GDirectory > Arts > Comics > Comic_Strips_and_Panels > G
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Daily geek strip about a programmer in search of beer and true love. Includes such fan faves as demonic chickens and the Panties of Potency. |
The exploits of a kid and a giant donut with legs. |
Features the series Final Blasphemy. Includes Ask God, The Rules of Anime, and The Bible is Stupid. |
Official site of the daily strip about high school sports created by Jack Berrill, now produced by Jerry Jenkins and Ray Burns. With archives, articles, and merchandise. |
Cartoons by Julie Sigwart. Weekly cartoon of Silicon Valley life, work, relationships, and sex or lack thereof. |
Daily single-panel comics, e-cards, and the Farting Dogs. By Dan Gibson. |
Comic about the absurdity of modern life and the stupidity which ensues. By Case Yorke. |
A satirical look at God and his creations, by Matt Jones. |
Andrew Feinstein and Justin Borus are the creators of the Girls and Sports strip. |
A troublesome computer wreaks havoc on a new user and his family. By Ed Wiens. |
Spiritual humor as found by the Holy Cartoonist, Lew May. |
Laugh at talking corks, a 1951 frazer, bananas on crutches and more in this daily cartoon. |
Features the daily strips Marginal Humor, Extremely Blee, Strenua Inertia. |
Daily comic about cats and dogs, and the humans that own them. |
Australia's most syndicated comic strip. |
A comic strip about a comic strip, featuring Argus the gargoyle. |
Robot, stranded on earth, struggles to understand the human condition, and become more than the sum of his parts. |
An ongoing comic about Pen Celine and Jack Bakunin's adventures, with interuptions of Stickfigure Hamlet. |
A strange twist to standard comic strips. No art. Bizarre humor. Period. |
About geeks, for geeks. Includes an RSS feed. |
A comic about 4 college friends by Trent Donelson. |
Samples of Darrin Mason's single-panel cartoon "Give Me A Break". Available for publication in newspapers, magazines and online. |
About taxi drivers, their passengers, and the city where they reside. Illustrated by editorial-cartoonist Graeme MacKay, and written by columnist Wade Hemsworth. |
Some utopias are far from perfect. Some higher beings are far from noble. Some people are cast between them. By Eurydice. |
Comic spreading the gospel of the ultimate anime-universe weapons: nanotechnology-enhanced gerbils piloting robot suits piloting mechs. Strips are divided between the GMech world and the lives of the strips' creators, Monthenor and Morgion. |
Featuring the frog, Wally the wallaby, Andy the rooster, Rex Prickle, Wags the dog, and Katra, a goddess based on the cartoonist. By Liz Vardy. |
Strip about a researcher and the animals he's researching. By David Gau. |
General Protection Fault is an on-line comic strip full of geeky fun, bizarre characters, and a sentient slime mold or two. Join Nick, Ki, Fooker, Dwayne, Trudy and Fred the Slime Mold as they try to keep GPF Software afloat, while surviving odd parodies and wacky situations. The strip runs every Monday through Saturday. A strip archive, plus "geeky games". |
On April 1, 1999, 30 of the most popular cartoonists on the Internet switched cartoons for a day. |
Read a sprite-based comic largely of the X series. |
A series about a girl worn out by life and a friend who steps in to help her. A story of love and random silliness by Josh Lesnick. |
Daily comic strip about geeks, computers and the Internet. Features cast, archive and bio of cartoonist Francis Cleetus. |
Offers mostly gag strips and sketches and a forum. |
A brave hero, a perilous adventure, a grand plot, and some girl with green hair. By Dan Lay. |
Twice-weekly strip revolving around the multitudinous Grimble family. By Adam Burke. |
About dragons, Dragunz actually, who live with humans, an elf, and Death. Asian themes. |
Comic about little round angels, demons, and time-travelling giant robots, drawn with 3-D graphics. By Pete Smith. |
Web comic about high school kids, by Rissa. |
Centered around a fairly normal guy, who's centered around his fairly strange friends. By John Norton. |
With pop culture references at hand and a quick wit upstairs, the protagonist is the archetypal embittered sarcastic kid. By R.L. Peterson. |
Jennie Breeden on LARP at SOLAR. |
The adventures of life, death and jazz. Features an archive, FAQ, and bios. Created by Eric Burns and Greg Holkan. |
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