Aight bet, nothing better to do atm anyway
First thing I noticed was how much better his art is now
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Detail on the bamboo is much better, and not simply repeating lines.
Another thing, the tribe isn't explicitly named, unlike the Aimumu
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Outfits are mostly similar, facial piercings match, except for the bone septum. The fabric itself is held in place in much of the same way, tho the new tribal girl has some sort of bra. They both have armbands but not 100% the same.
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Fun thing I didn't notice before, the goddess statue changes color, but doesn't seem to imply brainwashing as Sarah had enough sense to try to leave just before the final ceremony, even when the statuette was already red.
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She also develops Heterochromia by the end, where he teases the story may not be over.
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Now some more interesting stuff,
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This boy is named Adihya, got nothing from the name with that spelling but, Adiyah means God's Jewel, there's conflicting sources on its Origin, its either Hebrew or Arabic.
The "god" that Sarah allows to be a host of is Tawaret
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a real Egyptian deity of fertility and childbirth, also ferries the dead across the duat into the field of reeds/afterlife
But the problem starts here
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The Aimumu are pacific islanders that are so far, undocumented as they didn't expect to find a tribe on the island
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As opposed to Sarah's tribe, which has been featured in a documentary, and known enough for aid workers to be dispatched and while the comic didn't seem to say where the tribe is
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It appears it took Sarah a single flight to get there, there was most likely land transportation going from the plane to the tribe but for whatever reason Sarah didn't call her husband when she first arrived.
Just about all I could gather