44 Relatable Comics From PizzaCake Comics

Alex Thompson

1 day ago

Collection of relatable comic images and Pizzacake comic compilations featuring bad haircuts and insurance scams

44 Relatable Comics That Feel Too Accurate

Updated on January 4, 2026

I opened my phone to check one thing, then got punched in the feelings by relatable comics by PizzaCake Comics. That’s what happens in early January. Your brain is back online, your bills are awake, and your tolerance for nonsense is low. So yes, I’m choosing laughter. It’s cheaper than therapy.

PizzaCake Comics always hits that sweet spot. The art is bright. The jokes are sharp. And the punchlines land like they’ve been living in your head rent-free. Reddit loves these screenshot panels, Instagram posts them at the worst possible time, and suddenly your group chat is sending comic strips like emergency supplies.

44 Relatable Comics For The “Yep, That’s Me” Feeling

The s’more drawing one is a perfect opener. The artist is like, “Normal stuff,” while the file name says “smorgy.psd.” That’s the internet in one panel. It’s chaotic, but it’s honest. Right after that, the insurance satire lands hard. Pay money forever, then get a “no” when you need help. The monocle is just villain seasoning.

Then you get the animated mom body-type breakdown, which is funny in a way that also makes you stare into the distance. And the Netflix cancellation comic is painfully accurate. Great ratings? Loyal fans? Cool. Cancel it. That’s the Netflix lifecycle, and we keep falling for it.

One of the best relatable comics in this set is the “Hit Me Baby One More Time” realization. You hear it as an adult, and suddenly your childhood playlist feels like evidence in a courtroom. Same vibe with the “Rich Person Crime Card” punch card. The idea of buying nine crimes and getting the tenth free is so absurd it circles back to believable.

The “Oldies station” one hurts the most, though. Hearing the songs you grew up with labeled “retro” is like taking psychic damage. It’s the moment you realize time is not your friend. Then the Rolls Royce gift comic shows up and reminds you that wealth inequality is both real and deeply weird to witness.

There’s also a great internet history callback. Modern “brain rot” videos get defended by comparing them to Badger Badger Mushroom. That’s fair. We were always like this. The formats just changed. And the salon visit steps panel is a clean summary of the haircut cycle: shame, unwanted style, debt, tip anyway. It’s not a joke. It’s a process.

If you want more relatable comics after this set, try 35 Funny Comics That Feel Like A Personal Attack, 35 Relatable Posts For People Who Are Tired, and 20 Screenshots That Explain Modern Adulthood.

Alex Thompson writes like a dashboard analyst of human feelings—patterns spotted, pain quantified, and humor deployed as the fastest fix.

Alex Thompson has been chronicling internet culture and meme phenomena for nearly seven years. Starting at CollegeHumor and later becoming lead meme editor at Mashable, Alex has covered everything from vintage internet memes like Rickrolling to recent viral events such as Corn Kid and Grimace Shake. With a keen eye for what connects and entertains digital audiences, Alex writes with humor, relatability, and deep knowledge of online culture. At Thunder Dungeon, Alex is the go-to source for meme analysis, viral breakdowns, and internet nostalgia.

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