Storyboard One
The origin mood: solar pool, school geek, glowing water, and the start of the superhero problem.
A solar-heated pool makes superheroes. The villains attack with stolen panels, peak rates, paperwork, old gas heat, and blackouts. The jokes are manga. The solar lessons are real.
Start with the origin. Stay for the villains.
Read the storyline in order: geek origin, Sunny Reina transformation, stolen solar system, and the food-court battle against Madame Peak Rate.
A super geek comes home after school, jumps into the solar-heated pool, and becomes the most confusing legend at the mall.
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Sunny Reina follows the glow, jumps into the pool, and corrects everyone: she is not hot. She is solar.
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The roof is empty, the pool is cold, and the Gas Heater Dragon is laughing in a warehouse full of stolen sunshine.
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Madame Peak Rate attacks the food court. The heroes bring stored sunlight and learn that timing is the real villain.
Read EpisodeThe pool makes the heroes, but the family, mentor, battery guardian, and equipment pad keep the story from collapsing into pure chaos.
The geek who swims into the sun and becomes a mall legend.
Sunny Reina claims the glow and becomes the stronger co-hero.
She is not hot. She is solar. She notices everything first.
The mentor who explains the system before the heroes panic.
The friendly battery guardian who stores sunlight and growls at outages.
He wanted lower bills. He accidentally created superheroes.
She knows exactly what is happening and waits for everyone else to catch up.
The practical place where the load list gets real.
Every villain is a joke with a practical lesson: old heating habits, peak-rate timing, paperwork delay, blackouts, and neglected pool maintenance.
From 4 PM to 9 PM, fun belongs to her.
The old-fuel monster who burns money to heat water.
He attacks with missing initials, confusing forms, and weaponized footnotes.
He makes the backyard go silent and exposes weak backup planning.
The pool-maintenance nuisance who loves lazy circulation.
The practical rate-timing page behind Madame Peak Rate.
Plan selected loads before the outage arrives.
The selected-loads page for pool equipment and backyard circuits.
These pages connect the comic story to actual solar design thinking: load lists, pool equipment, batteries, inverters, peak hours, and backup priorities.
The glowing-pool concept that starts the whole story.
The pump is not a side character. It is a real electrical load.
Stored sunlight and selected-load discipline.
Pool-specific backup design starts with the load list.
The inverter-system page for solar, batteries, and selected loads.
The battery equipment page behind Briggs the Battery Beast.
The storyboard images hold the whole tone: backyard comedy, solar tech, mall drama, and villains who are secretly energy-planning lessons.
The origin mood: solar pool, school geek, glowing water, and the start of the superhero problem.
The larger world: villains, stolen systems, peak-rate food courts, and the solar heroes fighting back.
SolarPoolPower.com is a comedy, but the practical message is simple: pool power should be designed around real equipment, real circuits, real backup priorities, and professional installation.