Note: I am having trouble organizing this stuff, its a problem inherent with the web page editor I am using... very annoying, but just bare with me and I will get it fixed up soon enough. Ok so ZBrush is sorta hard to learn at first, I'm not complaining here, I'm doing something about it. One of the hardest parts of ZBrush when you first get it is understanding what the people who made it were thinking, I don't recommend trying to figure that out, they were thinking in VERY LARGE MATH. Pixologic says that ZBrush is a tool for artists made by artists, and while that may be true as a simple fact, it should be more like a tool for artists made by genius programmers (Blender on the other hand is a program made by programmers so that programmers can make things that look like an artist did them). This is both good and bad, the bad part is the resulting documentation is way over a lot of peoples heads. The good thing is that it's fucking brilliant, ZBrush is better than food. The tutorials I make attempt to take into account all levels of ability, so if you are advanced at this stuff don't get pissed off when I tell people to turn on edit mode, it is NOT self evident. Ok? The trick here is that while I will have tutorials about how to make a blob and squish it with sculpting brushes, I will also show other things like how the blob can be turned into a ball of fluff and the fluff can be turned into tentacles and the tentacles can become robotic and and the robotic tentacles can joyfully impregnate your face... um... ok! Onward and upward! Anyhow even if you have never used ZBrush it SHOULD be possible to follow any one of these. If you are totally new you will maybe be daunted by things with a lot of steps, don't be, a large portion of that will become second nature later, like the Edit Button.
Lesson One for learning ZBrush is not finished yet, but I should have it up soon. If all goes well it will be very short and simple. Gah... this site is getting disorganized...... MORE COFFEE!!!!!!