DM of the Rings Remastered CXLIV: The Long-Expected Parting

By Peter T Parker Posted Tuesday Dec 23, 2025

Filed under: DM of the Rings Remaster 16 comments

Friends! I will not keep you long. I am writing this to you for a purpose. Indeed, for three purposes. First of all, to tell you that I am immensely fond of you all, and that one year is far too short a time to write a webcomic for such excellent and admirable readers. I don’t know half of you half as well as I would like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve.

Secondly, to celebrate the one-year anniversary of this strip. I should say, OUR strip, since the comments and suggestions you’ve given over the last year have been as entertaining as the strip itself. Together the strips score one hundred and forty-four. One gross, if I may use the expression.

This month is also, if I may be allowed to refer to ancient history, the two-year anniversary of the start of this site. Two years ago this site began in utter obscurity, with me posting a narrative of a D&D campaign to nobody in particular. But today the site is thriving and I can now say, “Thank you very much” to the thousands of you who read this.

Thirdly and finally, I wish to make an ANNOUNCEMENT. I regret to announce that, though, as I said, a year is for too short a time to spend on a webcomic, this is the END. It is over now. GOOD BYE.

 

Er, not quite. Oh dear. Bilbo seems to have painted me into a corner. Let’s start over.

This is indeed the end of DM of the Rings, but not the end as far as writing webcomics go. On this site, I have another couple of weeks of deleted strips and other bits I’ve come up with that didn’t fit into the DMotR continuity.

If you want to read more by me, then check out Stolen Pixels, a screencap comic I do for The Escapist. It’s on videogames, not D&D, but it might amuse you if you’re into that sort of thing.

Thanks so much for reading. It’s been an honor.

-Shamus, Friday Sep 7, 2007

I miss you old man

 


From The Archives:
 

16 thoughts on “DM of the Rings Remastered CXLIV: The Long-Expected Parting

  1. Viorel Apopei says:

    Thank you for these remasters Peter. Are you interested in writing more for the site ? (Short message cause phone posting )

  2. Sleeping Dragon says:

    Ah what a ride. It was good to experience it again. Shamus had a gift.

  3. Acher4 says:

    For one more time, so long!
    Thanks so much!!
    This was a wonderful remaster!!! :_)

  4. Olivier FAURE says:

    Thanks for everything!

    And one last time: if anyone wants to see someone take Shamus’s concept, expand it, make it about Star Wars, and replace the cast of dysfunctional sociopaths with a cast of semi-functional goofballs, well, such a comic can be read!

    https://darthsanddroids.net/

    1. Siphedious says:

      As a Darths and Droids fan (but when are the rest of the “Solo” strips getting commentary? :p ), it was fun to read the original inspiration…and newly remastered!

      Thank you, Peter, for all the time and effort and obvious love you put into this!

    2. Philadelphus says:

      And if you want to see it done with a cast of people working out interpersonal group dynamics in the setting of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, such a comic exists too! (It’s complete now, after an almost 13-year[!] run.)

      https://friendshipisdragons.thecomicseries.com/

      TVTropes also has a page listing other examples of what it calls “campaign comics,” if you’re looking for something else new.

      1. Anonymous says:

        And if you want to see the concept executed by an actually functional group, there’s always One Piece: Grand Line 3.5, which continues to receive updates thrice weekly and maintain a semi-active (plus generally friendly) shoutbox community.

        On a related note, I take Olivier’s use of “(semi-)functional)” to mean “devoid of any major social-emotional issues that impact, or may impact, the players’ ability to collaborate and communicate with each other peacefully and respectfully,” but that’s merely my take.

        —————

        On the other hand, if you somehow want to subject yourself to an even more dysfunctional group with only half the humor of DMotR, I suppose you could always read D&D Aangvanced, which is listed on the TV Tropes that Philadelphus so kindly linked for us.

        For those masochistic daring enough to brave Aangvanced themselves, be warned that the series was designed to be as unfriendly as physically possible to low-vision, blind, or screen reader-using readers. For whatever goddamn reason the author thought it acceptable, even brilliant, to liberally use low-contrast (especially dark-on-dark) text, visual effects in speech bubbles (blurred text, noisy backgrounds, etc.), and alt text commentary throughout the comic. There are no transcripts for most of the comic to help readers navigate the author’s…interesting artistic choices, and the transcripts hosted on tumblr for the first dozen pages or so are not guaranteed to resist link rot. Hell, if you just want transcripts around to keep track of which lines or panels go where, Aangvanced is not for you: The author loved to experiment with panel and speech bubble layouts for the sake of drama and aesthetics, sometimes at the expense of an intuitive (or at least coherent) visual order.

        (Seriously, if you want a campaign comic that centers access in its reading experience, Friendship is Dragons and Darths & Droids are both excellent choices. They have detailed transcripts with SFX and descriptions of noteworthy details in case anyone uses a screen reader or is simply confused by any given page’s layout. Sadly, Grand Line 3.5 doesn’t offer any transcripts.)

        I also feel obligated to mention that Aangvanced is exquisitely detailed in its depictions of emotional and verbal abuse, toxic kinship (both family and friend) dynamics, and gaslighting. At one point in the final arc, there’s even an extensive and aggressive attempt to induce psychosis and suicide ideation in the newest player to join the table. Consider this your main advisory; the author never saw fit to add content warnings themself.

        Oh, and the first half of the series might be difficult for autistic readers to stomach. Let’s just say the table doesn’t treat their sole autistic player with much empathy or inclusion.

        (If anyone is wondering whether the multitude of warnings is necessary: Yes. Yes, it is. The series is just that cruelly written.)

  5. Zaxares says:

    I miss the old man too. :( (Actually he was only a decade older than me.)

  6. irvitzer says:

    Thank you for this remaster! It was a pleasure to see this story again, after so many years.

    And I’ve completed my translation (to Russian) as well, and even did some extras by myself (DMotR ‘special’ one-shots and ‘Knights of the Rohirrim’): https://acomics.ru/~dm-of-the-rings-remaster

  7. Leslee Beldotti says:

    It was fun rereading all of these comics. Thank you for doing this!

    Is there any chance that Shamus’ comics about his time spent in Lord of the Rings Online? There doesn’t seem to be any way to access them, as they are all just broken links on the old Escapist website.

    1. djw says:

      It looks like his mmo playthroughs are listed under “Shamus Plays” in the archives. Here is the first lulzy:

      https://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=30811

      Shamus is responsible for me playing lotro as well.

  8. DrPoset says:

    Thanks for everything! I started on the original version and now I’m finishing with this great remaster

  9. Tuck says:

    Thank you for all the work you’ve put into this!

  10. Richard says:

    Good fun to revisit the comic again, and some bittersweet moments as well. Thanks for remastering them & running them again

  11. Doug says:

    (inevitable nerd observation)
    The original was better.
    (/ino)

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane. :)

  12. Grandma Sharon says:

    I hate to see it end. I bought “Help My Dice Are Trying Ti Kill Me” mugs/travel mugs for some of the family for Christmas. We all miss Shamus in an unending way.

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