Tai must be pretty desperate to seek relationship advice about Dora from someone who couldn't make a relationship with Dora work. Instead of doing what Marten would have done, she should do what she would do - it's her relationship, after all.
In Bechdel test news QC is still running a strong F. This points out an odd weakness of the test. Several good conversations where two or more women are being people are ruined because they are about music and musicians who are men. I've been liberal here and not taken references to a band, but only points where a conversational arc leads to one or more statements about a person or persons identified as a man or men. Now at 338 and the girls now out number the boys after a long sting of parity.
There's more than one odd weakness in that test.
The reason single comic strips keep failing the test is mostly because a single comic strip is short: usually there are only few characters, and only a single conversation. Assuming a non-biased work: the chance of two talking characters being both female is statistically no higher than 25%. Even then, as soon as the topic includes someone human, there's another 50% to fail the test - a higher chance if the topic includes multiple humans, like a conversation about artists. By the test, as stated, the following sentence fails: "Hey, I like <female artist 1>, <female artist 2> and <female artist 3>. I hate <male artist 1>." So, by chance alone, an unbiased comic would have a less than 10% chance of passing the test. Now consider that the comic deals heavily in romance (with mostly hetero relationships), and those chances sink even lower.
IMHO, the metric is useless as a test of gender-bias unless it is compared to the
reverse Bechdel test: are two man talking about something other than a woman?
So let's try this. Counting both trans people and robots as the gender they identify as.
We're at #2913.
The most recent comic where two males are talking is
#2896, 17 comics ago.
If you count wordless looming as conversation. Fails the third test though, since it's about Claire.
The second last male-male-conversation I can find is
#2858, 55 comics ago.
If you count a conversation where a woman is present. Also, fails the third test, they're talking about Emily. A few other comics in the arc have conversations involving Clinton and Marten, but they're all about Emily.
Further back, we're at
#2766, 147 strips ago. Marten and Pintzsize talk about.. Emily.
#2756, 157 strips ago, Steve and Sven about.. Faye.
The most recent comic I could find that
might pass the reverse Bechdel test is
#2743, 170 comics ago, but only if that elf robot identifies as male. The comic doesn't say.
Finally, at
#2667, we can see two males talking about beers and poetry! 246 comics ago, we finally passed the reverse Bechdel test!
In other words: a low passing rate of the strict interpretation of the Bechdel test implies nothing interesting. Certainly not any of the things the Bechdel test was designed to imply.