Kique Nordin has done a slight reversal when it comes to updating Home pages on ComicFury. Perhaps he realized it was unfair for members of the public to only read two pages a month while patrons got to read three. The upload schedule has been adjusted so just like on Patreon, ComicFury will update on the 11th, 18th, and 25th of each month instead of just the second and last Thursdays. This change won’t close the gap between public and paywall pages, but the public won’t fall ridiculously behind. Still, at some point earlier this year Home was updating twice a week on CF and several times a week on Patreon. I’ll be surprised if those days ever return.

Commenting on public pages is still not worth your time if you’re critical of the story in any way. Check out this reply that was posted and removed:

Granted, Kique and his staff have the right to decide who can post or what is posted on their website. However, vague rules are unfair. The “critique is accepted” line is laughable because it is anything but true. If you’re only looking for comments that are just praise or story ideas, please let your audience know. Of course, I can only wager Kique hasn’t outright stated this because it’s not a good look even if these are absolutely the comments that ultimately are accepted. An artist who outright demands praise and agreement might scare away some readers. Readers that are used to stroke this artist’s ego and for him to pluck ideas from when he’s uncertain where to take the story– without credit of course.
Again, if you’re critical of Home and want to discuss the story please don’t waste your time with ComicFury. Just join the numerous places geared toward independent discussion, i.e. Exposedmundr, Askmundr, Nabisco Parodies, and Jonna’s server.




Kique has abandoned his public. Thats the truth. “Home Staff” a.k.a his gold digger and untalented girlfriend decides about the comets. He always had a problem with critique, but now is worse. This story lost too much quality.
Honestly, between Kique and his fans behavior (including his girlfriend), and the lack of a story, Home is just not worth reading. Every year is worse than the previous year in terms of storytelling– which is one hell of a feat.