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{{Short description|Comedic fantasy webcomic}}
{{Long plot|date=October 2022}}
{{Infobox comic strip| <!-- Part of ] --> {{Infobox comic strip| <!-- Part of ] -->
| title = The Order of the Stick | title = The Order of the Stick
| image = ] | image = ]
| caption = Principal characters, from left to right:<br/>], ], ], ], ], and ] | caption = Principal characters, from left to right:<br />], ], ], ], ], and ]
| author = ] | author = ]
| url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots.html | url = {{URL|www.giantitp.com/comics/oots.html}}

| rss = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots.rss
| status = Active (no standard update schedule) | status = Active (no standard update schedule)
| publisher = Giant in the Playground | publisher = Giant in the Playground
| began = September 29, 2003<ref name=oots0001>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=New Edition |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0001.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2003 |issue=#1 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> | began = {{Start date|2003|09|29}}<ref name=oots0001>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=New Edition |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0001.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2003 |issue=#1 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref>
| ended = | ended =
| genre = ], ], ] | genre = ], ], ]
| ratings =
}} }}


'''''The Order of the Stick''''' ('''''OOTS''''') is a comedic ] that satirizes tabletop ] and ]. The comic is written and drawn by ], who illustrates the comic in a ] style. '''''The Order of the Stick''''' ('''''OOTS''''') is a comedic ] that satirizes tabletop ] and ]. The comic is written and drawn by ], who illustrates the comic in a ] style.


Taking place in a magical world that loosely operates by the rules of the ] of the role-playing game '']'' (''D&D''), the comic follows the sometimes farcical exploits of six adventurers as they strive to save the world from an evil ] ]. Much of the comic's humor stems from the characters' awareness of the game rules that affect their lives or from having ] knowledge of modern culture. This in turn is often used by the author to ] various aspects of role-playing games and fantasy fiction. While primarily comedic in nature, ''The Order of the Stick'' features a continuing storyline serialized in one- to four-page episodes, with over 1000 such episodes released so far. Taking place in a magical world that loosely operates by the rules of the ] of the role-playing game '']'' (''D&D''), the comic follows the sometimes farcical exploits of six adventurers as they strive to save the world from an evil ] ]. Much of the comic's humor stems from the characters' awareness of the game rules that affect their lives or from having ] knowledge of modern culture. This in turn is often used by the author to ] various aspects of role-playing games and fantasy fiction. While primarily comedic in nature, ''The Order of the Stick'' features a continuing storyline serialized in one- to four-page episodes, with over 1300 such episodes released as of April 2024.


Although it is principally distributed online through the website ''Giant in the Playground'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com|title=Giant in the Playground}}</ref> seven book collections have been published, including several print-only stories (''On the Origin of PCs'' and ''Start of Darkness''). An alternate version of the strip appeared monthly in ] for 22 issues; these strips, among others, are collected in ''Snips, Snails and Dragon Tales''. Although it is principally distributed online through the website ''Giant in the Playground'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com|title=Giant in the Playground}}</ref> ten book collections have been published, including several print-only stories (''On the Origin of PCs'', ''Start of Darkness'', and ''Good Deeds Gone Unpunished''). An alternate version of the strip appeared monthly in ] for 22 issues; these strips, among others, are collected in ''Snips, Snails and Dragon Tales''.


==History== ==History==
''The Order of the Stick'' began its run on September 29, 2003, on what was Rich Burlew's personal site for gaming articles at the time. Burlew initially intended the strip to feature no plot whatsoever—depicting an endless series of gags drawn from the D&D rules instead—but Burlew quickly changed his mind, and began laying down hints of a storyline as early as strip #13.<ref name=DCFp20>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', Author Commentary, p. 20.</ref> The strip was originally produced to entertain people who came to his website to read articles, but it quickly became the most popular feature, leading Burlew to eventually abandon writing articles almost entirely.<ref name=DCFp5>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', Introduction, p. 5.</ref> ''The Order of the Stick'' began its run on September 29, 2003, on what was Rich Burlew's personal site for gaming articles at the time. Burlew initially intended the strip to feature no plot whatsoever—depicting an endless series of gags drawn from the D&D rules instead—but Burlew quickly changed his mind, and he began laying down hints of a storyline as early as strip #13.<ref name=DCFp20>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', Author Commentary, p. 20.</ref> The strip was originally produced to entertain people who came to his website to read articles, but it quickly became the most popular feature, leading Burlew to eventually abandon writing articles almost entirely.<ref name=DCFp5>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', Introduction, p. 5.</ref>


''The Order of the Stick'' began as a twice-weekly comic that debuted new strips on Mondays and Thursdays. When presales of the first ''OOTS'' compilation book allowed Burlew to make writing his full-time job, he increased the number to three per week.<ref name=GITPNews2/17/05>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index4.html#ZO077QwnU5SEfN09hcw |title=Do Quit Your Day Job |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2005-02-17 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> Since 2007, the comic has been published on an irregular schedule due to the author's ongoing health concerns.<ref name=GITPNews7/7/07>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#yOSODsgTNhjraLs4GSe |title=An Important Announcement About OOTS |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2007-07-07 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> ''The Order of the Stick'' began as a twice-weekly comic that debuted new strips on Mondays and Thursdays. When presales of the first ''OOTS'' compilation book allowed Burlew to make writing his full-time job, he increased the number to three per week.<ref name="GITPNews2/17/05">{{cite web |url=http://www.giantitp.com/index4.html#ZO077QwnU5SEfN09hcw |title=Do Quit Your Day Job |access-date=2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2005-02-17 |work=Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com |archive-date=2008-03-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080329153651/http://www.giantitp.com/index4.html#ZO077QwnU5SEfN09hcw |url-status=dead }}</ref> Since 2007, the comic has been published on an irregular schedule due to the author's ongoing health concerns.<ref name="GITPNews7/7/07">{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#yOSODsgTNhjraLs4GSe |title=An Important Announcement About OOTS |access-date= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2007-07-07 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> That included a hiatus from September to December 2012, after Burlew had an accident that severed the tendons in his right hand.<ref name="GITPNews9/19/12">{{cite web |url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html |title=Hi Everyone |last=Burlew |first=Mrs. |date=2012-09-19 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120923224219/http://www.giantitp.com/index.html |archive-date=23 September 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="PCmagazine" /><ref name="GITPNews12/31/12">{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#f952CzHnLAmXZtNFeNk|title=There's a New Comic |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2012-12-31 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref>


In September 2012, Burlew had an accident in which the tendons in his right hand were severed,<ref name=GITPNews9/19/12>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html|title=Hi Everyone |last=Burlew |first=Mrs. |date=2012-09-19 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> resulting in a hiatus until December 31, 2012.<ref name=GITPNews12/31/12>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#f952CzHnLAmXZtNFeNk|title=There's a New Comic |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2012-12-31 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> At the end of September 2013, Burlew estimated that the story will be finished in "about four years".<ref>{{cite web|last=Burlew|first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2013-09-29 |url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#y4gGFEGTKuaFz4luwE9 |work=Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com|title=9/29/2013 News}}</ref> In December 2019, Burlew stated that the story would end after one more book, but also noted that still means "years and years" of planned content. He noted that the two preceding books took five years each, and that the upcoming final book may be longer than either.<ref>{{cite web|last=Burlew|first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2013-09-29 |url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html|work=Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com|title=12/2/2019 News}}</ref>

===Evolution of art style===
The comic is created directly on a computer using the ] ], and the art style has been upgraded several times.<ref name=FAQ3>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq3 |title=How do you make the OOTS strips? |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2005-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground FAQ |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> In strip #103, the curved and crooked ] borders were replaced with straight—though still slanted—black lines. Burlew now questions how he ever thought the initial format was acceptable.<ref name=oots0101 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Man-to-Man Chat |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0101.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2004 |issue=#101 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=DCFp158>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', Author Commentary, p. 158.</ref> After he sprained his wrist in 2005, Burlew used some of the time he took off from writing the comic to improve the designs of the main cast, straightening their lines and adding tiny details like the ]s stitched along the edge of Vaarsuvius' cloak.<ref name=NCPBp108/> These changes were humorously acknowledged by the characters themselves when they premiered.<ref name=oots0198 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=The Great Kazoo |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0198.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#198 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> Burlew made adjustments to the colors that were required when the material was to appear in print for the first time.<ref name=NCPBp108 /> The later comics feature more frequent double- and even triple-page strips than in the early days, when longer strips were reserved for special occasions (such as reaching #200). In strip #947 the artwork was upgraded again, adding volume to characters' limbs that were previously drawn as simple stick-figure lines. In addition to these permanent improvements to the art, two variant art styles are used to distinguish the events of certain comics from those taking place in the story's present. Historical events relating to the plot are portrayed in a hand-drawn ] style both in the online comic and in ''Start of Darkness'',<ref name=oots0273 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=The Crayons of Time: Doodles on the Sketch Pad of Eternity |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0273.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#273 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=SODp36 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 36.</ref> while events in the "prequel" print-exclusive stories are shown in black-and-white.


===''Dragon'' magazine=== ===''Dragon'' magazine===
On September 30, 2005, Burlew announced that ''The Order of the Stick'' would begin appearing in '']'', the long-running official ''D&D'' magazine.<ref name=Paizo>, '''', September 30, 2005. Retrieved on November 10, 2007</ref> The strip debuted in the December 2005 issue, on the last page of the magazine.<ref name=Dragon338>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=December 2005 | title = The Order of the Stick: Goo goo g' chuul | journal = Dragon | issue = 338 | publisher = ].}}</ref> The following issue, ''OOTS'' appeared as a four-panel strip in the magazine's interior,<ref name=Dragon338-2>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=December 2005 | title = The Order of the Stick: I.D. Required | journal = Dragon | issue = 339 | publisher = ].}}</ref> but by the February 2006 issue, it had returned to a full-page strip on the last page, a position it would hold until the magazine's last print issue in September 2007.<ref name=Dragon340>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=February 2006 | title = The Order of the Stick: Save vs. Rods, Staves, and Schadenfreude | journal = Dragon | issue = 340 | publisher = ].}}</ref><ref name=GITPNews4/19/07>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#d73xkAsYUesECR37dT9 |title=No More OOTS in Dragon Magazine |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2007-04-19 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> On September 30, 2005, Burlew announced that ''The Order of the Stick'' would begin appearing in '']'', the long-running official ''D&D'' magazine.<ref name="PCmagazine">{{Cite web|url=https://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2399081,00.asp|title=The Best Webcomics 2015|access-date=2016-08-29}}</ref><ref name="Paizo"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304015247/http://paizo.com/paizo/news/v5748eaic9k1l |date=2016-03-04 }}, '''', September 30, 2005. Retrieved on November 10, 2007</ref> The strip debuted in the December 2005 issue, on the last page of the magazine.<ref name="Dragon338">{{cite journal|last=Burlew|first=Rich|date=December 2005|title=The Order of the Stick: Goo goo g' chuul|journal=Dragon|publisher=].|issue=338|author-link=Rich Burlew}}</ref> The following issue, ''OOTS'' appeared as a four-panel strip in the magazine's interior,<ref name="Dragon338-2">{{cite journal|last=Burlew|first=Rich|date=December 2005|title=The Order of the Stick: I.D. Required|journal=Dragon|publisher=].|issue=339|author-link=Rich Burlew}}</ref> but by the February 2006 issue, it had returned to a full-page strip on the last page, a position it held until the magazine's last print issue in September 2007.<ref name="Dragon340">{{cite journal|last=Burlew|first=Rich|date=February 2006|title=The Order of the Stick: Save vs. Rods, Staves, and Schadenfreude|journal=Dragon|publisher=].|issue=340|author-link=Rich Burlew}}</ref><ref name="GITPNews4/19/07">{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#d73xkAsYUesECR37dT9|title=No More OOTS in Dragon Magazine|last=Burlew|first=Rich|author-link=Rich Burlew|date=2007-04-19|publisher=GiantITP.com|access-date=2008-04-12|work=Giant in the Playground News}}</ref>


The ''Dragon'' version of ''OOTS'' featured the same main cast of six adventurers, but saw them adventuring in an unspecified underground location. None of the villains or supporting characters from the online strip appeared, with the exception of ], who appeared together twice.<ref name=Dragon351 group=n>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=January 2007 | title = The Order of the Stick: It Was Just a Matter of Time Anyway | journal = Dragon | issue = 351 | publisher = ].}}</ref><ref name=Dragon359 group=n>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=September 2007 | title = The Order of the Stick: End of the Line, Thanks for Riding | journal = Dragon | issue = 359 | publisher =].}}</ref> Burlew has stated that the events of the ''Dragon'' strips take place in an alternate universe from the online strip, and events in one storyline do not affect the other.<ref name=GITPNews10/10/05>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index3.html#DNSedGQuL91veK9lIS |title=UberCon and Paizo |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2005-10-10 |work= Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> This status quo was broken for the sake of a joke, however, when a character in the online strip referred to the July 2006 ''Dragon'' strip by claiming that "I told you that in one of the Dragon Magazine comics, so I'm not even sure that's the same continuity."<ref name=Dragon345 group=n>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=July 2006 | title = The Order of the Stick: The Tongue is Mightier Than the Sword | journal = Dragon | issue = 345 | publisher = ].}}</ref><ref name=oots0475 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Crashing the Party |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0475.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#475 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> The ''Dragon'' version of ''OOTS'' featured the same main cast of six adventurers, but saw them adventuring in an unspecified underground location. None of the villains or supporting characters from the online strip appeared, with the exception of Mr. Jones and Mr. Rodriguez, who appeared together twice.<ref name="Dragon351" group="n">{{cite journal|last=Burlew|first=Rich|date=January 2007|title=The Order of the Stick: It Was Just a Matter of Time Anyway|journal=Dragon|publisher=].|issue=351|author-link=Rich Burlew}}</ref><ref name="Dragon359" group="n">{{cite journal|last=Burlew|first=Rich|date=September 2007|title=The Order of the Stick: End of the Line, Thanks for Riding|journal=Dragon|publisher=].|issue=359|author-link=Rich Burlew}}</ref> Burlew has stated that the events of the ''Dragon'' strips take place in an alternate universe from the online strip, and events in one storyline do not affect the other.<ref name="GITPNews10/10/05">{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index3.html#DNSedGQuL91veK9lIS|title=UberCon and Paizo|last=Burlew|first=Rich|author-link=Rich Burlew|date=2005-10-10|publisher=GiantITP.com|access-date=2008-04-12|work=Giant in the Playground News|archive-date=2008-04-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080412094056/http://www.giantitp.com/index3.html#DNSedGQuL91veK9lIS|url-status=dead}}</ref> This status quo was broken for the sake of a joke, however, when a character in the online strip referred to the July 2006 ''Dragon'' strip by claiming that "I told you that in one of the Dragon Magazine comics, so I'm not even sure that's the same continuity."<ref name="Dragon345" group="n">{{cite journal|last=Burlew|first=Rich|date=July 2006|title=The Order of the Stick: The Tongue is Mightier Than the Sword|journal=Dragon|publisher=].|issue=345|author-link=Rich Burlew}}</ref><ref name="oots0475" group="n">{{cite journal|year=2007|title=Crashing the Party|url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0475.html|journal=The Order of the Stick|publisher=GiantITP.com|issue=#475|author=Burlew, Rich|author-link=Rich Burlew|access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref>


Starting in January 2013, a new version of the comic has started appearing in ''Gygax Magazine'', a new tabletop gaming magazine published in print and digital formats.<ref name=Wired>{{cite web |url=http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2013/01/gygax-magazine/ |title=A New TSR to Launch Gygax Magazine Saturday |last1=Gilsdorf |first1=Ethan |date= 25 January 2013|work= Wired|publisher=Condé Nast |accessdate=24 May 2013}}</ref> Starting in January 2013, a {{clarify span|date=July 2024|reason=Does "new version" mean redrawn art, or scenes/storylines not featured in the online or Dragon strips, or a completely new continuity?|new version}} of the comic appeared in ''Gygax Magazine'', a new tabletop gaming magazine published in print and digital formats.<ref name="Wired">{{cite magazine|url=https://www.wired.com/geekdad/2013/01/gygax-magazine/|title=A New TSR to Launch ''Gygax Magazine'' Saturday|date=25 January 2013|publisher=Condé Nast|last1=Gilsdorf|first1=Ethan|magazine=Wired|access-date=26 July 2024|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522072941/http://www.wired.com:80/geekdad/2013/01/gygax-magazine|archive-date=22 May 2013}}</ref>


===Evolution of art style===
==Characters==
The comic is created directly on a computer using the ] ], and the art style has been upgraded several times.<ref name=FAQ3>{{cite web |url=http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq3 |title=How do you make the OOTS strips? |access-date=2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2005-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground FAQ |publisher=GiantITP.com |archive-date=2011-09-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110902100105/http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq3 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In strip #103, the curved and crooked ] borders were replaced with straight—though still slanted—black lines. Burlew now questions how he ever thought the initial format was acceptable.<ref name=oots0101 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=Man-to-Man Chat |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0101.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2004 |issue=#101 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=DCFp158>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', Author Commentary, p. 158.</ref> After he sprained his wrist in 2005, Burlew used some of the time he took off from writing the comic to improve the designs of the main cast, straightening their lines and adding tiny details like the ]s stitched along the edge of Vaarsuvius' cloak.<ref name=NCPBp108/> These changes were humorously acknowledged by the characters themselves when they premiered.<ref name=oots0198 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=The Great Kazoo |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0198.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#198 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref> Burlew made adjustments to the colors that were required when the material was to appear in print for the first time.<ref name=NCPBp108 /> The later comics feature more frequent double- and even triple-page strips than in the early days, when longer strips were reserved for special occasions (such as reaching #200). In strip #947 the artwork was upgraded again, adding volume to characters' limbs that were previously drawn as simple stick-figure lines. In addition to these permanent improvements to the art, two variant art styles are used to distinguish the events of certain comics from those taking place in the story's present. Historical events relating to the plot are portrayed in a hand-drawn ] style both in the online comic and in ''Start of Darkness'',<ref name=oots0273 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=The Crayons of Time: Doodles on the Sketch Pad of Eternity |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0273.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#273 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=SODp36 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 36.</ref> while events in the "prequel" print-exclusive stories are shown in black-and-white.
{{Main|Characters of the Order of the Stick}}


=== Representation of minorities ===
Burlew has said that he includes stances on social topics in his comic because he worries about the impact of his work beyond momentary distractions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showsinglepost.php?p=16453175&postcount=152|title = View Single Post: Tactical Question - Haley}}</ref> He has also written that he is attempting to compensate for past instances of "unintentional sexism and/or insensitivity to gender issues"<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?411301-Interview-Questions-For-Rich/page4&p=19165054#post19165054|title=Interview Questions for Rich - Page 4}}</ref> but, being a straight white male, he finds it difficult to speak authoritatively about minorities without the proper knowledge.<ref name=BRitFp320>Burlew, ''Blood Runs in the Family'', p. 320.</ref>

==Characters==
===Protagonists=== ===Protagonists===
The comic's central protagonists, known collectively as "The Order of the Stick," are a party of adventurers who are questing to destroy an evil ] that is planning to conquer the world. Though they have many allies, the official members of the Order of the Stick are: The comic's central protagonists, known collectively as "The Order of the Stick," are a party of adventurers who are questing to destroy the evil ] Xykon who is attempting to conquer the world. Though they have many allies, the official members of the Order of the Stick are:


*'''Roy Greenhilt''': A 29-year-old<ref name="oots0500">{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0500.html | work = Episode 500 | title = A Reason To Keep Trying }}</ref> lawful good veteran ], Roy assembled the Order and acted as party leader. Roy is a ] of the traditional ''dumb fighter'' ]. *'''Roy Greenhilt''': A 29-year-old<ref name="oots0500" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0500.html | work = Episode 500 | title = A Reason To Keep Trying }}</ref> ] human ],<ref name="oots0343" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0343.html |title = OOTS #343: Served With a Side-Order of Whoop-Ass}}</ref><ref name="oots0490" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0490.html | title = OOTS #490: Final Review}}</ref> Roy assembled the Order to defeat Xykon,<ref name="roll">{{cite web|url=https://thecinnamonroll.co/2014/03/20/webcomic-review-the-order-of-the-stick/|title=Webcomic Review: The Order of the Stick|website=The Cinnamon Roll|date=20 March 2014}}</ref><ref name="origin" group=n>{{cite book| last=Burlew| first=Rich| title=The Order of the Stick: On the Origin of PCs| isbn=978-0-9766580-1-6| year=2005| publisher=Giant In The Playground}}</ref> and is its leader. Roy is a ] of the traditional "dumb fighter" ], being knowledgeable, rational, and a skilled tactician. He was conceived as the ] to the rest of his team's antics, but over the course of the comic he learns to appreciate their various eccentricities.
*'''Haley Starshine''': A 24-year-old<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0168.html | title = The Order of the Stick # 168 | accessdate = 2010-01-20 }}</ref> red-haired ] chaotic good ], she is the only obvious female on the team, and the Second-in-Command of the team. *'''Haley Starshine''': A 24-year-old<ref name="oots0168" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0168.html | title = The Order of the Stick # 168 | access-date = 2010-01-20 }}</ref> "]-ish" human ].<ref name="oots0393" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0393.html | title = OOTS #393: Truth}}</ref> The Order's second-in-command,<ref name="oots0444" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0444.html | title = OOTS #444: He's Dead, Jim}}</ref> she is skilled in stealth and deception. In early strips, the group thinks of her as the typical greedy thief, not knowing that her father was being held for ransom and she originally left a Thieves Guild to become a wandering adventurer to raise the money.<ref name="origin" group=n/> She develops a romantic crush on fellow member Elan and, later, begins a relationship with him.<ref name="oots0400" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0400.html | title = OOTS #400: Your Ship Has Come In}}</ref>
*'''Durkon Thundershield''': A lawful good ] ],<ref name="oots0202" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0202.html | title = OOTS #202: Scanning}}</ref> is the healer of the party. He had worked with Roy for years prior to the founding of the "Order of the Stick."<ref name="origin" group=n /> Durkon is a cleric of ]<ref name="oots0352" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0352.html | title = OOTS #352: The Turnaround}}</ref> and travels through human lands on the orders of the high priest of Thor, who exiled him as a result of a prophecy.<ref name="origin" group=n /> Durkon speaks and writes in a Scottish accent and has a fear of trees, taking any opportunity to fight them.
*'''Belkar Bitterleaf''': A barefoot chaotic evil ] ] at the start of the Order's adventures, he has since taken at least three levels of ].
*'''Belkar Bitterleaf''': A ] ] ]/],<ref name="oots0489" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0489.html | title = OOTS #489: Keepin' the Little Man Down}}</ref><ref name="oots0610" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0610.html |title = OOTS #610: You're It}}</ref> Belkar is an erratic, casual killer driven by selfish impulses. He joined the Order to escape justice from a deadly bar fight in which he knifed fifteen people.<ref name="origin" group=n /> The Order does not abandon him, despite his bloodthirsty tendencies, due to Roy's belief that he must keep Belkar under control. Belkar's loyalty to the Order fluctuates with his mood, and, despite frequently thinking about it, he never actually betrays them.<ref name="oots0285" group=n>{{cite web | url= http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0285.html | title = OOTS #285: A Moment of Truth}}</ref><ref name="oots0520" group=n>{{cite web | url= http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0520.html | title = OOTS #520: The Power of Immediate Gratification}}</ref> He adopts a ] named Mr. Scruffy to be his animal companion.
*'''Durkon Thundershield''': A 55-year-old lawful good ], Durkon is the party's ], worshipping ] as his patron deity. He was later turned into a vampire by Malack, and eventually revealed to have been possessed at that time by an inner voice, as it were, becoming High Priest of Hel.
*{{Anchor|Elan}}'''Elan''': A chaotic good human ]/Dashing Swordsman.<ref name=oots0445 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=A Song for the Departed |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0445.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#445 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref> Elan is the happy-go-lucky, childlike bard of the Order. Early in the series, he is frequently inept and oblivious to the motives of those around him, such as Haley's long-concealed attraction to him.<ref name="oots0184" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0184.html | title = OOTS #184: Hawaiian Love}}</ref> Raised solely by his mother, Elan discovers early in the story that his absent warlord father raised his twin brother, Nale, to be an evil mastermind.<ref name="oots0050" group=n>{{cite web | url = http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0050.html | title = OOTS #50: The Semi-Secret Origin of Elan & Nale}}</ref>
*'''Elan''': A 21-year-old chaotic good ], Elan has now taken levels as a Dashing Swordsman, an obscure but effective ].
*'''Vaarsuvius''': An arrogant and condescending<ref name="oots0597" group=n>{{cite web | url= http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0597.html | title = OOTS #597: Threat Assessment}}</ref> ]<ref name="Alignment">, ], 8/18/2011.</ref> ] ], whose gender is deliberately ambiguous, causing occasional confusion in teammates and others.<ref name=FAQ10>{{cite web |url=http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq10 |title=Is Vaarsuvius male or female? |access-date=2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |date=2005-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground FAQ |publisher=GiantITP.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110902100105/http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq10 |archive-date=2011-09-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="oots0177" group=n>{{cite web | url= http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0177.html| title = OOTS #177: Ch-ch-ch-changes}}</ref> Often addressed simply as "V" by teammates, Vaarsuvius tends toward unnecessary verbosity, often to the point of becoming ineffective as a teammate, although sometimes it can be of value;<ref name="oots0010" group=n>{{cite web | url= http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0010.html | title = OOTS #10: Like Enthrall, Only Boring}}</ref> and is motivated by the need to gain "ultimate arcane power" as an end unto itself. Vaarsuvius was married to an equally ambiguously gendered elf baker Inkyrius, with two children (who address them as "parent"), but Inkyrius filed for divorce due to Vaarsuvius's quest for power taking priority over family matters.
*'''Vaarsuvius''': A true-neutral high-] ], Vaarsuvius' gender is intentionally unclear, which goes as a ].


===Antagonists=== ===Antagonists===
The comic's central antagonists include the following: The comic's central antagonists include the following:
*''']''' (Formerly human ] ], Chaotic Evil<ref name=oots0446 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Hell of a Job |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0446.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#446 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref>): The archvillain of the story,<ref name=oots0023 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Meanwhile. |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0023.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2003 |issue=#23 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> Xykon is engaged in a plot to conquer the world by controlling a world-destroying beast known as the Snarl.<ref name=SODp45 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 45.</ref> While he has a notoriously short attention span and requires near-constant amusement, he is also capable of truly horrific acts of evil.<ref name=SODp98 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 98.</ref> *'''Xykon''' (Formerly human lich sorcerer, Chaotic Evil<ref name=oots0446 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=Hell of a Job |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0446.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#446 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref>): The archvillain of the story,<ref name=oots0023 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=Meanwhile. |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0023.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2003 |issue=#23 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref> Xykon is engaged in a plot to conquer the world by controlling a world-destroying being known as the Snarl.<ref name=SODp45 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 45.</ref> While he has a notoriously short attention span and requires near-constant amusement, he is also capable of truly horrific acts of evil.<ref name=SODp98 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 98.</ref>
*''']''' (] ] of the Dark One, ]<ref name=oots0546 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=O-Chul's Razor |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0546.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2008 |issue=#546 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref>): Xykon's main ally, he is a high priest of his deity and commander of the goblinoids that serve as the lich's minions. He is motivated by concern for the goblin people and their poor lot in life, believing that harnessing the power of the Snarl will allow his god to bargain for a better place for all goblins.<ref name=SODp47 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 47.</ref> Unlike his boss, Redcloak is a patient planner and a competent leader,<ref name=oots0423 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Periodic Bombardment |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0423.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#423 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> and has shown an inclination for scientific thought.<ref name=oots0546 group=n /> *'''Redcloak''' (] Cleric of the Dark One, ]<ref name=oots0546 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=O-Chul's Razor |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0546.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2008 |issue=#546 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref>): Xykon's main ally, he is a high priest of his deity and commander of the goblinoids that serve as the lich's minions. He is motivated by concern for the goblin people and their poor lot in life, believing that harnessing the power of the Snarl will allow his god to bargain for a better place for all goblins.<ref name=SODp47 group=n>Burlew, ''Start of Darkness'', p. 47.</ref> Unlike his boss, Redcloak is a patient planner and a competent leader,<ref name=oots0423 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=Periodic Bombardment |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0423.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#423 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref> and has shown an inclination for scientific thought.<ref name=oots0546 group=n />
*The ''']''': An enigmatic, childlike monster whom Redcloak and Right-eye, his brother, rescued from a circus. Although designated as Xykon's secret weapon, the Monster is terrified of almost everything, including the dark. On the rare occasions he has used force, he demonstrates incredible power. The paladin ] deemed the Monster "a good man" after befriending him while imprisoned. *The '''Monster in the Dark''': An enigmatic, childlike monster that lurks in darkness under a pink umbrella. Although designated as Xykon's secret weapon, the Monster is terrified of almost everything, including the dark. On the rare occasions he has used force, he has demonstrated incredible power. The paladin O-Chul deemed the Monster "a good man" after befriending him.
*The '''Linear Guild''': An adventuring party comprising "]" to the Order. While the Guild originally sought a powerful magic artefact, its purpose turned solely toward defeating the Order after their first encounter with them. Each of their engagements with the Order results in the Guild needing to recruit new members, not all of whom last long. Recurring characters include:
*''']''': A female human ] who was originally imprisoned in Azure City for necromancy, she was released by the Azurites to help them during the battle against Xykon, but betrayed them to join Xykon instead. She has a ] attraction to Xykon, who rejected her advances. She planned to supplant Redcloak as Xykon's second-in-command. She died as of comic #830, by Redcloak's orders.
:*'''Nale''': Elan's evil identical twin brother, the Guild leader. A multiclass fighter/rogue/] who specializes in enchantment spells, he looks identical to Elan except for a small goatee. Though more intelligent than Elan, his plans are typically vastly more complicated than is necessary to achieve his goals. He is ultimately killed by his own father, Tarquin, for his murder of Malack.
*The ''']''': An adventuring party comprising "]" to the Order, led by Elan's literal evil twin, '''Nale'''. While the Guild originally sought a powerful magic artifact, its purpose turned solely toward defeating the Order after their first encounter with them.
:*'''Sabine''': Nale's lover and the opposite number of Haley Starshine. Sabine is a female ] with shapeshifting and plane-hopping abilities. Though her loyalties are divided between the Guild and a shady group of ] in the Lower Planes, she is genuinely attached to Nale and furiously angry when he is killed.
*''']''' (Human ]/], ]): Strongest warrior of the Sapphire Guard,<ref name=oots0409 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Intercession |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0409.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#409 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> Miko is dispatched to apprehend the Order at the request of her liege. Her sanctimonious attitude and her frequent judgment of others on moral grounds<ref name=oots0250 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Oh No, He DIDN'T |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0250.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#250 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> create conflict with the Order, although both oppose the forces of Evil. She was killed in comic #464.<ref name=oots0464 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Not For Everyone |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0464.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#464 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2010-11-20}}</ref>
:*'''Thog''': A male half-orc barbarian with two levels in fighter. Roy's opposite. He wields a greataxe and combines a childlike innocence with a propensity for merciless slaughter. Last seen as a gladiator in the Empire of Blood on the Western Continent, where Roy defeats him by collapsing a building on him; whether he survives is unknown.
*''']''': The de facto ruler of the Empire of Blood on the Western Continent and the father of Elan and Nale, General Tarquin is a lawful evil fighter who has schemes within schemes. Much like Elan, Tarquin is genre-savvy and has a flair for the dramatic, and becomes upset when others fail to respect literary convention.
:*'''Zz'dtri''': A male ] wizard who wields dual scimitars. Vaarsuvius' opposite. Dragged off by lawyers after his first on-screen battle for being a rather obvious parody of the character ], a continuation of a running joke. Rejoins the Guild in their stint in the Western Continent, where he is killed by Vampire Durkon after helping Nale murder Malack.
*''']''': A ] ] cleric of ] and close friend of Tarquin. He harbors a grudge against Nale for killing his children, but forges a truce with the Linear Guild at Tarquin's behest. Malack and Durkon form a friendship soon after they meet, but Malack is later revealed to be a vampire and attacks both Belkar and Durkon, killing and converting the latter to a vampire. Malack meets his end in comic #906 when the Linear Guild betrays him and dispels his protection from sunlight.
:*'''Hilgya Firehelm''': A female dwarf cleric of Loki. Durkon's opposite. Quits the Guild after they abandon her to die in their first battle against the Order. Sleeps with Durkon in the Dungeon of Dorukan but flees in tears when he rejects her after she reveals she is married. Returns, accompanied by her and Durkon's baby son Kudzu, to help the Order fight Vampire Durkon at Firmament.
:*(In a running joke, Belkar's Linear Guild opposites are a succession of ], none of whom survive contact with him.)
*'''Miko Miyazaki''' (Human ]/], Lawful good): Strongest warrior of the Sapphire Guard,<ref name=oots0409 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=Intercession |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0409.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#409 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref> Miko is dispatched to apprehend the Order at the request of her liege. Her sanctimonious attitude and her frequent judgment of others on moral grounds<ref name=oots0250 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=Oh No, He DIDN'T |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0250.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#250 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref> create conflict with the Order, although both oppose the forces of Evil. Miko breaks her Paladin oath by killing Shojo, her liege lord. She is killed during the battle of Azure City.
*'''General Tarquin''': The de facto ruler of the Empire of Blood on the Western Continent and the father of Elan and Nale, General Tarquin is a lawful evil fighter who has schemes within schemes. Much like Elan, Tarquin is genre-savvy and has a flair for the dramatic, and becomes upset when others fail to respect literary convention.
*'''Minister Malack''': A lawful evil ] cleric of ] and close friend of Tarquin; secretly a vampire. He harbors a grudge against Nale for killing his children (i.e. vampire spawn) and befriends Durkon soon after they meet, but later turns him into a vampire. Ultimately murdered by Nale.
*'''Vampire Durkon''': An evil spirit created by Hel to fit the darker aspects of Durkon's personality. When Durkon is vampirized this spirit takes possession of his body, keeping the original Durkon a prisoner in his own brain. He is Hel's agent in the attempt to sway the gods' vote to destroy the world. Sacrifices himself when outwitted by the real Durkon.
*''']''': The Northern goddess of death, daughter of ]. At the creation of the current world, she and Thor agreed (with Loki's connivance) that she could have the soul of every dwarf who died without honor. The dwarves since became a race of honorable warriors, frustrating her plans. When the gods debate whether to destroy the world, she attempts to swing the vote to Yes, since if the world is snuffed out every remaining dwarf soul becomes hers.


==Plot== ==Plot==
<!-- Commented out: ].]] -->

While the online version of ''The Order of the Stick'' unfolds continuously, the strips have been broken down into plot arcs for purposes of publication; the plot summary that follows breaks the story down into these arcs for clarity. Burlew notes in the commentary of ''War and XPs'' that the strips contained within that volume were the first to be plotted with publication in mind from the very beginning.<ref name=WAXPp5>Burlew, ''War and XPs'', Introduction, p. 5.</ref> Several volumes have been released in book-only format: ''On the Origin of PCs,'' a prequel to the heroes' adventures;<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/GIPOTS00.html|title = Giant in the Playground Games}}</ref> ''Start of Darkness,'' a prequel to the villains' escapades;<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/GIPOTS99.html|title = Giant in the Playground Games}}</ref> ''Good Deeds Gone Unpunished,'' a prequel that includes stories about various residents of Azure City;<ref>{{Cite web|title=Giant in the Playground Games|url=https://www.giantitp.com/GIPOTS50.html|access-date=2022-01-09|website=www.giantitp.com}}</ref> and ''Snips, Snails and Dragon Tails,'' a collection of all the ''Dragon Magazine'' comics plus 80 pages of new material.
].]]
While the online version of ''The Order of the Stick'' unfolds continuously, the strips have been broken down into plot arcs for purposes of publication; the plot summary that follows breaks the story down into these arcs for clarity. Burlew notes in the commentary of ''War and XPs'' that the strips contained within that volume were the first to be plotted with publication in mind from the very beginning.<ref name=WAXPp5>Burlew, ''War and XPs'', Introduction, p. 5.</ref> Several volumes have been released in book-only format: ''On the Origin of PCs,'' a prequel to the heroes' adventures;<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/GIPOTS00.html</ref> ''Start of Darkness,'' a prequel to the villains' escapades;<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/GIPOTS99.html</ref> and ''Snips, Snails and Dragon Tails,'' a collection of all the ''Dragon Magazine'' comics plus 80 pages of new material.


===''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools''=== ===''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools''===
The webcomic begins with the Order fighting ] and other monsters on their way through the Dungeon of Dorukan (although the first volume of the printed edition later included a preamble showing how the Order finds and enters the Dungeon). They are led by Roy Greenhilt on a quest to destroy a lich sorcerer named Xykon. Roy is motivated by nightly visits from the ] of his father, from whom he receives a cryptic warning. The Order briefly joins forces with an adventuring party known as the ], led by Nale (the evil twin of the Order's happy-go-lucky bard, Elan). The Guild eventually betrays the Order, but the Order prevails due to Roy's sudden understanding of his father's prophecy. The Order goes on to battle Xykon near a mysterious magical gate. Xykon shatters Roy's ancestral sword, but before he can release his ace-in-the-hole (a powerful monster shrouded in darkness), Roy flings him into a deadly mystic rune that protects the gate. Xykon's body is destroyed, but his disembodied soul is ferreted to safety by his lieutenant, ]. The book ends with Elan accidentally destroying the entire dungeon, including the gate, by activating another magic ]. The Order escapes to safety.<ref name=DCFTotal>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools''.</ref> The webcomic begins with the Order fighting ] and other monsters on their way through the Dungeon of Dorukan (although the first volume of the printed edition later included a preamble showing how the Order finds and enters the Dungeon). They are led by Roy Greenhilt on a quest to destroy a lich sorcerer named Xykon. Roy is motivated by nightly visits from the ] of his father, from whom he receives a cryptic warning.
The Order briefly joins forces with an adventuring party known as the Linear Guild, led by Nale (the evil twin of the Order's happy-go-lucky bard, Elan). The Guild eventually betrays the Order, but the Order prevails due to Roy's sudden understanding of his father's prophecy. Durkon Thundershield, the Order's dutiful dwarf cleric of Thor, enjoys a sexual encounter with the Guild's dwarf cleric of Loki Hilgya Firehelm, but they shortly afterwards part in tears.
The Order goes on to battle Xykon near a mysterious magical gate. Xykon shatters Roy's ancestral sword, but before he can release his ace-in-the-hole (a powerful creature known as the Monster in the Darkness), Roy flings him into a deadly mystic rune that protects the gate. Xykon's body is destroyed, but his disembodied soul is ferreted to safety by his lieutenant, Redcloak, in his phylactery. The book ends with Elan accidentally destroying the entire dungeon, including the gate, by activating another magic ]. The Order escapes to safety.<ref name=DCFTotal>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools''.</ref> The printed book contains strips 1–121, plus extras.


===''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''=== ===''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''===
The Order travels to Wooden Forest, where they slay a black ] and loot its hoard in order to retrieve a rare "starmetal" to repair Roy's broken sword. The party is arrested by the paladin ] for the capital crime of destroying the magical gate in the Dungeon of Dorukan. While stopping at an inn, the party loses the dragon's treasure in an explosion, the shock of which renders Haley unable to speak coherently (rendered as cryptograms in the comic). In Azure City, Miko's liege Lord Shojo informs the Order that the gate they destroyed is one of five gates that reinforce the structure of the universe. Without them, a god-killing abomination known as the Snarl would escape and destroy all of creation. The Order is put on trial, but acquitted with the help of Celia, a sylph they had aided in the Dungeon of Dorukan. Shojo later explains that the trial was a sham to get the Order's assistance in defending the remaining gates. Roy reluctantly agrees once he learns that Xykon has survived and is recruiting a massive army of ] to seize the remaining gates. As payment for their future aid, each member of the Order receives a boon, one of which is the repair of Roy's sword.<ref name=NCPBTotal>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''.</ref> The Order travels to Wooden Forest, where Vaarsuvius slays a ] so they can loot its hoard to retrieve a rare "starmetal" to repair Roy's broken sword. The party is arrested by the paladin Miko Miyazaki for destroying the magical gate in the Dungeon of Dorukan. While stopping at an inn, the party loses the dragon's treasure in an explosion, the shock of which renders Haley unable to speak coherently (rendered as cryptograms in the comic).

In Azure City, Belkar is imprisoned separately from the rest of the Order but escapes, murdering a guard in the process. The others are put on trial before Miko's liege, the elderly Lord Shojo (and his cat, Mr. Scruffy), who informs them that the gate they destroyed is one of five gates that reinforce the structure of the universe. Without them, a god-killing abomination known as the Snarl would escape and destroy all of creation. The five gates were each built by a member of an adventuring party who defeated the Snarl in the past, and, with one exception, named after their creators: Dorukan, Lirian, Soon, Girard Draketooth, Kraagor (who was killed in battle) and the halfling Serini Toormuck (who named her gate in honor of Kraagor rather than herself). Dorukan's and Lirian's Gates have now both been destroyed; Soon's Gate is located in Azure City.

The Order is acquitted with the help of Celia, a sylph they had aided in the Dungeon of Dorukan. Belkar, however, is recaptured by Miko and returned to prison for his murder of the guard. Shojo reveals that the trial was a sham to recruit the Order to defend the remaining gates. Roy reluctantly agrees once he learns that Xykon has survived and is recruiting a massive army of ] to seize the remaining gates. As a condition for his agreement, he has Belkar released on bail, with a magic rune on his forehead (called a "Mark of Justice") that will trigger a curse if he violates certain conditions. In addition, each member of the Order receives a boon, one of which is the repair of Roy's sword.<ref name=NCPBTotal>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''.</ref> The printed book contains strips 122–301, plus extras.


===''War and XPs''=== ===''War and XPs''===
In Azure City, Celia and Roy begin a romantic relationship, and Celia gives Roy a talisman which will summon her when broken. The Order travels to Sunken Valley to consult an Oracle as to which Gate Xykon will target next. Roy phrases the question poorly and receives the misleading answer that, out of Girard's and Kraagor's Gate, Xykon will approach Girard's first; in fact, Xykon's army embarks for Azure City.
The Order makes a brief diversion to Cliffport to confront the Linear Guild. After Nale frames Elan for the Linear Guild's crimes, Elan escapes from prison and reunites with Haley with the help of a dashing swordsman named Julio Scoundrel. Haley recovers her speech and confesses her love for Elan, who reciprocates. The Order returns to Azure City to ask Lord Shojo for further directions. Miko, who does not know about the plan to find the gates but does know about Xykon's army, overhears the conversation and jumps to the conclusion that both are in league with Xykon. She strikes her master down, and is immediately stripped of her paladin status by her gods and imprisoned. Xykon's hobgoblins attack the city the next day. The Order helps Shojo's heir, Hinjo, hold the city walls. Xykon attempts to circumvent the defenders, but Roy leaps up to the ] dragon that Xykon is riding, and the two duel once more. Xykon overpowers Roy and sends him falling to his death. Xykon and Redcloak attempt to activate the gate hidden within the castle's throne room, but Miko, having escaped from prison, destroys the gate in an attempt to protect it. In the ensuing explosion, Miko is killed, and Xykon and Redcloak escape. The city falls to the hobgoblins. Haley and Belkar become separated from the party when they go to recover Roy's corpse, while the others sail away with Hinjo and the surviving Azurites.<ref name=WAXPTotal>Burlew, ''War and XPs''.</ref>

The Order makes a brief diversion to Cliffport to confront the Linear Guild, who have kidnapped Roy's sister Julia. After Nale frames Elan for the Linear Guild's crimes, Elan escapes from prison and reunites with Haley with the help of a dashing swordsman named Julio Scoundrel. Haley recovers her speech and confesses her love for Elan, who reciprocates.

The Order returns to Azure City to ask Lord Shojo for further directions. Miko, who does not know about the plan to find the Gates but does know about Xykon's army, overhears the conversation and jumps to the conclusion that both are in league with Xykon. She strikes her master down, and is immediately stripped of her paladin status by her gods and imprisoned.

Xykon's hobgoblins attack the city the next day. The Order helps Shojo's heir, Hinjo, hold the city walls. Xykon attempts to circumvent the defenders, but Roy jumps onto the ] dragon that Xykon is riding, and the two duel once more. Xykon overpowers Roy and sends him falling to his death. Xykon and Redcloak attempt to activate Soon's Gate, which is hidden within a gem embedded in the royal throne, but Miko, having escaped from prison, destroys it to prevent this. In the ensuing explosion, Miko is killed, and Xykon and Redcloak escape. The city falls to the hobgoblins. Haley and Belkar become separated from the party when they go to recover Roy's corpse, while the others sail away with Hinjo and the surviving Azurites.<ref name=WAXPTotal>Burlew, ''War and XPs''.</ref> The printed book contains strips 302–484, plus extras.


===''Don't Split the Party''=== ===''Don't Split the Party''===
Roy finds himself in the Afterlife with his father, who cannot rest until Xykon is gone. Roy is found worthy of entrance to paradise, but he returns to his father's side when he learns that almost four months have passed. Looking down, he sees that Haley and Belkar have formed an underground resistance movement in hobgoblin-occupied Azure City. Haley accidentally summons Celia, who convinces her to look for the other half of the party. Their travels take them to Greysky City, where Haley is betrayed by one of her old friends in the Thieves' Guild, but the Order triumphs over the Guild in the ensuing battle. Meanwhile, Elan, Durkon, and Vaarsuvius stop the nobleman Kubota's plot to assassinate Hinjo, and Vaarsuvius kills Kubota after capturing him. Vaarsuvius then flies to an isolated island to search for Haley, where Vaarsuvius is attacked and defeated by the mother of the black dragon whom Vaarsuvius had killed during ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''. After the dragon threatens to kill Vaarsuvius' children, Vaarsuvius contracts with fiends to rent out the souls of three evil spellcasters. Vaarsuvius then kills the black dragon and her entire lineage by "renting" an epic ''Familicide'' spell. Loath to waste this increased arcane power, Vaarsuvius teleports to Azure City to defeat Xykon, but is knocked out during the battle and loses control of the souls. Witnessing this, the paladin O-Chul escapes from prison and attempts to destroy Xykon's phylactery, but it falls into a storm drain and is lost. Vaarsuvius and O-Chul are teleported to Hinjo's fleet by Xykon's monster in the darkness, which O-Chul had befriended during his imprisonment. There, the Order regroups and Durkon completes the ritual to resurrect Roy. The story arc ends with the Order sailing towards the next gate and Vaarsuvius apologizing to the neglected ] Blackwing, who tells Vaarsuvius that it saw what appeared to be another world in the rift in space caused by the Snarl. Roy finds himself in the Afterlife with his father, who cannot rest until Xykon is gone. Roy is found worthy of entrance to paradise, but he returns to his father's side when he learns that almost four months have passed. Looking down into the mortal realm, he sees that Haley and Belkar have formed an underground resistance movement in hobgoblin-occupied Azure City. Haley accidentally breaks Roy's talisman and summons Celia, who convinces her to look for the other half of the party.

They first return to Sunken Valley in the hope that the Oracle can restore Roy to life, but he denies having any such power. In the ensuing quarrel, Belkar stabs the Oracle to death, thus triggering his Mark of Justice; he becomes ill. (The Oracle, resurrected after they leave, tells Roy's eavesdropping ghost that Belkar will die within the year.) Their travels take them to Greysky City, where Haley is betrayed by one of her old friends in the Thieves' Guild, but the Order triumphs over the Guild in the ensuing battle. Belkar's Mark of Justice is removed by a priest of Loki, and he decides to become more helpful to his teammates.

Meanwhile, Elan, Durkon, and Vaarsuvius foil a plot to assassinate Hinjo, and Vaarsuvius kills the ringleader (a nobleman named Kubota). Vaarsuvius then flies to an isolated island to search for Haley, where s/he is attacked and defeated by the mother of the black dragon whom s/he had killed during ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''. After the dragon threatens to kill Vaarsuvius' children, s/he contracts with three archfiends to rent the souls of three evil spellcasters; in exchange each archfiend earns temporary possession of Vaarsuvius' soul. S/he then kills the black dragon and her entire lineage with an epic ''Familicide'' spell from one of the souls.

Loath to waste this increased arcane power, Vaarsuvius teleports to Azure City to defeat Xykon. Here s/he encounters a paladin named O-Chul, a prisoner of Xykon and Redcloak who has secretly befriended Xykon's Monster in the Darkness. Vaarsuvius is knocked out during the battle and loses access to the "rented" souls, but O-Chul breaks free and comes to Vaarsuvius' aid. Xykon's phylactery falls into a storm drain and is lost.

Vaarsuvius and O-Chul are accidentally teleported to Hinjo's fleet in the nick of time by the Monster in the Darkness. There, the Order regroups and Durkon resurrects Roy. The story arc ends with the Order sailing towards the next gate and Vaarsuvius apologizing to the neglected familiar Blackwing, who tells Vaarsuvius that it saw what appeared to be another world in the rift in space caused by the Snarl. The printed book contains strips 485–672, plus extras.


===''Blood Runs in the Family''=== ===''Blood Runs in the Family''===
While O-Chul and Lien travel north to Kraagor's gate, the Order sails to the Western Continent. Their search for Girard's Gate takes them to the Empire of Blood, where Tarquin, the Empress's chief general (and the true power behind the throne), dramatically reveals himself to be Elan's father. Tarquin gives the Order a tip that Girard's relative Orrin Draketooth can be found in Windy Canyon. However, Tarquin and the Linear Guild join forces and plot to seize the gate for themselves. The action briefly cuts away to Azure City where Redcloak's troops recover Xykon's phylactery and destroy the resistance's base; Redcloak, who is plotting against Xykon, gives Xykon a fake phylactery and keeps the real one for himself. The Order discovers a magically cloaked ] in Windy Canyon but once inside finds the entire Draketooth clan dead &mdash; an unexpected result of Vaarsuvius's ''Familicide'' spell, which causes him/her to flee into the pyramid in horror. The Linear Guild arrives shortly after in hot pursuit. Belkar, Durkon, and Tarquin become separated from their respective groups in the ensuing battle. Belkar and Durkon encounter Tarquin's cleric Malack, who kills Durkon, turning him into a vampire ]. Belkar reunites with the Order and they continue deeper into the pyramid, overcoming various traps and illusions along the way. When they discover the gate, Roy decides to destroy it, and consequently the entire pyramid, rather than risk it falling into the hands of Evil. Again the Order sees what appears to be another world in the rift. With Tarquin gone, Nale takes the opportunity to kill Malack, freeing Durkon who rejoins the Order. Tarquin kills Nale for disobedience upon returning and sends a vast army to attack the Order. With the help of Vaarsuvius (who was temporarily dragged into hell by the archfiends so that s/he could not prevent the Order from destroying the Gate), and Julio Scoundrel swooping in at the last moment, the Order is triumphant. Tarquin is left in the middle of the desert as the Order flies away on Julio's airship towards the last Gate. The final strip reveals that the Northern Death God, Hel, has placed a spirit in the vampirized body of Durkon, and plans for the spirit to bring ruin to the Dwarven lands as Durkon helplessly struggles trapped in his own body. While O-Chul and fellow paladin Lien travel north to Kraagor's gate, the Order sails to the Western Continent. Their search for Girard's Gate takes them to the Empire of Blood, where Tarquin, the Empress of Blood's chief general (and the true power behind the throne), dramatically reveals himself to be Elan's father. Tarquin gives the Order a tip that Girard's relative Orrin Draketooth can be found in Windy Canyon. However, Tarquin and the Linear Guild join forces and plot to seize the gate for themselves.


Meanwhile, in Azure City, Redcloak's troops recover Xykon's phylactery and destroy the resistance's base. Redcloak, who is plotting against Xykon, gives him a false phylactery and keeps the real one for himself; Xykon hides the fake in a secret fortress in the ].
===Current storyline===
Julio's airship gets damaged in a storm, and the Order stop in the ]-inspired gnome town of Tinkertown to repair it. While there, Haley and the airship's captain have to deal with a golem made out of Haley's archenemy Crystal (who she killed during the ''Don't Split the Party'' storyline), and Roy and Durkon search for a cleric who can cure Durkon's vampirism. They encounter Veldrina and Wrecan (a Kickstarter backer's creation and a tribute to one of the moderators on Giant in the Playground's message boards, respectively), who are traveling to the Godsmoot, an interfaith council of clerics. The Order flies the pair to the Godsmoot where they discover that due to the threat of the Snarl, the gods are casting votes (conveyed through their mortal representatives) on whether to destroy the world and start over. The High Priest of Hel votes in favor of the destruction, causing a tie. With the swing votes of demigod priests potentially dooming the world, Roy tries to eliminate the High Priest of Hel to negate the vote. They fight to a stand still and the demigod priests vote and also cause a tie - with the priest of Dvalin needing to consult with the Dwarven Council before he can cast a vote due to an oath he made. It is then revealed that Durkon has killed and vampirized all the members of the Creed of Stone, who walk into the room. Durkon abdicates his position as High Priest and hands it over to one of the newly formed vampires as he and a few other vampires teleport to the dwarven lands to dominate the dwarven council so they will vote in Hel's favor. Roy regroups with his team and they fly to dwarven city named Firmament.


The Order discovers a magically cloaked ] in Windy Canyon, but once inside finds the entire Draketooth clan dead — an unexpected result of Vaarsuvius's ''Familicide'' spell, which causes them to flee into the pyramid in horror. The Linear Guild arrives shortly after in hot pursuit. Belkar, Durkon, and Tarquin become separated from their respective groups in the ensuing battle. Belkar and Durkon encounter Tarquin's cleric Malack, who kills Durkon, turning him into a vampire thrall. Belkar reunites with the Order and they continue deeper into the pyramid, overcoming various traps and illusions along the way.
<!--PLEASE DO NOT add plot synopsis of the latest comic until several further comics have been published, to make sure that the synopsis you are adding is significant.-->


When they discover the gate, Roy decides to destroy it, and consequently the entire pyramid, rather than risk it falling into the hands of Evil. Vaarsuvius, in an adjacent corridor, tries to tell him not to, but is temporarily dragged into hell as one of the archfiends collects on their debt. Again the Order sees what appears to be another world in the rift.
==Fictional world==
The world the characters inhabit is similar to those depicted in ''Dungeons & Dragons'', complete with functional magic and monsters. According to an introductory strip included in ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', the world operates under three sets of laws: Physics, Magic, and Gaming (specifically, paper-and-pencil roleplaying games).<ref name="DCFp8" group=n>Burlew, ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools', p. 8.</ref> Though ostensibly medieval in nature, the ''OOTS'' world is rife with ]s, both social (such as college admissions standards for the Evil ]<ref name=oots0100 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Teenage Boys Are CR 1 |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0100.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2004 |issue=#100 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref>) and technological (such as coffee makers<ref name=oots0317 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=The Best Part of Waking Up |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0317.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#317 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref>). The characters make references to real-life individuals (]<ref name=oots0413 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Not to Scale |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0413.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#413 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-11-14}}</ref> or ]<ref name=oots0606 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=The Philosophy of Chaos |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0606.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2008 |issue=#606 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-11-14}}</ref>), fictional characters from other sources (] and ]),<ref name=oots0359 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Roll Over |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0359.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#359 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-11-14}}</ref> or ] in general. Sometimes, fictional characters (or explicit "third-rate knock-offs" thereof) from other fantasy works cross paths with the main characters, such as the halfling "]".<ref name="DCFp8" group=n/><ref name=oots0415 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Idiot Box |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0415.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#415 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-11-14}}</ref>


With Tarquin gone, Nale takes the opportunity to kill Malack, freeing Durkon who rejoins the Order. Tarquin kills Nale for disobedience upon returning and sends a vast army to attack the Order. With the help of Julio Scoundrel swooping in at the last moment, the Order is triumphant. Tarquin is left in the middle of the desert as the Order flies away on Julio's airship towards the last Gate.
===Geography===
Three main areas of the world's geography have been mentioned: a mainland continent consisting of the Northern Lands and the Southern Lands,<ref name=oots0204 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=What's My Motivation? |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0204.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#204 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> and the separate Western Continent.<ref name=OTOPCp11 group=n>Burlew, ''On the Origin of PCs'', p. 11.</ref> The Northern Lands seem to consist mostly of grassy plains and mountains, which resemble medieval Europe in setting, but with a wider variety of skin colors than was present in medieval Europe. For example, ] and his family have dark brown skin, and are not referred to as coming from a different area or having a different cultural background than the characters with light skin. Other characters, such as the lawyer Phil Rodriguez, show a third (light brown) skin color. Non-human races, which are often player characters in ''D&D'', such as dwarves and gnomes, have both dark- and light-skinned members as well.


The final strip reveals that the Northern death goddess Hel has placed a spirit in the vampirized body of Durkon, and plans for the spirit to bring ruin to the Dwarven lands as the real Durkon helplessly struggles trapped in his own body. The printed book contains strips 673–946, plus extras.
Most of the seen Southern Lands seem to be extremely mountainous, rocky and barren, though what seems to be a more tropical forested nation and a colder region have briefly been seen. The people of the Southern Lands are significantly different ethnically and culturally, with nations roughly analogous to real-world Asian cultures such as China and India, the most prominent of which was Azure City, which greatly resembled feudal Japan (though a few Chinese elements were present). Four separate areas in the South besides Azure city are briefly shown.<ref name=oots0501 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=No Cure for the Wedding Bell Blues |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0501.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |issue=#501 |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref>


===''Utterly Dwarfed''===
The Western Continent is split into an Elven forest in the north and an expansive desert in the south, separated from each other by the ''Goaway Mountains''. Due to the continent's fragile political state, a large number of nations cluster around the edges of the desert. The Western Continent includes Vaarsuvius's homeland, and is close to an island with abandoned Elven ruins, where (s)he teleported the Azurite fleet.
Julio's airship gets damaged in a storm, and the Order stop in the ]-inspired gnome town of Tinkertown to repair it. Haley deals with her old enemies, while Roy and Durkon search for a cleric who can cure Durkon's vampirism. The vampire spirit possessing Durkon's body forces Durkon to show him his memories so as to fool the rest of the Order into thinking he is the same person. They encounter Veldrina and Wrecan,<ref>a Kickstarter backer's creation and a tribute to one of the moderators on Giant in the Playground's message boards, respectively</ref> who are traveling to the Godsmoot, an interfaith council of clerics. The Order flies the pair to the Godsmoot with the goal of restoring Durkon to life.


At the Godsmoot, they discover that due to the threat of the Snarl, the gods are casting votes (conveyed through their mortal representatives) on whether to destroy the world and start over. Vampire Durkon, revealed to be the High Priest of Hel, votes in favor of the destruction, causing a tie. Roy and Vampire Durkon fight to a standstill; the demigods' priests vote and also end up in a tie – with the priest of Dvalin needing to consult with the Dwarven Council before he can cast a vote.
===Religion===
There are three primary polytheistic pantheons worshiped by humans, all based on real-life mythology: the Northern Pantheon (] led by ]), the Southern Pantheon (the Twelve Gods of the ]), and the Western Pantheon (] like ] and ]). Dwarves worship the Northern Pantheon. Lizardfolk worship the Western Pantheon. Elves have their own gods separate from the main pantheons.


Vampire Durkon is now revealed to have turned a number of other people into vampires behind closed doors before the vote; he and most of them teleport out to the dwarven lands (leaving one as a replacement High Priest) to dominate the Council so they will vote in Hel's favor. The Order regroups and flies off to the dwarven city of Firmament, their journey plagued by frost-giant attacks and mutiny.
There once was a fourth primary pantheon, the Eastern Pantheon, based on the ] led by ]. These deities were killed by the Snarl and so had no role in the re-creation of the world; only people who are privy to the story of the Snarl have ever even heard of them.


O-Chul and Lien reach the North Pole. There, they watch Xykon's party attempt to find Kraagor's Gate, which is hidden behind one of hundreds of dungeon doors leading from a ravine. The Monster in the Darkness marks the doors they have already tried with paint, but when the others' backs are turned also marks other doors in order to stymie their plans.
Each pantheon has a deific color: yellow for the North, red for the West, blue for the South (whence "]" City), and green for the East.


In Firmament the Order gain allies (among them Hilgya Firehelm, accompanied by her and Durkon's infant son Kudzu) and fight newly vampirized dwarves. The vampires manage to hypnotize most of the Order, ruining their plans and leaving all of them unconscious. However, in the meantime Durkon tricks Vampire Durkon into absorbing the rest of his memories all at once, effectively turning him into a copy of Durkon for long enough to get their body destroyed by Belkar.
===Afterlife===
Like most of the worlds of ''Dungeons & Dragons'', the ''Order of the Stick'' universe contains a verifiable ]—a series of ] to which dead souls are drawn. The afterlife in the ''OOTS'' world resembles the ] cosmology, with separate planes for the departed of each ].<ref name=oots0445 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=A Song for the Departed |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0445.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#445 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> To enter the afterlife, a planar being must assess whether or not a soul has fulfilled the tenets of their alignment throughout their life.<ref name=oots0487 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Their Concierge Service is Heavenly |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0487.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#487 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-10-23}}</ref> Some Dwarves might be exempt from this rule, as those who do not die honorably in battle (or from liver failure due to alcohol poisoning) are sent to the plane of Hel upon death, regardless of alignment.


Durkon's soul ascends to the afterlife along with that of another dwarf cleric (Minrah Shaleshoe). They encounter Thor, who reveals that their world is the latest of countless many created by the gods as temporary prisons for the Snarl. Having been created by ''four'' pantheons, the Snarl is stronger than anything created by only three, and always destroys its prison eventually. However, Thor reveals that a fourth pantheon has arisen in this world consisting (so far) only of the goblins' god The Dark One. He tasks Durkon with recruiting Redcloak, the Dark One's high priest, to help stop the Snarl for good.
The Lawful Good afterlife plane has been portrayed in the comic as a mountain with seven plateaus loosely based on ], and the side of the mountain the deceased enter from in depends on their religion. The first plateau is dedicated to satisfying physical desires, such as for sex and food, while higher levels offer spiritual satisfaction. The seventh level, at the mountain's peak, holds “true perfect enlightenment.”<ref name=oots0493 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=Led Zeppelin Lied to Us All |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0493.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#493 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> Below the mountain is a demi plane of blue skies and clouds, where dead souls, archons, and gods from all of the Good-aligned planes can look down on the mortal world.<ref name=oots0486 group=n>{{cite journal | last=Burlew | first=Rich | authorlink=Rich Burlew | url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0486.html | journal=The Order of the Stick | year=2007 | issue=#486 | accessdate=2008-10-05 | publisher=GiantITP.com | title=Next on "As the Plane Turns"..}}</ref>


Hilgya resurrects Durkon. The Order and an army of dwarves led by Minrah (who has also been resurrected) storm the Dwarven Council chambers and defeat the vampires. Using a magical hammer gifted him by Thor, Durkon damages the Council table sufficiently to get the vote delayed indefinitely. The Order embarks for Kraagor's Gate, with Minrah joining them. Meanwhile, O-Chul and Lien are kidnapped and drugged by invisible attackers.
===Representation of minorities===
Burlew, through his webcomic, is trying to raise greater awareness about minorities.<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showsinglepost.php?p=16453175&postcount=152</ref><ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showsinglepost.php?p=18654306&postcount=205)</ref> He has recently introduced a lesbian character and has adapted some of the newer comic dialogues in order to better represent such minorities.
Burlew explained, by answering to readers, that one of the main purposes of raising awareness about minorities and avoiding sexism (as he unintentionally displayed before) is that he is worried about being thought as a closet misogynist<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?411301-Interview-Questions-For-Rich/page4&p=19165054#post19165054</ref> and that, having passed the age of 40, wishes his work to have impact beyond momentary distractions.<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?314962-Tactical-Question-Haley/page6&p=16453175#post16453175</ref>
He also explained that he failed to include an obiviously gay character for more than 900 strips so he needed to compensate as soon as possible by inserting a new LGBT character.<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showthread.php?363648-OOTS-959-The-Discussion-Thread/page3&p=17825455#post17825455</ref>


The printed book contains strips 947–1189, plus extras.
The author stressed the fact that he will not be put off by any criticism about his necessity to representing minorities and will continue to pass on his teachings through his webcomic,<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showsinglepost.php?p=17825455&postcount=87</ref> addressing further comments with the following statement: "You don't like me teaching you? Then stop showing up to my class."<ref>http://www.giantitp.com/forums/showsinglepost.php?p=19234708&postcount=1122)</ref>


=== Book 7 ===
Burlew expanded this approach of his representation of minorities even on the official commentary of his book "Blood Runs in the Family". He stated that he made the character Tarquin in a way that it's not accident that he is "a wealthy old straight white man losing his marbles over the fact that the tale he is experiencing doesn't focus on the other straight white man at the expense of the black man, the woman, the genderqueer person and the Latino guest star <...>"<ref name=BRitFp320>Burlew, ''Blood Runs in the Family'', Author Commentary, p. 320.</ref>. He added that he, being a straight white guy, finds difficult to make statements about the experiences of other demographics groups without running the risk of "talking out of his ass"<ref name=BRitFp320>Burlew, ''Blood Runs in the Family'', Author Commentary, p. 320.</ref>.
The Order reaches the North Pole, where Kraagor's Gate is hidden. They investigate the paladins' disappearance, but Durkon and Minrah abscond (against Roy's orders) in an unsuccessful bid to win over Redcloak to Thor's cause. In the ensuing fight, the two dwarves are routed by Redcloak, Xykon, and others; they hide, tricking the villains into seeking them behind one of the many doors, then rejoin the rest of the Order. With Xykon's party close on their trail, the Order take refuge behind one of the doors. They bypass a magical trap laid across the threshold, which proves to be a teleport gate when the villains cross it and vanish.

O-Chul and Lien wake to find themselves chained to a wall at the mercy of Serini Toormuck, now elderly and part troll due to a past accident. Toormuck fears that they and the Order will destroy the last Gate and, with it, the world, rather than let Xykon win; on that basis, she proceeds to ambush the Order with the aid of her adopted child, a trusting ] named Sunny. The Order prevails and restrains her, releasing the paladins. Eventually they manage to convince her that saving the world from destruction requires stopping Xykon, and she agrees, grudgingly, to ally with them.
<!--PLEASE DO NOT add plot synopsis of the latest comic until several further comics have been published, to make sure that the synopsis you are adding is significant.-->


==Commentary on role-playing games== ==Commentary on role-playing games==
Much of the humor of ''The Order of the Stick'' is based on roleplaying games (particularly the ] ruleset), with characters freely discussing ], such as experience points, skill sets, and random encounters.<ref name="comixtalk" /> The characters know very well that they live in a world controlled by the rules of roleplaying games, but attempt to function normally within it, often with nonsensical results.<ref name="comixtalk" /><ref name="ComicBuyersGuide" /> Characters have been shown browsing through rulebooks for the ''D&D'' game to select a certain monster for use,<ref name=oots0431 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=The Three Xykons |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0431.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#431 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-10-23}}</ref> or to learn about a new class.<ref name=oots0390 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=In a Class All His Own |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0390.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#390 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-10-23}}</ref> Common techniques of players and Dungeon Masters are spoofed, such as the weather of the campaign world changing to herald a dramatic encounter,<ref name="burns199" /> or a player who does not bother to complete the details of his character's backstory.<ref name=OTOPCp4>Burlew, ''On the Origin of PCs'', Introduction, p. 4.</ref> Burlew's satirical humor addresses many of the clichés of the fantasy genre as a whole, often by twisting them in new and different ways.<ref name="Rothfuss">]. Foreword to ''War and XPs''. p. 3.</ref> Much of the humor of ''The Order of the Stick'' is based on roleplaying games (particularly the ] ruleset), with characters freely discussing ], such as experience points, skill sets, and random encounters.<ref name="comixtalk" /> The characters know very well that they live in a world controlled by the rules of roleplaying games, but attempt to function normally within it, often with nonsensical results.<ref name="comixtalk" /><ref name="ComicBuyersGuide" /> Characters have been shown browsing through rulebooks for the ''D&D'' game to select a certain monster for use<ref name=oots0431 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=The Three Xykons |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0431.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2007 |issue=#431 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-10-23}}</ref> or to learn about a new class.<ref name=oots0390 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=In a Class All His Own |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0390.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#390 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-10-23}}</ref> Common techniques of players and Dungeon Masters are spoofed, such as the weather of the campaign world changing to herald a dramatic encounter,<ref name="burns199" /> or a player who does not bother to complete the details of his character's backstory.<ref name=OTOPCp4>Burlew, ''On the Origin of PCs'', Introduction, p. 4.</ref> Burlew's satirical humor addresses many of the clichés of the fantasy genre as a whole, often by twisting them in new and different ways.<ref name="Rothfuss">]. Foreword to ''War and XPs''. p. 3.</ref>


Burlew occasionally creates characters and situations specifically to highlight what he considers common problems and deficits among roleplayers. The controversial paladin Miko Miyazaki is one such character; Burlew has said that she represents the division among players of the game over whether or not one character should be allowed to "police" the remainder of an adventuring party.<ref name=NCPBp106>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Author Commentary, p. 106.</ref> He has referred to her as being "one of the WORST ways to play a paladin."<ref name=NCPBp108>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Author Commentary, p. 108.</ref> Another example is the creation myth of the ''OOTS'' world, which shows a group of gods bickering over how to create the world—accidentally creating the world-devouring Snarl through their refusal to compromise. In the commentary for ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Burlew likens this story to the squabbles that might arise in a group of roleplayers, which threaten to destroy the fun that they have created together.<ref name=NCPBp180>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Author Commentary, p. 180.</ref> Burlew occasionally creates characters and situations specifically to highlight what he considers common problems and deficits among roleplayers. The controversial paladin Miko Miyazaki is one such character; Burlew has said that she represents the division among players of the game over whether or not one character should be allowed to "police" the remainder of an adventuring party.<ref name=NCPBp106>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Author Commentary, p. 106.</ref> He has referred to her as being "one of the WORST ways to play a paladin."<ref name=NCPBp108>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Author Commentary, p. 108.</ref> Another example is the creation myth of the ''OOTS'' world, which shows a group of gods bickering over how to create the world—accidentally creating the world-devouring Snarl through their refusal to compromise. In the commentary for ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Burlew likens this story to the squabbles that might arise in a group of roleplayers, which threaten to destroy the fun that they have created together.<ref name=NCPBp180>Burlew, ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', Author Commentary, p. 180.</ref>


The comic occasionally directly comments on current events in the roleplaying game industry by the inclusion of characters that represent the participants. In the last three comics to appear in ''Dragon'', the ''OOTS'' members encounter a green dragon that serves as a self-identified allegorical figure for the magazine itself.<ref name=Dragon357>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=July 2007 | title = The Order of the Stick: Stop Dragon My Art Around | journal = Dragon | issue = 357 | publisher = ].}}</ref> The dragon recounts the magazine's long history, complete with representations of its various publishers, including a ] and ] (the signature toy of Wizards of the Coast's corporate parent, ]).<ref name=Dragon358>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |date=August 2007 | title = The Order of the Stick: Claw/Claw/Bite the Hand That Feeds Me | journal = Dragon | issue = 358 | publisher = ].}}</ref> In the final issue, the dragon escapes the wizard of the coast's lawyers by flying through a room featuring characters from many of the comics that have appeared in ''Dragon'' over the years, such as '']'', '']'', and '']'', before the ''OOTS'' characters directly thank the dragon for its long years of service. This theme was employed again when a character in the online strip voiced Burlew's eulogy to ''D&D'' co-creator ] immediately after his death was announced.<ref name=oots0536>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=A Brief Tribute |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0536.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2008 |issue=#536 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=News3/4/2008>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#AmQKTxMeXozCUZHVw0L |title=In Memorium: E. Gary Gygax |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2008-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> The memorial comic was widely cited among websites covering Gygax's death.<ref>Grossman, Lev. '''', , March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref><ref>Taylor, Howard. '''', , March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref><ref>Jackson, Steve. '''', March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref><ref>Utter, David A. '''', , March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref> Burlew created a similar tribute strip for ''D&D'' co-creator ] after his death.<ref name=oots0644>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=An Unsung Legend |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0644.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2009 |issue=#644 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2009-08-15}}</ref> The comic occasionally directly comments on current events in the roleplaying game industry by the inclusion of characters that represent the participants. In the last three comics to appear in ''Dragon'', the ''OOTS'' members encounter a green dragon that serves as a self-identified allegorical figure for the magazine itself.<ref name=Dragon357>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |date=July 2007 | title = The Order of the Stick: Stop Dragon My Art Around | journal = Dragon | issue = 357 | publisher = ].}}</ref> The dragon recounts the magazine's long history, complete with representations of its various publishers, including a ] and ] (the signature toy of Wizards of the Coast's corporate parent, ]).<ref name=Dragon358>{{cite journal | last = Burlew | first = Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |date=August 2007 | title = The Order of the Stick: Claw/Claw/Bite the Hand That Feeds Me | journal = Dragon | issue = 358 | publisher = ].}}</ref> In the final issue, the dragon escapes the wizard of the coast's lawyers by flying through a room featuring characters from many of the comics that have appeared in ''Dragon'' over the years, such as '']'', '']'', and '']'', before the ''OOTS'' characters directly thank the dragon for its long years of service. This theme was employed again when a character in the online strip voiced Burlew's eulogy to ''D&D'' co-creator ] immediately after his death was announced.<ref name=oots0536>{{cite journal|author=Burlew, Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=A Brief Tribute |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0536.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2008 |issue=#536 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080929124117/http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0536.html |archive-date=2008-09-29 }}</ref><ref name="News3/4/2008">{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#AmQKTxMeXozCUZHVw0L |title=In Memorium: E. Gary Gygax |access-date= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2008-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground News |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref> The memorial comic was widely cited among websites covering Gygax's death.<ref>Taylor, Howard. '''', , March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref><ref>Jackson, Steve. '''', March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref><ref>Utter, David A. '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080309013307/http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2008/03/05/gary-gygax-departs-for-ethereal-plane |date=2008-03-09 }}'', , March 5, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.</ref> Burlew created a similar tribute strip for ''D&D'' co-creator ] after his death.<ref name=oots0644>{{cite journal|author=Burlew, Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=An Unsung Legend |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0644.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2009 |issue=#644 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2009-08-15 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090411054655/http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0644.html |archive-date=2009-04-11 }}</ref>


==Reaction== ==Reaction==
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|url=http://webcomicsreview.com/?p=95 |url=http://webcomicsreview.com/?p=95
|title=Who Talks Like That? (The Use and Importance of Dialect in Webcomic Narrative) |title=Who Talks Like That? (The Use and Importance of Dialect in Webcomic Narrative)
|accessdate=2008-04-23 |access-date=2008-04-23
|last=Godek |last=Godek
|first=Tym |first=Tym
|date=June 2005 |date=June 2005
|work=The Webcomics Examiner |work=The Webcomics Examiner
|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071006061040/http://webcomicsreview.com/?p=95 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071006061040/http://webcomicsreview.com/?p=95
|archivedate = 2007-10-06 |archive-date = 2007-10-06
}}</ref> ''The Order of the Stick'' has been hailed as "must reading" for those who play roleplaying games<ref name="ComicBuyersGuide">Mishler, James. "The Order of the Stick: Dungeon Crawlin' Fools", ''Comic Buyer's Guide'', January 2006, No. 1613. , Retrieved January 24, 2008. Link has expired, as at March 25, 2011.</ref> and "the roleplaying comic to beat".<ref name=Roney>Roney, Brian. '''', , August 15, 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2008.</ref> Critics sometimes cite the insular nature of in-jokes regarding the ''D&D'' rules that crop up regularly (especially in the early part of the comic's run) as a barrier to new readers, noting that without a working knowledge of fantasy roleplaying games, much of the humor may fall flat.<ref name="OnionAVClub">Bowman, Donna; Murray, Noel; Phipps, Keith; Robinson, Tasha. "", ''The A.V. Club'', February 1, 2006. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref><ref name=Timewasters>Creer, Jeff. '''', , August 18, 2005. Retrieved March 10, 2008.</ref> However, the comic is just as often seen as being accessible to casual readers without such gaming knowledge due to the strength of the main cast's portrayals and abundance of character-based humor.<ref name="comixtalk">Summers, Matt. "", '''', August 2005. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref><ref name="ComicBuyersGuide" /><ref name=Roney /> The comic has been praised for its "shrewd writing" and "increasingly intricate and cleverly scripted adventures", as well as its execution.<ref name="burns199">Burns, Eric. "". '''', July 6, 2005. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref><ref name="OnionAVClub" /><ref name="TIME">]. "", ''TIME.com'', January 31, 2007. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref> One webcomic critic has called it "one of the few very simplistically drawn comics that can pull an extensive storyline."<ref>"", '''', December 14, 2007. Retrieved January 8, 2008.</ref> Particular praise has been given to the scenes depicting the siege of Azure City, which has been called "a war worthy of ]."<ref name="savagecritics">Kingston-Gabai, Diana. "", '''', February 26, 2008. Retrieved on November 17, 2008</ref> }}</ref> ''The Order of the Stick'' has been hailed as "must reading" for those who play roleplaying games<ref name="ComicBuyersGuide">Mishler, James. "The Order of the Stick: Dungeon Crawlin' Fools", ''Comic Buyer's Guide'', January 2006, No. 1613. {{Dead link|date=August 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, Retrieved January 24, 2008. Link has expired, as at March 25, 2011.</ref> and "the roleplaying comic to beat".<ref name=Roney>Roney, Brian. '' {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708093031/http://brianroney.com/?p=30 |date=2011-07-08 }}'', {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081119142618/http://brianroney.com/ |date=2008-11-19 }}, August 15, 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2008.</ref> Critics sometimes cite the insular nature of in-jokes regarding the ''D&D'' rules that crop up regularly (especially in the early part of the comic's run) as a barrier to new readers, noting that without a working knowledge of fantasy roleplaying games, much of the humor may fall flat.<ref name="OnionAVClub">Bowman, Donna; Murray, Noel; Phipps, Keith; Robinson, Tasha. "", ''The A.V. Club'', February 1, 2006. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref><ref name=Timewasters>Creer, Jeff. '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090114215520/http://www.timewastersguide.com/review/1140/Order-of-the-Stick |date=2009-01-14 }}'', , August 18, 2005. Retrieved March 10, 2008.</ref> However, the comic is just as often seen as being accessible to casual readers without such gaming knowledge due to the strength of the main cast's portrayals and abundance of character-based humor.<ref name="comixtalk">Summers, Matt. " {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111001191250/http://comixtalk.com/the_order_of_the_stick_by_rich_burlew_reviewed_by_matt_netpoet_summers |date=2011-10-01 }}", '''', August 2005. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref><ref name="ComicBuyersGuide" /><ref name=Roney /><ref name="Time">{{Cite news |last=Grossman |first=Lev |title=In Praise of the Order of the Stick |newspaper=Time |url=https://techland.time.com/2008/11/25/in-praise-of-the-order-of-the-stick/ |access-date=2016-08-30 |issn=0040-781X}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Rich Burlew on the Record-Breaking Success of the 'Order of the Stick' Kickstarter |url=http://comicsalliance.com/rich-burlew-kickstarter-order-stocl/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160813145809/http://comicsalliance.com/rich-burlew-kickstarter-order-stocl/ |archive-date=2016-08-13 |access-date=2016-08-30 |website=Comics Alliance}}</ref> The comic has been praised for its "shrewd writing" and "increasingly intricate and cleverly scripted adventures" as well as its execution.<ref name="burns199">Burns, Eric. "". '''', July 6, 2005. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref><ref name="OnionAVClub" /> One webcomic critic has called it "one of the few very simplistically drawn comics that can pull an extensive storyline."<ref>" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071224075513/http://webcomicbeacon.com/2007/12/14/twcb-episode-2-writing-vs-art/ |date=2007-12-24 }}", '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080319133714/http://webcomicbeacon.com/ |date=2008-03-19 }}'', December 14, 2007. Retrieved January 8, 2008.</ref> Particular praise has been given to the scenes depicting the siege of Azure City, which has been called "a war worthy of ]."<ref name="savagecritics">{{cite web|last=Kingston-Gabai |first=Diana |url=http://www.savagecritic.com/reviews/diana-goes-digital-4-natural-twenties/ |title=Diana Goes Digital #4: Natural Twenties |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140725182224/http://www.savagecritic.com/reviews/diana-goes-digital-4-natural-twenties/ |archive-date=2014-07-25 }}, '''', February 26, 2008. Retrieved on November 17, 2008</ref>


The comic's ] art has received mixed reviews. Some critics praise its "surprisingly expressive art,",<ref name="TIME" /> with '']'' cartoonist Scott Kurtz adding that the comic would not be as funny or have as much heart if the characters were drawn in any other style.<ref name="Kurtz">]. Foreword to ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', p. 3.</ref> Others denounce its simple geometric characters as "merely functional"<ref name=Timewasters /> or (as fellow webcomic creator ] put it) only "good for someone who isn't really an artist".<ref>Lesnick, Josh. "", ''Josh Lesnick's Horsejournal'', June 10, 1007. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref> Burlew has defended his art style several times in public statements, stating he has no lack of proficiency at drawing, but intentionally developed a clean and simple style to help the reader focus on the humor.<ref name=WAXPp5 /> He has pointed out that the primary goal of comic art is to communicate the actions of the characters, which his style does as well as any other.<ref name=WAXPp5 /><ref name=FAQ5>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq5 |title=How come your art sucks so much? Can't you draw? |accessdate= 2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |date=2005-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground FAQ |publisher=GiantITP.com}}</ref><ref>Israel, Cecily. "". '''', March 1, 2007. Retrieved on November 9, 2007</ref> Burlew has addressed similar criticisms within the comic itself several times, either by contrasting his usual art with more realistic drawings or by simply putting self-deprecating dialogue regarding his style into the mouths of characters.<ref name=oots0339 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=C.P.P.D. Blue |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0339.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#339 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=oots0229 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | authorlink = Rich Burlew |title=No Offense, Aaron |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0229.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#229 |publisher=GiantITP.com |accessdate=2008-04-22}}</ref> The comic's ] art has received mixed reviews. Some critics praise its "surprisingly expressive art", with '']'' cartoonist Scott Kurtz adding that the comic would not be as funny or have as much heart if the characters were drawn in any other style.<ref name="Kurtz">]. Foreword to ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', p. 3.</ref> '']'' and '']'' praised the comic characters for their expressiveness,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.blackgate.com/2012/01/22/a-few-words-about-the-order-of-the-stick/|title=Black Gate » Articles » A Few Words About The Order of the Stick|website=www.blackgate.com|date=22 January 2012 |access-date=2016-08-30}}</ref><ref name="Time" /> even though they are drawn as stick figures. ] of ''Time'' said that Burlew sometimes "imbues them with a weird epic majesty".<ref name="Time" /> Others denounce its simple geometric characters as "merely functional"<ref name=Timewasters /> or (as fellow webcomic creator ] put it) only "good for someone who isn't really an artist".<ref>Lesnick, Jackie. "", ''Josh Lesnick's Horsejournal'', June 10, 2007. Retrieved on November 8, 2007</ref> Burlew has defended his art style several times in public statements, stating he has no lack of proficiency at drawing, but intentionally developed a clean and simple style to help the reader focus on the humor.<ref name=WAXPp5 /> He has pointed out that the primary goal of comic art is to communicate the actions of the characters, which his style does as well as any other.<ref name=WAXPp5 /><ref name=FAQ5>{{cite web |url=http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq5 |title=How come your art sucks so much? Can't you draw? |access-date=2008-04-12 |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |date=2005-03-04 |work=Giant in the Playground FAQ |publisher=GiantITP.com |archive-date=2011-09-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110902100105/http://www.giantitp.com/FAQ.html#faq5 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>Israel, Cecily. "". '''', March 1, 2007. Retrieved on November 9, 2007</ref> Burlew has addressed similar criticisms within the comic itself several times, either by contrasting his usual art with more realistic drawings or by simply putting self-deprecating dialogue regarding his style into the mouths of characters.<ref name=oots0339 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=C.P.P.D. Blue |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0339.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2006 |issue=#339 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref><ref name=oots0229 group=n>{{cite journal |author=Burlew, Rich | author-link = Rich Burlew |title=No Offense, Aaron |url=http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0229.html |journal=The Order of the Stick |year=2005 |issue=#229 |publisher=GiantITP.com |access-date=2008-04-22}}</ref>


Surveys of webcomic site traffic held since May 2007 have consistently placed ''The Order of the Stick'' as one of the 10 most widely read webcomics in existence.<ref name=CampbelMay2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.brokenfrontier.com/lowdown/details.php?id=869 |title=What We Don't Know |accessdate=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2007-05-31 |work=Lowdown |publisher=Broken Frontier |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080221095036/http://www.brokenfrontier.com/lowdown/details.php?id=869 <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-02-21}}</ref><ref name=CampbelNov2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=80 |title=What Are the Most Popular Comics? |accessdate=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2007-11-18 |work=Webcomics.com |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080308083940/http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=80 <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-03-08}}</ref><ref name=CampbelFeb2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=114 |title=The Unreliable Survey, February 2008 |accessdate=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2008-02-14 |work=Webcomics.com |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080304031316/http://webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=114 <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-03-04}}</ref><ref name=CampbelMApr2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=134 |title=The Unreliable Survey, April 2008 |accessdate=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2008-04-07 |work=Webcomics.com |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080411210434/http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=134 <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-04-11}}</ref> Burlew has estimated that he has about 650,000 dedicated readers and up to one million additional casual readers.<ref name=PWFeb2012>{{cite web |url=http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/comics/article/50797-rich-burlew-talks-about-his-1-million-kickstarter-book-project.html |title=Rich Burlew Talks About His $1 Million Kickstarter Book Project |last1=Allen |first1=Todd |date=27 February 2013 |work=Publisher's Weekly |accessdate=24 May 2013}}</ref> Every day, thousands of the comic's readers participate in the comic's official forums, which feature discussion of ''The Order of the Stick'' and roleplaying games in general. Many participants are noted for adopting avatars drawn in emulation of Burlew's stick figure style, with some fans even creating additional "fancomics" in that style on the site's message board or their own sites. Surveys of webcomic site traffic held since May 2007 have consistently placed ''The Order of the Stick'' as one of the 10 most widely read webcomics in existence.<ref name=CampbelMay2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.brokenfrontier.com/lowdown/details.php?id=869 |title=What We Don't Know |access-date=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2007-05-31 |work=Lowdown |publisher=Broken Frontier |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080221095036/http://www.brokenfrontier.com/lowdown/details.php?id=869 |archive-date=2008-02-21 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=CampbelNov2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=80 |title=What Are the Most Popular Comics? |access-date=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2007-11-18 |work=Webcomics.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080308083940/http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=80 |archive-date=2008-03-08 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=CampbelFeb2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=114 |title=The Unreliable Survey, February 2008 |access-date=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2008-02-14 |work=Webcomics.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080304031316/http://webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=114 |archive-date=2008-03-04 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name=CampbelMApr2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=134 |title=The Unreliable Survey, April 2008 |access-date=2008-04-22 |last=Campbell |first=T |date=2008-04-07 |work=Webcomics.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411210434/http://www.webcomics.com/full_blog_story.php?id=134 |archive-date=2008-04-11 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Burlew has estimated that he has about 650,000 dedicated readers and up to one million additional casual readers.<ref name=PWFeb2012>{{cite web |url=http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/comics/article/50797-rich-burlew-talks-about-his-1-million-kickstarter-book-project.html |title=Rich Burlew Talks About His $1 Million Kickstarter Book Project |last1=Allen |first1=Todd |date=27 February 2013 |work=Publishers Weekly |access-date=24 May 2013}}</ref> Every day, thousands of the comic's readers participate in the comic's official forums, which feature discussion of ''The Order of the Stick'' and roleplaying games in general. Many participants are noted for adopting avatars drawn in emulation of Burlew's stick figure style, with some fans even creating additional "fancomics" in that style on the site's message board or their own sites.


===Awards and recognition=== ===Awards and recognition===
''The Order of the Stick'' received two nominations for Britain's 2008 ], for Favourite Web-Based Comic and Favourite Original Graphic Novel (for ''Start of Darkness''). ''OOTS'' won the former category, but lost the latter one to ]'s '']''.<ref name=EaglesResults>{{cite web|url=http://www.eagleawards.co.uk/ |title=Eagle Awards |accessdate=2008-06-25 |year=2008 |work=The Eagle Awards}}</ref> In announcing the results on his site, Burlew stated he was pleased that he didn't win the Favourite Original Graphic Novel category, saying, "I don't think I want to live in a world where a parody stick figure comic beats one of the comic industry's top writers."<ref name=1-for-2>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#x5hwuKt9CaScNIim6bY |title=OOTS Goes 1-for-2 at Eagles |accessdate=2008-06-25|work=Giant in the Playground Games}}</ref> ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', the comic's second print compilation, won a 2007 Gold ] award.<ref name=ENnies2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.ennieawards.com/2007-archive.html |title=2007 ENnie Awards Archives |accessdate=2008-04-22 |date=2007-09-09 |work=The ENnies |publisher=ENWorld |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080418085208/http://www.ennieawards.com/2007-archive.html <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-04-18}}</ref> ''OOTS'' has been nominated for ten ], of which it has won five. It was named Best Long Form Comic in 2008,<ref name=WCCA2008>{{cite web|url=http://www.ccawards.com/2008finalists.html |title=The Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards – 2008 List of Winners & Finalists |accessdate=2008-04-22 |date=2008-03-08 |work=Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards}}</ref> ] and ] in 2007, and ] in 2006, and tied for ] in 2005. ''The Order of the Stick'' received two nominations for Britain's 2008 ], for Favourite Web-Based Comic and Favourite Original Graphic Novel (for ''Start of Darkness''). ''OOTS'' won the former category, but lost the latter one to ]'s '']''.<ref name=EaglesResults>{{cite web |url=http://www.eagleawards.co.uk/ |title=Eagle Awards |access-date=2008-06-25 |year=2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120620041513/http://www.eagleawards.co.uk/ |archive-date=2012-06-20 }}</ref> In announcing the results on his site, Burlew stated he was pleased that he didn't win the Favourite Original Graphic Novel category, saying, "I don't think I want to live in a world where a parody stick figure comic beats one of the comic industry's top writers."<ref name=1-for-2>{{cite web|url=http://www.giantitp.com/index.html#x5hwuKt9CaScNIim6bY |title=OOTS Goes 1-for-2 at Eagles |access-date=2008-06-25|work=Giant in the Playground Games}}</ref> ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'', the comic's second print compilation, won a 2007 Gold ] award.<ref name=ENnies2007>{{cite web|url=http://www.ennieawards.com/2007-archive.html |title=2007 ENnie Awards Archives |access-date=2008-04-22 |date=2007-09-09 |work=The ENnies |publisher=ENWorld |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080418085208/http://www.ennieawards.com/2007-archive.html |archive-date=2008-04-18 |url-status=dead }}</ref> ''OOTS'' has been nominated for ten ], of which it has won five. It was named Best Long Form Comic in 2008,<ref name=WCCA2008>{{cite web|url=http://www.ccawards.com/2008finalists.html |title=The Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards – 2008 List of Winners & Finalists |access-date=2008-04-22 |date=2008-03-08 |work=Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090310200607/http://www.ccawards.com/2008finalists.html |archive-date=2009-03-10 }}</ref> ] and ] in 2007, and ] in 2006, and tied for ] in 2005.


The ] in New York City included '''' in its first webcomic-only exhibit, ''Infinite Canvas: The Art of Webcomics''.<ref name=FleenMuseum>{{cite web|url=http://www.fleen.com/archives/2007/09/14/this-woman-wants-to-bring-webcomics-into-the-rarified-world-of-museums/ |title=This Woman Wants To Bring Webcomics Into The Rarefied World Of Museums |accessdate=2008-04-22 |last=Tyrell |first=Gary |date=2007-09-14 |work= Fleen}}</ref> The ] in New York City included '''' in its first webcomic-only exhibit, ''Infinite Canvas: The Art of Webcomics''.<ref name=FleenMuseum>{{cite web|url=http://www.fleen.com/archives/2007/09/14/this-woman-wants-to-bring-webcomics-into-the-rarified-world-of-museums/ |title=This Woman Wants To Bring Webcomics Into The Rarefied World Of Museums |access-date=2008-04-22 |last=Tyrell |first=Gary |date=2007-09-14 |work= Fleen}}</ref>


==Publications== ==Publications==
] ]
''The Order of the Stick'' books are published by Giant in the Playground Games, a small press publishing company formed by ''OOTS'' creator Rich Burlew. The books are widely distributed to online and brick-and-mortar retailers in the hobby game market,<ref>Greater Games Industry Catalog, Fall 2007, page 151.</ref><ref name=AllianceListing>{{cite web|url=http://www.alliance-games.com/publicaccess/results.asp?SearchArg=Giant+in+the+Playground+Games&list=By_Company |title=Company Listing for Giant in the Playground |accessdate=2008-04-22 |work=Alliance Game Disrtibutors Online Catalog |publisher=Alliance Game Distribution }}</ref> as well as to comic book direct retailers. All four books feature an introduction by the author, as well as a preface written in the voice of one of the characters from the strip. The compilation books feature a number of pages of "bonus material", primarily additional strips inserted into various points in the story. The bonus material for ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', for example, includes a nine-page opening to the story that Burlew felt introduced the characters in a more organic way than the online comic's cast page.<ref name=DCFp5 /> ''The Order of the Stick'' books are published by Giant in the Playground Games, a small press publishing company formed by ''OOTS'' creator Rich Burlew. The books are widely distributed to online and brick-and-mortar retailers in the hobby game market<ref>Greater Games Industry Catalog, Fall 2007, page 151.</ref><ref name=AllianceListing>{{cite web |url=http://www.alliance-games.com/publicaccess/results.asp?SearchArg=Giant+in+the+Playground+Games&list=By_Company |title=Company Listing for Giant in the Playground |access-date=2008-04-22 |work=Alliance Game Distributors Online Catalog |publisher=Alliance Game Distribution |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080410194303/http://www.alliance-games.com/publicaccess/results.asp?SearchArg=Giant+in+the+Playground+Games&list=By_Company |archive-date=2008-04-10 }}</ref> as well as to comic book direct retailers. Each book features an introduction by the author as well as a preface written in the voice of one of the characters from the strip. The compilation books feature a number of pages of "bonus material"—primarily additional strips inserted into various points in the story. The bonus material for ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'', for example, includes a nine-page opening to the story that Burlew felt introduced the characters in a more organic way than the online comic's cast page.<ref name=DCFp5 />


On Jan. 22nd, 2012, Burlew launched a ] <ref name="Kickstarter">, Jan. 22, 2012. Retrieved on Feb. 4, 2012</ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> campaign to get ''The Order of the Stick: War and XPs'' back into print, which eventually raised enough money to reprint the whole book series.<ref name="comicsalliance"> </ref> The drive was the most funded creative work in Kickstarter up to that point,<ref name="comicsalliance"/> getting more than twenty times the original goal for a total of $1,254,120.<ref name="Kickstarter28">: Update #28: End of the Line—All Aboard!</ref><ref name="Kickstarter25">: Update #25: You Knew This Was Coming</ref> During the reprint drive Burlew committed, as rewards for meeting increasing funding goals,<ref name="comicsbeat">{{cite web|url=http://www.comicsbeat.com/2012/01/29/the-235k-and-counting-kickstarter-comic/|title=The $235K (And Counting) Kickstarter Comic|author=Todd Allen|publisher=]}}</ref> to write eight new short stories either about specific characters or in alternative non-canon settings; the characters for three of these stories were chosen by backers as part of the pledge reward.<ref name="Kickstarter4">: Update #4: And the Mystery Prize is...</ref> On Jan. 22nd, 2012, Burlew launched a ]<ref name="Kickstarter">, Jan. 22, 2012. Retrieved on Feb. 4, 2012</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120216064134/http://www.comicsbeat.com/2012/02/12/diesel-sweets-and-kickstarter-another-established-webcomic-getting-big-bucks-on-kickstarter/ |date=2012-02-16 }}</ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208113312/http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/02/05/best-webcomics-ever-this-week-2-5-12/ |date=2012-02-08 }}</ref> campaign to get ''The Order of the Stick: War and XPs'' back into print, which eventually raised enough money to reprint the whole book series.<ref name="comicsalliance"> </ref> The drive was the most funded creative work in Kickstarter up to that point,<ref name="comicsalliance"/> getting more than twenty times the original goal for a total of $1,254,120.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Cavna|first=Michael|date=2012-02-21|title=NEW KICKSTARTER RECORD: 'Order of the Stick' webcomic creator Rich Burlew cites 'huge geeky safety net' in $1.2M donation campaign|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/new-kickstarter-record-order-of-the-stick-webcomic-creator-rich-burlew-cites-huge-geeky-safety-net-in-12m-donation-campaign/2012/02/21/gIQAbMJSRR_blog.html|access-date=2021-01-28|newspaper=Washington Post|language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Kickstarter28">: Update #28: End of the Line—All Aboard!</ref><ref name="Kickstarter25">: Update #25: You Knew This Was Coming</ref> During the reprint drive Burlew committed, as rewards for meeting increasing funding goals,<ref name="comicsbeat">{{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.comicsbeat.com/2012/01/29/the-235k-and-counting-kickstarter-comic|date=*|title=The $235K (And Counting) Kickstarter Comic}}</ref> to write eight new short stories either about specific characters or in alternative non-canon settings; the characters for three of these stories were chosen by backers as part of the pledge reward.<ref name="Kickstarter4">: Update #4: And the Mystery Prize is...</ref>


{| class="wikitable sortable" border="1" {| class="wikitable sortable" border="1"
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| ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools'' | ''Dungeon Crawlin' Fools''
| 2005 | 2005
| 9780985413910
| 978-0-9766580-0-3
| 1 | 1
| 1–121 | 1–121
Line 175: Line 199:
| ''On the Origin of PCs'' | ''On the Origin of PCs''
| 2005 | 2005
| 9780985413927
| 978-0-9766580-1-1
| 0 | 0
| Print-exclusive prequel | Print-exclusive prequel
Line 183: Line 207:
| ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues'' | ''No Cure for the Paladin Blues''
| 2006 | 2006
| 9780976658030
| 978-0-9766580-3-8
| 2 | 2
| 121a–301
| 121a-301
| 244 | 244
| Full color | Full color
Line 191: Line 215:
| ''Start of Darkness'' | ''Start of Darkness''
| 2007 | 2007
| 9780976658047
| 978-0-9766580-4-7
| −1 | −1
| Print-exclusive prequel | Print-exclusive prequel
| 96 | 112
| Black-and-white with color inserts | Black-and-white with color inserts
|- |-
| ''War And XPs'' | ''War And XPs''
| 2008 | 2008
| 9780976658054
| 978-0-9766580-5-4
| 3 | 3
| 302–484 | 302–484
| 288 | 288
| Full color<ref name="GTS">. '''', April 26, 2007. Retrieved on November 9, 2007</ref><ref name="WarAndXPs">. '''', July 17, 2008. Retrieved on July 18, 2008</ref> | Full color<ref name="GTS"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080709052154/http://www.gamingreport.com/article.php?sid=23501&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0 |date=2008-07-09 }}. '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070711202425/http://www.gamingreport.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=NPNews&file=index |date=2007-07-11 }}'', April 26, 2007. Retrieved on November 9, 2007</ref><ref name="WarAndXPs"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080719065356/http://www.giantitp.com/WarAndXPs.html |date=2008-07-19 }}. '''', July 17, 2008. Retrieved on July 18, 2008</ref>
|- |-
| ''Don't Split the Party'' | ''Don't Split the Party''
| 2009 | 2009
| 9780976658061
| 978-0-9766580-6-1
| 4 | 4
| 485–672 | 485–672
Line 215: Line 239:
| ''Snips, Snails, and Dragon Tales'' | ''Snips, Snails, and Dragon Tales''
| 2011 | 2011
| 9780976658078
| 978-0-9766580-7-8
| D | D
| '']'' content, plus print-only content | '']'' content, plus print-only content
Line 223: Line 247:
| ''Blood Runs in the Family'' | ''Blood Runs in the Family''
| 2014 | 2014
| 9780976658085
| 978-0-9766580-8-5
| 5 | 5
| 673–946
| 673-946
| 368 | 368
| Full color
|-
| ''Good Deeds Gone Unpunished''
| 2018
| 9780976658092
| {{sort|0.5|½}}
| Print-exclusive spin-off
| 160
| Black-and-white
|-
| ''Utterly Dwarfed''
| 2019
| 9780985413965
| 6
| 947–1189
| 352
| Full color | Full color
|} |}
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]In partnership with APE Games, Giant in the Playground released the first ''OOTS'' game, ''The Order of the Stick Adventure Game: The Dungeon of Dorukan''. The game, which was released in September 2006, utilizes cards and a board, and has strong influences from games such as '']'' and '']'', as well as the less-known "Kings & Things". ]In partnership with APE Games, Giant in the Playground released the first ''OOTS'' game, ''The Order of the Stick Adventure Game: The Dungeon of Dorukan''. The game, which was released in September 2006, utilizes cards and a board, and has strong influences from games such as '']'' and '']'', as well as the less-known "Kings & Things".


''The Dungeon of Dorukan'' is designed for 2–6 people, aged twelve and older. Each player controls one member of the OOTS team to explore the dungeon and hunt down Xykon. The player is able to train their chosen member with a variety of ] cards. Each character provides a different gaming experience, and the players have the ability to either aid or harm their team mates. ''The Dungeon of Dorukan'' is designed for 2–6 people, aged twelve and older. Each player controls one member of the OOTS team to explore the dungeon and hunt down Xykon. The player is able to train their chosen member with a variety of ] cards. Each character provides a different gaming experience, and the players have the ability to either aid or harm their teammates.


The game has received two expansion sets. The first one, ''The Shortening'', released in 2011 by APE Games,<ref></ref><ref></ref> included new cards and rules to reduce the duration of the game. The second 20 card mini-expansion, ''Sticky Shticks'', was announced as a pledge reward for the 2012 "reprint drive" Kickstarter campaign.<ref name="Kickstarter19">: Update #19: The Game and More</ref> It features cards that can be stuck to characters giving them some penalties. The game has received two expansion sets. The first one, ''The Shortening'', released in 2011 by APE Games,<ref></ref><ref></ref> included new cards and rules to reduce the duration of the game. The second 20 card mini-expansion, ''Sticky Shticks'', was announced as a pledge reward for the 2012 "reprint drive" Kickstarter campaign.<ref name="Kickstarter19">: Update #19: The Game and More</ref> It features cards that can be stuck to characters giving them some penalties.

A second, stand-alone game, '''The Order of the Stick Adventure Game: The Linear Guild''', was set to be released by APE Games in the Fall of 2008,<ref name="GTS" /> but has not been released. Players would be able to take on the parts of Nale, Thog, Sabine, and other members of the ] in their own dungeon adventure, or they can combine the materials in the game with those from the Dungeon of Dorukan set for a massive Order of the Stick vs. Linear Guild head-to-head adventure.


{{clear}} {{clear}}


==Sources== ==Sources==
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Dungeon Crawlin' Fools |date=February 2005 |location= Philadelphia|publisher=Giant in the Playground |isbn=978-0-9766580-0-9}} *{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Dungeon Crawlin' Fools |date=February 2005 |location= Philadelphia|publisher=Giant in the Playground |isbn=9780985413910}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: On the Origin of PCs |date=August 2005 |publisher=Giant in the Playground|location=Philadelphia |isbn=978-0-9766580-1-6}} *{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: On the Origin of PCs |date=August 2005 |publisher=Giant in the Playground|location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780985413927}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: No Cure for the Paladin Blues |date=August 2006 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=978-0-9766580-3-0}} *{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: No Cure for the Paladin Blues |date=August 2006 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658030}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Start of Darkness |date=May 2007 |publisher=Giant in the Playground|location=Philadelphia |isbn=978-0-9766580-4-7}} *{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Start of Darkness |date=May 2007 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658047}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: War and XPs |date=August 2008 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=978-0-9766580-5-4}} *{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: War and XPs |date=August 2008 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658054}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |authorlink=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Don't Split the Party |date=December 2009 |publisher=Giant in the Playground|location=Philadelphia |isbn=978-0-9766580-6-1}} *{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Don't Split the Party |date=December 2009 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658061}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Snips, Snails, and Dragon Tales |date=June 2011 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658078}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Blood Runs in the Family |date=November 2014 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658085}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Good Deeds Gone Unpunished |date=August 2018 |publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780976658092}}
*{{cite book |last=Burlew |first=Rich |author-link=Rich Burlew |title=The Order of the Stick: Utterly Dwarfed |date=December 2019|publisher=Giant in the Playground |location=Philadelphia |isbn=9780985413965}}


==References== ==References==
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<ref>{{cite web
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{{Reflist|2}} {{Reflist|2}}


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==External links== ==External links==
{{Wikiquote}} {{Wikiquote}}
* {{official website}}
*
* *
* at * {{cite web |url= http://www.apegames.com/portfolio/order-of-the-stick-adventure-game/ |title= The Order of the Stick Adventure Game |website= ] |url-status= live |archive-date= July 13, 2006 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060713185911/http://www.apegames.com/oots/oots-dod/oots-dod.html }}
* at ] * {{cite web |url= http://boardgamegeek.com/game/24157 |id= 24157 |date= 2006 |title= The Order of the Stick Adventure Game: The Dungeon of Dorukan |series= Deluxe Edition |website= ] }}
* at the ] * {{cite web |url= http://www.moccany.org/exhibit-infinitecanvas.html |title= Infinite Canvas: The Art of Webcomics |series= Exhibit |date= Sep 14, 2007 |publisher= ] |url-status= dead |archive-date= October 26, 2007 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071026021329/http://www.moccany.org/exhibit-infinitecanvas.html }}
* {{tvtropes|OrderOfTheStick}}
*]


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Latest revision as of 04:55, 30 November 2024

Comedic fantasy webcomic
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. (October 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
The Order of the Stick
Principal characters, from left to right:
Belkar Bitterleaf, Vaarsuvius, Elan, Haley Starshine, Durkon Thundershield, and Roy Greenhilt
Author(s)Rich Burlew
Websitewww.giantitp.com/comics/oots.html
Current status/scheduleActive (no standard update schedule)
Launch dateSeptember 29, 2003 (2003-09-29)
Publisher(s)Giant in the Playground
Genre(s)Fantasy, comedy, parody

The Order of the Stick (OOTS) is a comedic webcomic that satirizes tabletop role-playing games and medieval fantasy. The comic is written and drawn by Rich Burlew, who illustrates the comic in a stick figure style.

Taking place in a magical world that loosely operates by the rules of the 3.5 edition of the role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons (D&D), the comic follows the sometimes farcical exploits of six adventurers as they strive to save the world from an evil lich sorcerer. Much of the comic's humor stems from the characters' awareness of the game rules that affect their lives or from having anachronistic knowledge of modern culture. This in turn is often used by the author to parody various aspects of role-playing games and fantasy fiction. While primarily comedic in nature, The Order of the Stick features a continuing storyline serialized in one- to four-page episodes, with over 1300 such episodes released as of April 2024.

Although it is principally distributed online through the website Giant in the Playground, ten book collections have been published, including several print-only stories (On the Origin of PCs, Start of Darkness, and Good Deeds Gone Unpunished). An alternate version of the strip appeared monthly in Dragon magazine for 22 issues; these strips, among others, are collected in Snips, Snails and Dragon Tales.

History

The Order of the Stick began its run on September 29, 2003, on what was Rich Burlew's personal site for gaming articles at the time. Burlew initially intended the strip to feature no plot whatsoever—depicting an endless series of gags drawn from the D&D rules instead—but Burlew quickly changed his mind, and he began laying down hints of a storyline as early as strip #13. The strip was originally produced to entertain people who came to his website to read articles, but it quickly became the most popular feature, leading Burlew to eventually abandon writing articles almost entirely.

The Order of the Stick began as a twice-weekly comic that debuted new strips on Mondays and Thursdays. When presales of the first OOTS compilation book allowed Burlew to make writing his full-time job, he increased the number to three per week. Since 2007, the comic has been published on an irregular schedule due to the author's ongoing health concerns. That included a hiatus from September to December 2012, after Burlew had an accident that severed the tendons in his right hand.

In December 2019, Burlew stated that the story would end after one more book, but also noted that still means "years and years" of planned content. He noted that the two preceding books took five years each, and that the upcoming final book may be longer than either.

Dragon magazine

On September 30, 2005, Burlew announced that The Order of the Stick would begin appearing in Dragon, the long-running official D&D magazine. The strip debuted in the December 2005 issue, on the last page of the magazine. The following issue, OOTS appeared as a four-panel strip in the magazine's interior, but by the February 2006 issue, it had returned to a full-page strip on the last page, a position it held until the magazine's last print issue in September 2007.

The Dragon version of OOTS featured the same main cast of six adventurers, but saw them adventuring in an unspecified underground location. None of the villains or supporting characters from the online strip appeared, with the exception of Mr. Jones and Mr. Rodriguez, who appeared together twice. Burlew has stated that the events of the Dragon strips take place in an alternate universe from the online strip, and events in one storyline do not affect the other. This status quo was broken for the sake of a joke, however, when a character in the online strip referred to the July 2006 Dragon strip by claiming that "I told you that in one of the Dragon Magazine comics, so I'm not even sure that's the same continuity."

Starting in January 2013, a new version of the comic appeared in Gygax Magazine, a new tabletop gaming magazine published in print and digital formats.

Evolution of art style

The comic is created directly on a computer using the vector-based software Adobe Illustrator, and the art style has been upgraded several times. In strip #103, the curved and crooked panel borders were replaced with straight—though still slanted—black lines. Burlew now questions how he ever thought the initial format was acceptable. After he sprained his wrist in 2005, Burlew used some of the time he took off from writing the comic to improve the designs of the main cast, straightening their lines and adding tiny details like the runes stitched along the edge of Vaarsuvius' cloak. These changes were humorously acknowledged by the characters themselves when they premiered. Burlew made adjustments to the colors that were required when the material was to appear in print for the first time. The later comics feature more frequent double- and even triple-page strips than in the early days, when longer strips were reserved for special occasions (such as reaching #200). In strip #947 the artwork was upgraded again, adding volume to characters' limbs that were previously drawn as simple stick-figure lines. In addition to these permanent improvements to the art, two variant art styles are used to distinguish the events of certain comics from those taking place in the story's present. Historical events relating to the plot are portrayed in a hand-drawn crayon style both in the online comic and in Start of Darkness, while events in the "prequel" print-exclusive stories are shown in black-and-white.

Representation of minorities

Burlew has said that he includes stances on social topics in his comic because he worries about the impact of his work beyond momentary distractions. He has also written that he is attempting to compensate for past instances of "unintentional sexism and/or insensitivity to gender issues" but, being a straight white male, he finds it difficult to speak authoritatively about minorities without the proper knowledge.

Characters

Protagonists

The comic's central protagonists, known collectively as "The Order of the Stick," are a party of adventurers who are questing to destroy the evil lich Xykon who is attempting to conquer the world. Though they have many allies, the official members of the Order of the Stick are:

  • Roy Greenhilt: A 29-year-old lawful good human fighter, Roy assembled the Order to defeat Xykon, and is its leader. Roy is a counterstereotype of the traditional "dumb fighter" cliché, being knowledgeable, rational, and a skilled tactician. He was conceived as the straight man to the rest of his team's antics, but over the course of the comic he learns to appreciate their various eccentricities.
  • Haley Starshine: A 24-year-old "Chaotic Good-ish" human rogue. The Order's second-in-command, she is skilled in stealth and deception. In early strips, the group thinks of her as the typical greedy thief, not knowing that her father was being held for ransom and she originally left a Thieves Guild to become a wandering adventurer to raise the money. She develops a romantic crush on fellow member Elan and, later, begins a relationship with him.
  • Durkon Thundershield: A lawful good dwarven cleric, is the healer of the party. He had worked with Roy for years prior to the founding of the "Order of the Stick." Durkon is a cleric of Thor and travels through human lands on the orders of the high priest of Thor, who exiled him as a result of a prophecy. Durkon speaks and writes in a Scottish accent and has a fear of trees, taking any opportunity to fight them.
  • Belkar Bitterleaf: A chaotic evil halfling ranger/barbarian, Belkar is an erratic, casual killer driven by selfish impulses. He joined the Order to escape justice from a deadly bar fight in which he knifed fifteen people. The Order does not abandon him, despite his bloodthirsty tendencies, due to Roy's belief that he must keep Belkar under control. Belkar's loyalty to the Order fluctuates with his mood, and, despite frequently thinking about it, he never actually betrays them. He adopts a housecat named Mr. Scruffy to be his animal companion.
  • Elan: A chaotic good human bard/Dashing Swordsman. Elan is the happy-go-lucky, childlike bard of the Order. Early in the series, he is frequently inept and oblivious to the motives of those around him, such as Haley's long-concealed attraction to him. Raised solely by his mother, Elan discovers early in the story that his absent warlord father raised his twin brother, Nale, to be an evil mastermind.
  • Vaarsuvius: An arrogant and condescending true neutral elven wizard, whose gender is deliberately ambiguous, causing occasional confusion in teammates and others. Often addressed simply as "V" by teammates, Vaarsuvius tends toward unnecessary verbosity, often to the point of becoming ineffective as a teammate, although sometimes it can be of value; and is motivated by the need to gain "ultimate arcane power" as an end unto itself. Vaarsuvius was married to an equally ambiguously gendered elf baker Inkyrius, with two children (who address them as "parent"), but Inkyrius filed for divorce due to Vaarsuvius's quest for power taking priority over family matters.

Antagonists

The comic's central antagonists include the following:

  • Xykon (Formerly human lich sorcerer, Chaotic Evil): The archvillain of the story, Xykon is engaged in a plot to conquer the world by controlling a world-destroying being known as the Snarl. While he has a notoriously short attention span and requires near-constant amusement, he is also capable of truly horrific acts of evil.
  • Redcloak (Goblin Cleric of the Dark One, Lawful Evil): Xykon's main ally, he is a high priest of his deity and commander of the goblinoids that serve as the lich's minions. He is motivated by concern for the goblin people and their poor lot in life, believing that harnessing the power of the Snarl will allow his god to bargain for a better place for all goblins. Unlike his boss, Redcloak is a patient planner and a competent leader, and has shown an inclination for scientific thought.
  • The Monster in the Dark: An enigmatic, childlike monster that lurks in darkness under a pink umbrella. Although designated as Xykon's secret weapon, the Monster is terrified of almost everything, including the dark. On the rare occasions he has used force, he has demonstrated incredible power. The paladin O-Chul deemed the Monster "a good man" after befriending him.
  • The Linear Guild: An adventuring party comprising "evil opposites" to the Order. While the Guild originally sought a powerful magic artefact, its purpose turned solely toward defeating the Order after their first encounter with them. Each of their engagements with the Order results in the Guild needing to recruit new members, not all of whom last long. Recurring characters include:
  • Nale: Elan's evil identical twin brother, the Guild leader. A multiclass fighter/rogue/sorcerer who specializes in enchantment spells, he looks identical to Elan except for a small goatee. Though more intelligent than Elan, his plans are typically vastly more complicated than is necessary to achieve his goals. He is ultimately killed by his own father, Tarquin, for his murder of Malack.
  • Sabine: Nale's lover and the opposite number of Haley Starshine. Sabine is a female succubus with shapeshifting and plane-hopping abilities. Though her loyalties are divided between the Guild and a shady group of fiends in the Lower Planes, she is genuinely attached to Nale and furiously angry when he is killed.
  • Thog: A male half-orc barbarian with two levels in fighter. Roy's opposite. He wields a greataxe and combines a childlike innocence with a propensity for merciless slaughter. Last seen as a gladiator in the Empire of Blood on the Western Continent, where Roy defeats him by collapsing a building on him; whether he survives is unknown.
  • Zz'dtri: A male drow wizard who wields dual scimitars. Vaarsuvius' opposite. Dragged off by lawyers after his first on-screen battle for being a rather obvious parody of the character Drizzt Do'Urden, a continuation of a running joke. Rejoins the Guild in their stint in the Western Continent, where he is killed by Vampire Durkon after helping Nale murder Malack.
  • Hilgya Firehelm: A female dwarf cleric of Loki. Durkon's opposite. Quits the Guild after they abandon her to die in their first battle against the Order. Sleeps with Durkon in the Dungeon of Dorukan but flees in tears when he rejects her after she reveals she is married. Returns, accompanied by her and Durkon's baby son Kudzu, to help the Order fight Vampire Durkon at Firmament.
  • (In a running joke, Belkar's Linear Guild opposites are a succession of kobolds, none of whom survive contact with him.)
  • Miko Miyazaki (Human Monk/Paladin, Lawful good): Strongest warrior of the Sapphire Guard, Miko is dispatched to apprehend the Order at the request of her liege. Her sanctimonious attitude and her frequent judgment of others on moral grounds create conflict with the Order, although both oppose the forces of Evil. Miko breaks her Paladin oath by killing Shojo, her liege lord. She is killed during the battle of Azure City.
  • General Tarquin: The de facto ruler of the Empire of Blood on the Western Continent and the father of Elan and Nale, General Tarquin is a lawful evil fighter who has schemes within schemes. Much like Elan, Tarquin is genre-savvy and has a flair for the dramatic, and becomes upset when others fail to respect literary convention.
  • Minister Malack: A lawful evil lizardfolk cleric of Nergal and close friend of Tarquin; secretly a vampire. He harbors a grudge against Nale for killing his children (i.e. vampire spawn) and befriends Durkon soon after they meet, but later turns him into a vampire. Ultimately murdered by Nale.
  • Vampire Durkon: An evil spirit created by Hel to fit the darker aspects of Durkon's personality. When Durkon is vampirized this spirit takes possession of his body, keeping the original Durkon a prisoner in his own brain. He is Hel's agent in the attempt to sway the gods' vote to destroy the world. Sacrifices himself when outwitted by the real Durkon.
  • Hel: The Northern goddess of death, daughter of Loki. At the creation of the current world, she and Thor agreed (with Loki's connivance) that she could have the soul of every dwarf who died without honor. The dwarves since became a race of honorable warriors, frustrating her plans. When the gods debate whether to destroy the world, she attempts to swing the vote to Yes, since if the world is snuffed out every remaining dwarf soul becomes hers.

Plot

While the online version of The Order of the Stick unfolds continuously, the strips have been broken down into plot arcs for purposes of publication; the plot summary that follows breaks the story down into these arcs for clarity. Burlew notes in the commentary of War and XPs that the strips contained within that volume were the first to be plotted with publication in mind from the very beginning. Several volumes have been released in book-only format: On the Origin of PCs, a prequel to the heroes' adventures; Start of Darkness, a prequel to the villains' escapades; Good Deeds Gone Unpunished, a prequel that includes stories about various residents of Azure City; and Snips, Snails and Dragon Tails, a collection of all the Dragon Magazine comics plus 80 pages of new material.

Dungeon Crawlin' Fools

The webcomic begins with the Order fighting goblins and other monsters on their way through the Dungeon of Dorukan (although the first volume of the printed edition later included a preamble showing how the Order finds and enters the Dungeon). They are led by Roy Greenhilt on a quest to destroy a lich sorcerer named Xykon. Roy is motivated by nightly visits from the ghost of his father, from whom he receives a cryptic warning.

The Order briefly joins forces with an adventuring party known as the Linear Guild, led by Nale (the evil twin of the Order's happy-go-lucky bard, Elan). The Guild eventually betrays the Order, but the Order prevails due to Roy's sudden understanding of his father's prophecy. Durkon Thundershield, the Order's dutiful dwarf cleric of Thor, enjoys a sexual encounter with the Guild's dwarf cleric of Loki Hilgya Firehelm, but they shortly afterwards part in tears.

The Order goes on to battle Xykon near a mysterious magical gate. Xykon shatters Roy's ancestral sword, but before he can release his ace-in-the-hole (a powerful creature known as the Monster in the Darkness), Roy flings him into a deadly mystic rune that protects the gate. Xykon's body is destroyed, but his disembodied soul is ferreted to safety by his lieutenant, Redcloak, in his phylactery. The book ends with Elan accidentally destroying the entire dungeon, including the gate, by activating another magic rune. The Order escapes to safety. The printed book contains strips 1–121, plus extras.

No Cure for the Paladin Blues

The Order travels to Wooden Forest, where Vaarsuvius slays a black dragon so they can loot its hoard to retrieve a rare "starmetal" to repair Roy's broken sword. The party is arrested by the paladin Miko Miyazaki for destroying the magical gate in the Dungeon of Dorukan. While stopping at an inn, the party loses the dragon's treasure in an explosion, the shock of which renders Haley unable to speak coherently (rendered as cryptograms in the comic).

In Azure City, Belkar is imprisoned separately from the rest of the Order but escapes, murdering a guard in the process. The others are put on trial before Miko's liege, the elderly Lord Shojo (and his cat, Mr. Scruffy), who informs them that the gate they destroyed is one of five gates that reinforce the structure of the universe. Without them, a god-killing abomination known as the Snarl would escape and destroy all of creation. The five gates were each built by a member of an adventuring party who defeated the Snarl in the past, and, with one exception, named after their creators: Dorukan, Lirian, Soon, Girard Draketooth, Kraagor (who was killed in battle) and the halfling Serini Toormuck (who named her gate in honor of Kraagor rather than herself). Dorukan's and Lirian's Gates have now both been destroyed; Soon's Gate is located in Azure City.

The Order is acquitted with the help of Celia, a sylph they had aided in the Dungeon of Dorukan. Belkar, however, is recaptured by Miko and returned to prison for his murder of the guard. Shojo reveals that the trial was a sham to recruit the Order to defend the remaining gates. Roy reluctantly agrees once he learns that Xykon has survived and is recruiting a massive army of hobgoblins to seize the remaining gates. As a condition for his agreement, he has Belkar released on bail, with a magic rune on his forehead (called a "Mark of Justice") that will trigger a curse if he violates certain conditions. In addition, each member of the Order receives a boon, one of which is the repair of Roy's sword. The printed book contains strips 122–301, plus extras.

War and XPs

In Azure City, Celia and Roy begin a romantic relationship, and Celia gives Roy a talisman which will summon her when broken. The Order travels to Sunken Valley to consult an Oracle as to which Gate Xykon will target next. Roy phrases the question poorly and receives the misleading answer that, out of Girard's and Kraagor's Gate, Xykon will approach Girard's first; in fact, Xykon's army embarks for Azure City.

The Order makes a brief diversion to Cliffport to confront the Linear Guild, who have kidnapped Roy's sister Julia. After Nale frames Elan for the Linear Guild's crimes, Elan escapes from prison and reunites with Haley with the help of a dashing swordsman named Julio Scoundrel. Haley recovers her speech and confesses her love for Elan, who reciprocates.

The Order returns to Azure City to ask Lord Shojo for further directions. Miko, who does not know about the plan to find the Gates but does know about Xykon's army, overhears the conversation and jumps to the conclusion that both are in league with Xykon. She strikes her master down, and is immediately stripped of her paladin status by her gods and imprisoned.

Xykon's hobgoblins attack the city the next day. The Order helps Shojo's heir, Hinjo, hold the city walls. Xykon attempts to circumvent the defenders, but Roy jumps onto the zombified dragon that Xykon is riding, and the two duel once more. Xykon overpowers Roy and sends him falling to his death. Xykon and Redcloak attempt to activate Soon's Gate, which is hidden within a gem embedded in the royal throne, but Miko, having escaped from prison, destroys it to prevent this. In the ensuing explosion, Miko is killed, and Xykon and Redcloak escape. The city falls to the hobgoblins. Haley and Belkar become separated from the party when they go to recover Roy's corpse, while the others sail away with Hinjo and the surviving Azurites. The printed book contains strips 302–484, plus extras.

Don't Split the Party

Roy finds himself in the Afterlife with his father, who cannot rest until Xykon is gone. Roy is found worthy of entrance to paradise, but he returns to his father's side when he learns that almost four months have passed. Looking down into the mortal realm, he sees that Haley and Belkar have formed an underground resistance movement in hobgoblin-occupied Azure City. Haley accidentally breaks Roy's talisman and summons Celia, who convinces her to look for the other half of the party.

They first return to Sunken Valley in the hope that the Oracle can restore Roy to life, but he denies having any such power. In the ensuing quarrel, Belkar stabs the Oracle to death, thus triggering his Mark of Justice; he becomes ill. (The Oracle, resurrected after they leave, tells Roy's eavesdropping ghost that Belkar will die within the year.) Their travels take them to Greysky City, where Haley is betrayed by one of her old friends in the Thieves' Guild, but the Order triumphs over the Guild in the ensuing battle. Belkar's Mark of Justice is removed by a priest of Loki, and he decides to become more helpful to his teammates.

Meanwhile, Elan, Durkon, and Vaarsuvius foil a plot to assassinate Hinjo, and Vaarsuvius kills the ringleader (a nobleman named Kubota). Vaarsuvius then flies to an isolated island to search for Haley, where s/he is attacked and defeated by the mother of the black dragon whom s/he had killed during No Cure for the Paladin Blues. After the dragon threatens to kill Vaarsuvius' children, s/he contracts with three archfiends to rent the souls of three evil spellcasters; in exchange each archfiend earns temporary possession of Vaarsuvius' soul. S/he then kills the black dragon and her entire lineage with an epic Familicide spell from one of the souls.

Loath to waste this increased arcane power, Vaarsuvius teleports to Azure City to defeat Xykon. Here s/he encounters a paladin named O-Chul, a prisoner of Xykon and Redcloak who has secretly befriended Xykon's Monster in the Darkness. Vaarsuvius is knocked out during the battle and loses access to the "rented" souls, but O-Chul breaks free and comes to Vaarsuvius' aid. Xykon's phylactery falls into a storm drain and is lost.

Vaarsuvius and O-Chul are accidentally teleported to Hinjo's fleet in the nick of time by the Monster in the Darkness. There, the Order regroups and Durkon resurrects Roy. The story arc ends with the Order sailing towards the next gate and Vaarsuvius apologizing to the neglected familiar Blackwing, who tells Vaarsuvius that it saw what appeared to be another world in the rift in space caused by the Snarl. The printed book contains strips 485–672, plus extras.

Blood Runs in the Family

While O-Chul and fellow paladin Lien travel north to Kraagor's gate, the Order sails to the Western Continent. Their search for Girard's Gate takes them to the Empire of Blood, where Tarquin, the Empress of Blood's chief general (and the true power behind the throne), dramatically reveals himself to be Elan's father. Tarquin gives the Order a tip that Girard's relative Orrin Draketooth can be found in Windy Canyon. However, Tarquin and the Linear Guild join forces and plot to seize the gate for themselves.

Meanwhile, in Azure City, Redcloak's troops recover Xykon's phylactery and destroy the resistance's base. Redcloak, who is plotting against Xykon, gives him a false phylactery and keeps the real one for himself; Xykon hides the fake in a secret fortress in the Astral Plane.

The Order discovers a magically cloaked pyramid in Windy Canyon, but once inside finds the entire Draketooth clan dead — an unexpected result of Vaarsuvius's Familicide spell, which causes them to flee into the pyramid in horror. The Linear Guild arrives shortly after in hot pursuit. Belkar, Durkon, and Tarquin become separated from their respective groups in the ensuing battle. Belkar and Durkon encounter Tarquin's cleric Malack, who kills Durkon, turning him into a vampire thrall. Belkar reunites with the Order and they continue deeper into the pyramid, overcoming various traps and illusions along the way.

When they discover the gate, Roy decides to destroy it, and consequently the entire pyramid, rather than risk it falling into the hands of Evil. Vaarsuvius, in an adjacent corridor, tries to tell him not to, but is temporarily dragged into hell as one of the archfiends collects on their debt. Again the Order sees what appears to be another world in the rift.

With Tarquin gone, Nale takes the opportunity to kill Malack, freeing Durkon who rejoins the Order. Tarquin kills Nale for disobedience upon returning and sends a vast army to attack the Order. With the help of Julio Scoundrel swooping in at the last moment, the Order is triumphant. Tarquin is left in the middle of the desert as the Order flies away on Julio's airship towards the last Gate.

The final strip reveals that the Northern death goddess Hel has placed a spirit in the vampirized body of Durkon, and plans for the spirit to bring ruin to the Dwarven lands as the real Durkon helplessly struggles trapped in his own body. The printed book contains strips 673–946, plus extras.

Utterly Dwarfed

Julio's airship gets damaged in a storm, and the Order stop in the steampunk-inspired gnome town of Tinkertown to repair it. Haley deals with her old enemies, while Roy and Durkon search for a cleric who can cure Durkon's vampirism. The vampire spirit possessing Durkon's body forces Durkon to show him his memories so as to fool the rest of the Order into thinking he is the same person. They encounter Veldrina and Wrecan, who are traveling to the Godsmoot, an interfaith council of clerics. The Order flies the pair to the Godsmoot with the goal of restoring Durkon to life.

At the Godsmoot, they discover that due to the threat of the Snarl, the gods are casting votes (conveyed through their mortal representatives) on whether to destroy the world and start over. Vampire Durkon, revealed to be the High Priest of Hel, votes in favor of the destruction, causing a tie. Roy and Vampire Durkon fight to a standstill; the demigods' priests vote and also end up in a tie – with the priest of Dvalin needing to consult with the Dwarven Council before he can cast a vote.

Vampire Durkon is now revealed to have turned a number of other people into vampires behind closed doors before the vote; he and most of them teleport out to the dwarven lands (leaving one as a replacement High Priest) to dominate the Council so they will vote in Hel's favor. The Order regroups and flies off to the dwarven city of Firmament, their journey plagued by frost-giant attacks and mutiny.

O-Chul and Lien reach the North Pole. There, they watch Xykon's party attempt to find Kraagor's Gate, which is hidden behind one of hundreds of dungeon doors leading from a ravine. The Monster in the Darkness marks the doors they have already tried with paint, but when the others' backs are turned also marks other doors in order to stymie their plans.

In Firmament the Order gain allies (among them Hilgya Firehelm, accompanied by her and Durkon's infant son Kudzu) and fight newly vampirized dwarves. The vampires manage to hypnotize most of the Order, ruining their plans and leaving all of them unconscious. However, in the meantime Durkon tricks Vampire Durkon into absorbing the rest of his memories all at once, effectively turning him into a copy of Durkon for long enough to get their body destroyed by Belkar.

Durkon's soul ascends to the afterlife along with that of another dwarf cleric (Minrah Shaleshoe). They encounter Thor, who reveals that their world is the latest of countless many created by the gods as temporary prisons for the Snarl. Having been created by four pantheons, the Snarl is stronger than anything created by only three, and always destroys its prison eventually. However, Thor reveals that a fourth pantheon has arisen in this world consisting (so far) only of the goblins' god The Dark One. He tasks Durkon with recruiting Redcloak, the Dark One's high priest, to help stop the Snarl for good.

Hilgya resurrects Durkon. The Order and an army of dwarves led by Minrah (who has also been resurrected) storm the Dwarven Council chambers and defeat the vampires. Using a magical hammer gifted him by Thor, Durkon damages the Council table sufficiently to get the vote delayed indefinitely. The Order embarks for Kraagor's Gate, with Minrah joining them. Meanwhile, O-Chul and Lien are kidnapped and drugged by invisible attackers.

The printed book contains strips 947–1189, plus extras.

Book 7

The Order reaches the North Pole, where Kraagor's Gate is hidden. They investigate the paladins' disappearance, but Durkon and Minrah abscond (against Roy's orders) in an unsuccessful bid to win over Redcloak to Thor's cause. In the ensuing fight, the two dwarves are routed by Redcloak, Xykon, and others; they hide, tricking the villains into seeking them behind one of the many doors, then rejoin the rest of the Order. With Xykon's party close on their trail, the Order take refuge behind one of the doors. They bypass a magical trap laid across the threshold, which proves to be a teleport gate when the villains cross it and vanish.

O-Chul and Lien wake to find themselves chained to a wall at the mercy of Serini Toormuck, now elderly and part troll due to a past accident. Toormuck fears that they and the Order will destroy the last Gate and, with it, the world, rather than let Xykon win; on that basis, she proceeds to ambush the Order with the aid of her adopted child, a trusting beholder named Sunny. The Order prevails and restrains her, releasing the paladins. Eventually they manage to convince her that saving the world from destruction requires stopping Xykon, and she agrees, grudgingly, to ally with them.

Commentary on role-playing games

Much of the humor of The Order of the Stick is based on roleplaying games (particularly the Dungeons and Dragons 3rd Edition ruleset), with characters freely discussing game mechanics, such as experience points, skill sets, and random encounters. The characters know very well that they live in a world controlled by the rules of roleplaying games, but attempt to function normally within it, often with nonsensical results. Characters have been shown browsing through rulebooks for the D&D game to select a certain monster for use or to learn about a new class. Common techniques of players and Dungeon Masters are spoofed, such as the weather of the campaign world changing to herald a dramatic encounter, or a player who does not bother to complete the details of his character's backstory. Burlew's satirical humor addresses many of the clichés of the fantasy genre as a whole, often by twisting them in new and different ways.

Burlew occasionally creates characters and situations specifically to highlight what he considers common problems and deficits among roleplayers. The controversial paladin Miko Miyazaki is one such character; Burlew has said that she represents the division among players of the game over whether or not one character should be allowed to "police" the remainder of an adventuring party. He has referred to her as being "one of the WORST ways to play a paladin." Another example is the creation myth of the OOTS world, which shows a group of gods bickering over how to create the world—accidentally creating the world-devouring Snarl through their refusal to compromise. In the commentary for No Cure for the Paladin Blues, Burlew likens this story to the squabbles that might arise in a group of roleplayers, which threaten to destroy the fun that they have created together.

The comic occasionally directly comments on current events in the roleplaying game industry by the inclusion of characters that represent the participants. In the last three comics to appear in Dragon, the OOTS members encounter a green dragon that serves as a self-identified allegorical figure for the magazine itself. The dragon recounts the magazine's long history, complete with representations of its various publishers, including a wizard of the coast and Mr. Potato Head (the signature toy of Wizards of the Coast's corporate parent, Hasbro). In the final issue, the dragon escapes the wizard of the coast's lawyers by flying through a room featuring characters from many of the comics that have appeared in Dragon over the years, such as Wormy, Knights of the Dinner Table, and What's New with Phil & Dixie, before the OOTS characters directly thank the dragon for its long years of service. This theme was employed again when a character in the online strip voiced Burlew's eulogy to D&D co-creator Gary Gygax immediately after his death was announced. The memorial comic was widely cited among websites covering Gygax's death. Burlew created a similar tribute strip for D&D co-creator Dave Arneson after his death.

Reaction

Due to its reflection of the comical excesses of gaming culture, The Order of the Stick has been hailed as "must reading" for those who play roleplaying games and "the roleplaying comic to beat". Critics sometimes cite the insular nature of in-jokes regarding the D&D rules that crop up regularly (especially in the early part of the comic's run) as a barrier to new readers, noting that without a working knowledge of fantasy roleplaying games, much of the humor may fall flat. However, the comic is just as often seen as being accessible to casual readers without such gaming knowledge due to the strength of the main cast's portrayals and abundance of character-based humor. The comic has been praised for its "shrewd writing" and "increasingly intricate and cleverly scripted adventures" as well as its execution. One webcomic critic has called it "one of the few very simplistically drawn comics that can pull an extensive storyline." Particular praise has been given to the scenes depicting the siege of Azure City, which has been called "a war worthy of Peter Jackson."

The comic's stick figure art has received mixed reviews. Some critics praise its "surprisingly expressive art", with PvP cartoonist Scott Kurtz adding that the comic would not be as funny or have as much heart if the characters were drawn in any other style. Time magazine and Black Gate praised the comic characters for their expressiveness, even though they are drawn as stick figures. Lev Grossman of Time said that Burlew sometimes "imbues them with a weird epic majesty". Others denounce its simple geometric characters as "merely functional" or (as fellow webcomic creator Jackie Lesnick put it) only "good for someone who isn't really an artist". Burlew has defended his art style several times in public statements, stating he has no lack of proficiency at drawing, but intentionally developed a clean and simple style to help the reader focus on the humor. He has pointed out that the primary goal of comic art is to communicate the actions of the characters, which his style does as well as any other. Burlew has addressed similar criticisms within the comic itself several times, either by contrasting his usual art with more realistic drawings or by simply putting self-deprecating dialogue regarding his style into the mouths of characters.

Surveys of webcomic site traffic held since May 2007 have consistently placed The Order of the Stick as one of the 10 most widely read webcomics in existence. Burlew has estimated that he has about 650,000 dedicated readers and up to one million additional casual readers. Every day, thousands of the comic's readers participate in the comic's official forums, which feature discussion of The Order of the Stick and roleplaying games in general. Many participants are noted for adopting avatars drawn in emulation of Burlew's stick figure style, with some fans even creating additional "fancomics" in that style on the site's message board or their own sites.

Awards and recognition

The Order of the Stick received two nominations for Britain's 2008 Eagle Awards, for Favourite Web-Based Comic and Favourite Original Graphic Novel (for Start of Darkness). OOTS won the former category, but lost the latter one to Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier. In announcing the results on his site, Burlew stated he was pleased that he didn't win the Favourite Original Graphic Novel category, saying, "I don't think I want to live in a world where a parody stick figure comic beats one of the comic industry's top writers." No Cure for the Paladin Blues, the comic's second print compilation, won a 2007 Gold ENnie award. OOTS has been nominated for ten Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards, of which it has won five. It was named Best Long Form Comic in 2008, Best Gaming Comic and Best Long Form Comic in 2007, and Best Fantasy Comic in 2006, and tied for Best Fantasy Comic in 2005.

The Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art in New York City included The Order of the Stick #443 in its first webcomic-only exhibit, Infinite Canvas: The Art of Webcomics.

Publications

The cover of On The Origin of PCs, the first of two OOTS prequel books

The Order of the Stick books are published by Giant in the Playground Games, a small press publishing company formed by OOTS creator Rich Burlew. The books are widely distributed to online and brick-and-mortar retailers in the hobby game market as well as to comic book direct retailers. Each book features an introduction by the author as well as a preface written in the voice of one of the characters from the strip. The compilation books feature a number of pages of "bonus material"—primarily additional strips inserted into various points in the story. The bonus material for Dungeon Crawlin' Fools, for example, includes a nine-page opening to the story that Burlew felt introduced the characters in a more organic way than the online comic's cast page.

On Jan. 22nd, 2012, Burlew launched a Kickstarter campaign to get The Order of the Stick: War and XPs back into print, which eventually raised enough money to reprint the whole book series. The drive was the most funded creative work in Kickstarter up to that point, getting more than twenty times the original goal for a total of $1,254,120. During the reprint drive Burlew committed, as rewards for meeting increasing funding goals, to write eight new short stories either about specific characters or in alternative non-canon settings; the characters for three of these stories were chosen by backers as part of the pledge reward.

Title Year ISBN Volume Strips Pages Colors
Dungeon Crawlin' Fools 2005 9780985413910 1 1–121 120 Full color
On the Origin of PCs 2005 9780985413927 0 Print-exclusive prequel 72 Black-and-white
No Cure for the Paladin Blues 2006 9780976658030 2 121a–301 244 Full color
Start of Darkness 2007 9780976658047 −1 Print-exclusive prequel 112 Black-and-white with color inserts
War And XPs 2008 9780976658054 3 302–484 288 Full color
Don't Split the Party 2009 9780976658061 4 485–672 272 Full color
Snips, Snails, and Dragon Tales 2011 9780976658078 D Dragon content, plus print-only content 112 Mixed color and black-and-white
Blood Runs in the Family 2014 9780976658085 5 673–946 368 Full color
Good Deeds Gone Unpunished 2018 9780976658092 ½ Print-exclusive spin-off 160 Black-and-white
Utterly Dwarfed 2019 9780985413965 6 947–1189 352 Full color

Board game

Box cover for The Order of the Stick Adventure Game.

In partnership with APE Games, Giant in the Playground released the first OOTS game, The Order of the Stick Adventure Game: The Dungeon of Dorukan. The game, which was released in September 2006, utilizes cards and a board, and has strong influences from games such as Talisman and Dungeon!, as well as the less-known "Kings & Things".

The Dungeon of Dorukan is designed for 2–6 people, aged twelve and older. Each player controls one member of the OOTS team to explore the dungeon and hunt down Xykon. The player is able to train their chosen member with a variety of shtick cards. Each character provides a different gaming experience, and the players have the ability to either aid or harm their teammates.

The game has received two expansion sets. The first one, The Shortening, released in 2011 by APE Games, included new cards and rules to reduce the duration of the game. The second 20 card mini-expansion, Sticky Shticks, was announced as a pledge reward for the 2012 "reprint drive" Kickstarter campaign. It features cards that can be stuck to characters giving them some penalties.

Sources

References

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Story notes

  1. Burlew, Rich (January 2007). "The Order of the Stick: It Was Just a Matter of Time Anyway". Dragon (351). Paizo Publishing, LLC.
  2. Burlew, Rich (September 2007). "The Order of the Stick: End of the Line, Thanks for Riding". Dragon (359). Paizo Publishing, LLC.
  3. Burlew, Rich (July 2006). "The Order of the Stick: The Tongue is Mightier Than the Sword". Dragon (345). Paizo Publishing, LLC.
  4. Burlew, Rich (2007). "Crashing the Party". The Order of the Stick (#475). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  5. Burlew, Rich (2004). "Man-to-Man Chat". The Order of the Stick (#101). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  6. Burlew, Rich (2005). "The Great Kazoo". The Order of the Stick (#198). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  7. Burlew, Rich (2006). "The Crayons of Time: Doodles on the Sketch Pad of Eternity". The Order of the Stick (#273). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  8. Burlew, Start of Darkness, p. 36.
  9. "A Reason To Keep Trying". Episode 500.
  10. "OOTS #343: Served With a Side-Order of Whoop-Ass".
  11. "OOTS #490: Final Review".
  12. ^ Burlew, Rich (2005). The Order of the Stick: On the Origin of PCs. Giant In The Playground. ISBN 978-0-9766580-1-6.
  13. "The Order of the Stick # 168". Retrieved 2010-01-20.
  14. "OOTS #393: Truth".
  15. "OOTS #444: He's Dead, Jim".
  16. "OOTS #400: Your Ship Has Come In".
  17. "OOTS #202: Scanning".
  18. "OOTS #352: The Turnaround".
  19. "OOTS #489: Keepin' the Little Man Down".
  20. "OOTS #610: You're It".
  21. "OOTS #285: A Moment of Truth".
  22. "OOTS #520: The Power of Immediate Gratification".
  23. Burlew, Rich (2007). "A Song for the Departed". The Order of the Stick (#445). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  24. "OOTS #184: Hawaiian Love".
  25. "OOTS #50: The Semi-Secret Origin of Elan & Nale".
  26. "OOTS #597: Threat Assessment".
  27. "OOTS #177: Ch-ch-ch-changes".
  28. "OOTS #10: Like Enthrall, Only Boring".
  29. Burlew, Rich (2007). "Hell of a Job". The Order of the Stick (#446). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  30. Burlew, Rich (2003). "Meanwhile". The Order of the Stick (#23). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  31. Burlew, Start of Darkness, p. 45.
  32. Burlew, Start of Darkness, p. 98.
  33. ^ Burlew, Rich (2008). "O-Chul's Razor". The Order of the Stick (#546). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  34. Burlew, Start of Darkness, p. 47.
  35. Burlew, Rich (2007). "Periodic Bombardment". The Order of the Stick (#423). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  36. Burlew, Rich (2007). "Intercession". The Order of the Stick (#409). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  37. Burlew, Rich (2005). "Oh No, He DIDN'T". The Order of the Stick (#250). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  38. Burlew, Rich (2007). "The Three Xykons". The Order of the Stick (#431). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-10-23.
  39. Burlew, Rich (2006). "In a Class All His Own". The Order of the Stick (#390). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-10-23.
  40. Burlew, Rich (2006). "C.P.P.D. Blue". The Order of the Stick (#339). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  41. Burlew, Rich (2005). "No Offense, Aaron". The Order of the Stick (#229). GiantITP.com. Retrieved 2008-04-22.

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