it is they're looking for?
Panel 2
Diana lounges in the rear seat of the flyer, thinking. Areum sits attentively in the pilot's seat.
Diana: I don't know, but I don't think they even know what they're looking for.
Diana: We still have a few hours left in the day. I want to look for that mysterious android who was visiting Hayami at the deClayre mansion.
Panel 3
Diana and Areum
Areum: Mysterious android?
Diana: No name, or other identifier. Just some recorded images of brief visits.
Areum: A bit of a challenge, then.
Panel 4
Exterior view of super-flyer arcing towards a Junction Matrix.
Diana: So far, I've narrowed it down to five possibilities.
Diana: As it turns out, this was easier than finding a hyper-cubox-o'-heathens.