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[Six Pack Site / Joe Six-Pack / Sick Puppy Press] Comics

If anything needs to be updated, it's to include more erotic and sexual situations.
you are right, but after many years of reading the books that they post, i don't expect to see more erotic and sexual situations
their books are more about the feminization of some characters and the world around them (like BarrosBR works)
 
It's this one

Screenshot_20250522-151332.jpg
 
This one. When I got it, it had a different bname but I checked and it is the same book.
 

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Why Can't You Be More Like Your Sister?​

by Joe Six-Pack

Color Illustrations by Joe Six-Pack

A “Teens Transformed” Story

Drake Maddox has a reputation as a tough kid, a kid that’s on the fast track to living his life in and out of jail, damaged relationships and sleeping on other people’s couches. Problem is for his mother, that’s exactly what Drake wants, and he couldn’t be happier about it.

That contrasts with his sister, the apple of her mother’s eye. Rebecca Anne Maddox is everything Drake isn’t. Delicate, feminine, kind and docile. She’s the kind of daughter any mother can be proud of, unlike the embarrassment Drake has become.

Then comes word that Rebecca Anne will be returning from boarding school. Permanently. Drake hates the idea of having his perfect little doll of a sister around all the time, and does what Drake does. He rebels.

So in comes Drake’s Aunt Diane, a sturdy woman with a sour temper. She’s there to keep Darken line. And her way of keeping him in line? Put him in dresses. Surely that will calm him down.

Well, if Drake has anything to say about it, it won’t. He’s going to continue to be the same hard case he’s always been, and make his aunt regret the day she thought she could keep him in line.

At least… That’s his plan. It’s not going quite like Drake expected, though. In fact, he has the feeling that he might losing control of the situation.

 
I've been a JSP ride or die since day one but this is my breaking point. Used to tolerate his childish low-res 1960's comic book drawings because the writing was good. But last couple years for the most part his stories have had terrible pacing and what feels like a highly truncated plot. I mean he's never been great at wrapping up a story. But lately most of his third acts and endings have been, to use the literary term, total dogshit.

I will still support other authors featured on the site but I'm done with JSP until he shows he can write more than half of a story. His recent work feels lazy, phoned in, and in desperate need of an editor or workshop.
 
I thought this was a rare misfire on Joe’s part.

Until page 70 of 80 there is barely any transformation or process. The main character still looks like a boy who wears girl clothes. Then poof, the hypnosis takes hold and the final 10 pages, it’s a girl.
 
I thought this was a rare misfire on Joe’s part.

Until page 70 of 80 there is barely any transformation or process. The main character still looks like a boy who wears girl clothes. Then poof, the hypnosis takes hold and the final 10 pages, it’s a girl.
Mental up until then?
 
I thought this was a rare misfire on Joe’s part.

Until page 70 of 80 there is barely any transformation or process. The main character still looks like a boy who wears girl clothes. Then poof, the hypnosis takes hold and the final 10 pages, it’s a girl.
Storyline aside, I think a lot of Joe's artwork has this harsh line where the protag/transformee is not just a guy but an ugly guy in feminine clothing. His art rarely feels gradual in terms of progression.
 
I thought this was a rare misfire on Joe’s part.

Until page 70 of 80 there is barely any transformation or process. The main character still looks like a boy who wears girl clothes. Then poof, the hypnosis takes hold and the final 10 pages, it’s a girl.
Very true what the story lacks is the most interesting part of it the gradual transition which includes reluctance and resistance
 
The brainworms that are required to consistently create stories and illustrations that depict being a woman as the worst thing ever is honestly pretty embarrassing.
I'm trying to parse the odd syntax above but it seems to me that you despise stories in which the transformee is not happy about the change.

Might I suggest that being changed against one's will, no matter how pleasant the final form may turn out to be, is in itself a distressing situation? The loss of identity, the loss of agency, the possible loss of one's friends and family (depending on the story), the possible loss of legal status (particularly distressful these days), the possible loss of one's professional accomplishments (again, depending on the story), loss of property and/or livelihood, the (potential) loss of freedom (depending on the story)... these are all reasons for the protagonist to resist the change.

It's not necessarily that "being a woman is the worst thing ever," well, not by itself and not in every story. It's also everything ELSE that comes with the package.
 
Does anyone have the new book. Think this may be one of the rare ones I ask for not all I jump and buy every new book but this one is not really giving me that feeling but I do want to read it
 

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