MSPFA Literally Just Homestuck: Why a Simple Mirror Became the Fandom's Life Raft

MSPFA Literally Just Homestuck: Why a Simple Mirror Became the Fandom's Life Raft

Homestuck is a mess. I mean that with love, but look at the facts: 8,000-plus pages, broken Flash animations, and a primary website that feels like it’s held together by digital duct tape and spite. For years, the community has been scrambling to find a way to read the damn thing without the panels breaking or the music cutting out.

Enter MSPFA Literally Just Homestuck.

It sounds like a joke. It’s basically a reupload of Andrew Hussie’s entire opus onto the MS Paint Fan Adventures (MSPFA) hosting site. But for a huge chunk of the mobile-reading, Flash-hating, and archival-obsessed fandom, it wasn’t just a mirror. It was the only way to actually finish the story.

What was the deal with the MSPFA Homestuck reupload?

If you've spent any time on the MSPFA site, you know it’s usually for fan-made stuff. You’ve got Cool and New Webcomic, Vast Error, and a million "Sburbventures" where kids play the game and die in various creative ways. Then, smack in the middle of the "Completed" tab, you had this thing titled Literally Just Homestuck.

It wasn't a parody. It wasn't a "Homestuck Lite" rewrite (though people have tried those, like the ill-fated Homestuck Lite idea that tried to cut out 1,000 pages of John messing around). It was exactly what it said on the tin: a frame-by-frame, pesterlog-by-pesterlog mirror of the original comic.

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Why does this matter? Because the official Homestuck.com experience has been, frankly, a disaster since the death of Flash. When Viz Media took over, they had to convert thousands of assets. Some became YouTube videos; some became weird, clunky HTML5 hybrids. If you were trying to read on a phone in 2024 or 2025, you were basically fighting the interface. The MSPFA mirror provided a mobile-friendly, stable alternative that didn't crash your browser every time a [S] page came up.

Why the mirror suddenly vanished

The "Great Takedown" of late 2025 sent shockwaves through the r/homestuck subreddit. Suddenly, the link to MSPFA Literally Just Homestuck was a 404. People panicked. Was it a copyright strike? Did Viz finally decide to tighten the screws?

Actually, the truth is way more boring and a little bit sadder. According to community moderators and Discord sleuths like Grant and Dreemurrrrr, the MSPFA staff didn't touch it. It was likely deleted by the user who uploaded it.

See, the mirror had a fatal flaw. It was "lazy-loaded"—it pulled image URLs directly from the official Homestuck servers. When the main site changed its file structure or went down for maintenance (which happened a lot during the 2025 re-release events), the MSPFA mirror broke. If you were the guy responsible for manually fixing 8,000 broken image links because some corporate server changed a subdirectory, you’d probably hit the delete button too.

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The Unofficial Collection vs. The MSPFA Route

For the "purists," there is only one way to read the comic: The Unofficial Homestuck Collection (UHC). It’s an offline browser that preserves the Flash as it was meant to be seen. But not everyone wants to download a massive asset pack onto their desktop.

The MSPFA Literally Just Homestuck mirror filled the gap for the casual reader.

  • It was accessible via any browser.
  • It remembered your page number without needing a login.
  • It stripped away the corporate bloat of the post-2018 website.

Honestly, the fact that a fan reupload was more functional than the official multi-million dollar corporate site is a perfect metaphor for the Homestuck experience.

Is there a way to read it now?

With the MSPFA mirror gone, things are a bit fragmented. You’ve got the official site (Homestuck.com), which finished its long-overdue "re-release" in early January 2026. It’s better than it was, but it still lacks that "scrappy webcomic" feel.

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If you’re looking for that specific MSPFA experience, you’re mostly out of luck for a 1:1 mirror. However, the Homestuck Independent Creative Union has been forking the Unofficial Collection to keep it alive on GitHub. There are also various YouTube "Let’s Reads" (shoutout to Voxus) that have voiced about two-thirds of the comic.

The "Literally Just Homestuck" phenomenon proved one thing: the fans care more about the preservation of this story than the people who actually own the rights to it. We don't want "Beyond Canon" or "Epilogues" if we can't even read the first act without a 503 error.

How to actually read Homestuck in 2026

If you’re a newcomer or a returning vet trying to find a stable way to read, here is the current hierarchy of options:

  1. The Unofficial Homestuck Collection (GitHub Fork): Still the gold standard for desktop. It’s the only way to see the animations in their original frame rate with the correct music sync.
  2. Homestuck.com (The 2026 Version): Much more stable now. They finally fixed the mobile "stuck page" bug that plagued the 2024-2025 era.
  3. YouTube (Voxus): Perfect for the long pesterlogs if you have the attention span of a goldfish. The voice acting for Karkat and Dave is basically canon at this point.

The death of the MSPFA mirror is a bummer, but it's part of the cycle. Homestuck is a story about a game that destroys the world and then recreates it. It’s only fitting that the ways we read it have to be destroyed and rebuilt every couple of years too.

Next Steps for Readers:
Check the pinned threads on the Homestuck subreddit for the most recent GitHub links to the "UHC" fork. If you're on mobile and the official site still feels clunky, try using a browser that allows you to force "Desktop Mode" to bypass some of the weird mobile scaling issues that still linger in the Act 6 pages.