This was essentially my money-making plan as a kid: set up an old picnic bench in the front yard, lay out the clay produce, and wait for the cash to start rolling in. I spent a good several days during the summer just sitting in my front yard, waiting for my neighbors to walk by and buy something. At the end of the day, I'd head inside and put the day's spoils (usually a handful of change) into a robot bank on my shelf.
As for whether or not I ever earned enough to get a game, well... that will be revealed a few more pages down the road.
I drew this page from scratch on a live broadcast through my Ustream channel. I plan on doing this every Sunday night at 6 pm EST, so bookmark that page if you'd like to help me out with some live feedback on the comic.
Official Site: PeterandCompany.com
On Facebook: Peter & Company on Facebook
As for whether or not I ever earned enough to get a game, well... that will be revealed a few more pages down the road.
I drew this page from scratch on a live broadcast through my Ustream channel. I plan on doing this every Sunday night at 6 pm EST, so bookmark that page if you'd like to help me out with some live feedback on the comic.
Official Site: PeterandCompany.com
On Facebook: Peter & Company on Facebook
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Comics
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 600 x 900px
File Size 212.3 kB
Heh. Makes me remember a yard sale where my parents forced me to put my RPGs out for sale. They made the mistake of letting me price them. So I put the cover price +10% on them. My parents didn't notice until we were picking up for the day. My mom was actually silly enough to say it looked like I didn't want to sell them, to which I said, "Well, duh." Got smacked by my dad for it, but it wasn't like they gave me a choice about getting rid of beloved possessions. Still have those games, too. 20 years later. Take that yard sale!
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