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And somewhere, in a forgotten backup drive or a dusty storage unit, Shaundam’s rusted eyes are still waiting to meet the blonde queen once more. Have you seen any trace of the lost Seka Meets Shaundam comic? Contact the author via the footnote. Until then, keep hunting.
“That’s… sad,” Seka reportedly said.
Then, around 4 PM on Saturday, Seka got lost. Seka Meets Shaundam
A photographer from a low-circulation indie magazine, Flophouse Beat , snapped exactly five photos. One shows Seka pointing at a panel; another shows Shaundam’s art reflected in her sunglasses. It is the only visual evidence of the event. Riding the high of the interaction, J. R. Vex pitched an idea: a one-shot comic. Seka Meets Shaundam would be a 24-page black-and-white story where the real-world Seka is pulled into Shaundam’s dystopia. She would not be a damsel; she would be a mentor, using 1980s negotiating tactics to outsmart robotic warlords.
“Honey,” she said, “I know a thing or two about feeling obsolete in a young person’s game.” And somewhere, in a forgotten backup drive or
Incredibly, Seka agreed. Through a handshake deal (never notarized), Vex secured the rights to her likeness for a print run of 1,000 copies. The script was finished. The pencils were laid down. A pre-release promotional image—Seka’s silhouette merged with Shaundam’s chrome spine—circulated on early message boards.
Whether the comic ever resurfaces or not, the legend of the meeting is now more real than any physical copy could be. is no longer a product. It is a myth—one whispered across subreddits, zine pages, and convention floors, reminding us that the strangest crossovers make the most lasting art. Until then, keep hunting
J. R. Vex, broke and desperate, had scraped together enough cash for a folding table and a banner reading: He sat there for two days, ignored by the crowds flocking to see mainstream stars.