Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Why short comics hit so hard (and so fast)
- Meet the artist behind the giggles: Anežka Židkova (aka “Kiwi Agnes”)
- 33 funny comics (described) that aim to share a laugh with somebody
- 1) The genie who offers “realistic wishes”
- 2) The motivational poster that gets too honest
- 3) A cat explains boundaries
- 4) The mirror that roasts politely
- 5) A therapist for dramatic houseplants
- 6) The coworker who brings “team spirit” like a threat
- 7) A vampire tries modern dating
- 8) The “quick errand” that becomes a quest
- 9) An octopus learns multitasking is fake
- 10) The horoscope that reads you like a receipt
- 11) A ghost tries to haunt someone with anxiety
- 12) The wizard whose spell is “minor inconvenience”
- 13) The self-checkout machine becomes your judge
- 14) A couple debates what “we should cook” means
- 15) A dragon discovers online reviews
- 16) The alarm clock explains its “purpose”
- 17) The “healthy routine” collapses by noon
- 18) A mermaid tries to enjoy dry humor
- 19) A dog interprets “work from home” as “exist for me”
- 20) The villain gives a performance review
- 21) A witch invents a spell for “confidence”
- 22) The brain sends a “low battery” notification
- 23) The fortune cookie gets aggressive
- 24) A tiny demon feeds on procrastination
- 25) The “new you” arrives with unrealistic expectations
- 26) A robot tries small talk
- 27) The magician reveals the “real trick” of adulthood
- 28) A fairy godmother does budget-friendly miracles
- 29) The inner critic gets a microphone
- 30) A monster under the bed files a complaint
- 31) A time traveler regrets visiting “right now”
- 32) The “quick text reply” becomes an essay
- 33) The punchline is unexpectedly wholesome
- What makes these comics so shareable?
- How to use funny comics as a daily mood reset
- Real-life laughs: what it’s like to binge 33 comics in one sitting ( of pure, extremely relatable chaos)
- Conclusion
There are two kinds of people in the world: people who “just wanted to check one comic” and people who
mysteriously wake up 45 minutes later, still scrolling, whispering, “Okay, ONE more.”
If you’ve ever needed a quick laugh that doesn’t require a two-hour movie, a subscription, or emotional
preparedness, funny comics are basically the internet’s most efficient joy-delivery system.
Today’s laugh mission: a collection of 33 funny comics (described in a spoiler-safe way)
made by an artist who’s built a reputation for taking everyday moments, sprinkling in a little weirdness,
and landing the kind of punchline that makes you snort and immediately send it to someone you love.
Why short comics hit so hard (and so fast)
They’re bite-size stories with a “twist” payoff
A great comic strip is basically a tiny three-act play: setup, expectation, and thenbamyour brain trips over
a surprise. Philosophers call it “incongruity.” The rest of us call it “Wait… WHAT?” and then laugh while our
coffee regrets its life choices.
They make ordinary life feel less… personal
One reason relatable comics get shared like wildfire is that they turn private thoughts into public comedy.
The internal monologue you assumed was a “you problem” becomes a “wow, we’re all like this” moment.
It’s comfort food, but for your dignity.
Laughter is a legit stress reset
Humor isn’t just entertainment; it’s a pressure valve. Health organizations often note that laughing can help
shift the body out of stress modethink of it as a mini reboot for your nervous system. No incense required.
Meet the artist behind the giggles: Anežka Židkova (aka “Kiwi Agnes”)
The comics featured in the viral “share a laugh” style you’ve probably seen floating around social media are
often credited to Anežka Židkova, a Czech illustrator, cartoonist, and animator who posts under
the handle Kiwi Agnes. Her work leans into expressive characters, clean visuals, and punchlines
that arrive with a gentle gotcha rather than a mean swing.
In interviews about her process, she’s described disliking clichés and actively hunting for fresh anglesnew
perspectives, unexpected pairings, and endings that zig when you think they’ll zag. She’s also talked about
designing characters to fit each idea, treating details (even something as small as color choices) as part of
how a joke lands. That’s why the world in her comics can feel both whimsical and oddly specific, like it was
made from equal parts imagination and “I have absolutely lived this.”
Another fun thread: she’s mentioned being inspired by classic comic storytellingartists like Charles Schulz
showed how humor can be light, human, and quietly meaningful. The result is a vibe that’s playful without
being disposable: the jokes land, but the strips still feel like little observations about being a person.
33 funny comics (described) that aim to share a laugh with somebody
These aren’t reproductions of the original panelsthink of this as a “greatest hits” guide to the kinds of
scenes and punchlines her style delivers: relatable moments, absurd turns, and that one line that makes you
immediately text, “THIS IS YOU.”
-
1) The genie who offers “realistic wishes”
You ask for unlimited money. The genie offers a slightly used coupon and “financial literacy.” The joke:
magical beings are still bound by customer service policies. -
2) The motivational poster that gets too honest
“Believe in yourself!” quickly becomes “Believe in yourself… but also consider a nap.” It’s the optimism
you want, with the realism you deserve. -
3) A cat explains boundaries
The cat’s love language is “near you, not with you.” It’s a masterclass in independence delivered
by a creature who eats lint on purpose. -
4) The mirror that roasts politely
You look for confidence. The mirror responds with accuracy. The twist is that “self-awareness” is not the
spa day you were promised. -
5) A therapist for dramatic houseplants
The plant insists it’s “fine,” while visibly drooping. The comic nails how everyone says they’re okay
while actively not okay. -
6) The coworker who brings “team spirit” like a threat
Everyone’s calm until the overly enthusiastic person arrives with matching shirts. The punchline is fear
disguised as positivity. -
7) A vampire tries modern dating
He asks for your “type.” You say “O positive.” He says, “Perfect.” Romance is alive… ironically.
-
8) The “quick errand” that becomes a quest
You go out for one item and return as if you survived a fantasy war. The humor is in the dramatic framing
of a very normal day. -
9) An octopus learns multitasking is fake
Eight arms, zero inner peace. The twist: more capacity doesn’t mean less chaosit just means chaos in more
directions. -
10) The horoscope that reads you like a receipt
“Today you will overthink something you already understood yesterday.” Not mysticaljust violently
accurate. -
11) A ghost tries to haunt someone with anxiety
The ghost starts spooky. The human responds, “That’s nothing; let me show you my brain at 2 a.m.”
Haunted meets humbled. -
12) The wizard whose spell is “minor inconvenience”
A dramatic incantation results in your phone charging at a slightly annoying angle. The comedy lives in
big energy for tiny outcomes. -
13) The self-checkout machine becomes your judge
“Unexpected item in the bagging area” feels personal. The strip turns technology into an authority figure
with no empathy. -
14) A couple debates what “we should cook” means
One person suggests ideas. The other rejects them all with Olympic-level confidence. The ending proves:
the real meal is negotiation. -
15) A dragon discovers online reviews
“Too smoky. Treasure was nice though.” The dragon tries to improve customer experience while still being
a dragon. Relatable. -
16) The alarm clock explains its “purpose”
It claims it’s helping you “live your best life.” You respond with the kind of silence that says,
“Not today, demon.” -
17) The “healthy routine” collapses by noon
Morning: yoga, smoothie, journaling. Noon: lying on the floor rethinking everything. The laugh is the
speed of the downfall. -
18) A mermaid tries to enjoy dry humor
People keep saying “dry humor.” She’s offended on principle. Wordplay meets aquatic identity crisis.
-
19) A dog interprets “work from home” as “exist for me”
The dog schedules meetings (with its face) and demands “collaboration” (snacks). Corporate culture, but
furry and louder. -
20) The villain gives a performance review
“Your heroic effort is strong, but your time management is weak.” The punchline is treating epic battles
like office admin. -
21) A witch invents a spell for “confidence”
It worksuntil someone looks at her, and the confidence flees like it owes rent. The humor is in how fast
the magic evaporates. -
22) The brain sends a “low battery” notification
Instead of sleep, you choose scrolling. The brain responds with a system error and three unrelated songs
playing at once. -
23) The fortune cookie gets aggressive
“You will find happiness… when you stop answering emails at midnight.” It’s wisdom that sounds like a
gentle threat. -
24) A tiny demon feeds on procrastination
The demon grows stronger every time you say, “I’ll start after one more video.” Suddenly it’s huge, and
you’re still not started. -
25) The “new you” arrives with unrealistic expectations
The new you wants sunrise runs and perfect hydration. The current you wants a blanket and peace. The
strip ends in a compromise: snacks. -
26) A robot tries small talk
It asks, “How are you?” then immediately freezes at the honest answer. Turns out, feelings are not
plug-and-play. -
27) The magician reveals the “real trick” of adulthood
The trick isn’t pulling a rabbit out of a hatit’s keeping track of appointments without crying. The
rabbit looks impressed and concerned. -
28) A fairy godmother does budget-friendly miracles
You want a castle. She offers a slightly better apartment and a free month of streaming. The comedy is
modern inflation meeting fantasy. -
29) The inner critic gets a microphone
It starts as “helpful feedback” and becomes a full stand-up set about your awkward moment from 2014.
Nobody asked for tickets, yet here we are. -
30) A monster under the bed files a complaint
“Your laundry pile is a safety hazard.” Even the monster wants a cleaner workspace. The twist is the
monster is right. -
31) A time traveler regrets visiting “right now”
The future is fine. The past is fine. The present is the problem. The comic turns anxiety into a
time-travel itinerary. -
32) The “quick text reply” becomes an essay
You type “haha” and somehow draft a paragraph worthy of a literature prize. The ending reveals you never
send itjust stare at it forever. -
33) The punchline is unexpectedly wholesome
After all the chaos, the final strip lands on a gentle truth: sometimes the funniest thing is realizing
we’re all trying, and that’s kind of adorable.
What makes these comics so shareable?
The humor is clever, not cruel
The best “scroll-and-laugh” comics don’t need to punch down. They punch sideways at human habits:
overthinking, procrastination, social awkwardness, modern tech, relationship quirks, and the universal lie of
“I’ll just be productive tomorrow.”
The twist endings feel earned
A strong comic sets your expectations, then flips themoften with one detail you didn’t notice until the
last panel. That’s why re-reading is fun: the second time, you see the setup hiding in plain sight.
Visual choices do half the comedy
Expressive faces, body language, and small props (a sign, a snack, a suspiciously judgmental mug) can act like
extra punchlines. When the art supports the joke, even a simple line lands harder.
How to use funny comics as a daily mood reset
If your brain feels like 37 browser tabstwo are playing music and you can’t find which onesteal this simple
routine:
- Take a 2-minute laugh break: read one comic slowly, like it’s a tiny story, not a speedrun.
- Share one strip: laughter sticks better when it’s social (and group chats were made for this).
- Notice what you relate to: the joke often points to the stress you’ve been carrying.
- End on a “soft” comic: a wholesome punchline can feel like a mental exhale.
It’s not about pretending everything is fine. It’s about giving your nervous system a moment to unclench.
A small laugh won’t solve your entire life, but it can absolutely improve the next 20 minuteswhich is a
surprisingly good deal.
Real-life laughs: what it’s like to binge 33 comics in one sitting ( of pure, extremely relatable chaos)
Here’s the oddly universal experience of reading a big batch of funny comicsespecially twisty, relatable
ones like thesewhen you only meant to “take a quick break.” First, you start responsibly. You tell yourself
it’s a reward: one comic, maybe two. Something tiny. A palate cleanser between tasks. You are an adult making
healthy choices.
Then comic #1 hits and you do that quiet “ha” you try to keep inside your face, the one that looks like a
polite smile but feels like a win. By comic #4 you’re fully reacting, because the jokes aren’t just funny
they’re accurate. You catch yourself thinking, “Okay, whoever drew this has definitely watched a
human being struggle to reply to a text message.” By comic #7 you’re screenshotting. Not because you plan to
archive it like a historian, but because your friend needs to see the exact flavor of nonsense you
just witnessed.
Somewhere around comic #10, the experience turns into a mirror. You laugh, but you also feel seen in a way
that’s slightly illegal. The comics start tapping the same pressure points: the “I’ll start tomorrow” lie,
the emotional whiplash of modern life, the way your brain can produce 12 catastrophic scenarios while you’re
brushing your teeth. It’s funny because it’s true, but it’s also funny because someone turned the truth into
something lighter to carry.
By comic #15, you develop a strange confidence. You’re not alone in your weird habits. Other people also
treat a “quick errand” like a heroic quest. Other people also negotiate dinner like it’s international
diplomacy. The humor becomes social even if you’re sitting by yourself, because you can practically hear
someone else laughing at the same punchline somewhere in the world.
Around comic #22, you start doing the “one more” thing. It’s not even conscious. Your thumb scrolls like it
has a job. You’re chasing a very specific dopamine sparkle: setup… twist… laugh… repeat. And the weird part
is that the longer you read, the more the comics feel like a reset. Your shoulders drop. Your breathing gets
less dramatic. The day doesn’t look quite as heavy as it did five minutes ago.
Then you hit the late 20s and the punchlines start feeling… kind of warm. Not syrupy. Just gently human.
You realize the best comics don’t only make you laughthey also give you a little emotional permission slip:
it’s okay to be messy, it’s okay to be tired, it’s okay to be a work in progress. By comic #33, you’re
smiling for real, the kind that lingers after you close the tab. And if you’re lucky, you send one last
screenshot to someone you care about with the simplest caption on earth: “This made me think of you.”
Which is basically the whole point.
Conclusion
Funny comics are small, but their impact is sneaky-big: they turn stress into a punchline, loneliness into a
shared moment, and the chaos of modern life into something you can actually laugh at. If Anežka Židkova’s
comics do anything consistently, it’s this: they remind you that humor can be clever, kind, and still hit
like a perfect surprise ending. And if you laughed even once, mission accomplishednow go share it with
somebody.
