35 Funny Online Web Comics From Yes But Comics

Michael Hartley

6 days ago

Compilation of a funny online web comic series known as the Yes But comic

Funny Online Web Comics That Read Like Perfect Post-Its

Updated on November 28, 2025

I set out to tighten a cabinet hinge and instead fell into funny online web comics from Yes But Comics while the kettle did its best train impression. Frost on the truck windshield, mittens by the door, and my toolbox judging me from the corner like a foreman with coffee.

There’s a lovely shop-floor efficiency to these panels: quick setups, clean punchlines, and drawings that leave just enough white space for the grin.

If your day runs on Slack pings, r/comics detours, and a subway ride past Queen Street, you’re in the pocket. Expect webcomic images that land in a blink, comic strip pictures you can read at arm’s length, and single-panel comics built for screenshot diplomacy.

35 Funny Online Web Comics By Yes But Comics

Now that you’ve taken the tour of these Yes But Comics, you can feel the rhythm—everyday gripes turned into tidy diagrams, tiny victories labeled like parts bins, and the kind of caption you can copy into a chat without adding context. The best funny online web comics keep the laugh on the situation so everyone gets to keep their dignity and their coffee.

Midway through, the tone tilted toward domestic bravado: heroic trips to the junk drawer, snack math that requires a protractor, and the eternal debate over which Allen key is the chosen one. The webcomic images here stay legible on a phone with gloves, which is the only field test that matters in late November.

A few panels whispered workplace truth without throwing elbows. Status updates that sound like torque specs, meetings that could have been labels, and the calm satisfaction of crossing off one small task with a big pen. Those single-panel comics work like utility knives—simple, sharp, reliable.

You likely saved a couple that felt like winter brain maintenance: hat hair accepted as a lifestyle, daylight rationed with good humor, and pocket hand warmers treated like rare artifacts. Comic strip pictures that stick to one idea tend to live longer on the camera roll.

What ties the set together is craft. Line weight like good hardware, captions tuned like a ratchet, and pacing that respects your attention span. Funny online web comics thrive when the gag ends exactly where the smile starts; today’s batch nails the handoff.

If you’re building a small kit from this gallery, keep three: one panel for “not today,” one for “on it,” and one for that compact “done” that clicks like a well-fitted hinge. Deployed wisely, they’ll get you to quitting time with fewer squeaks.

Mike Hartley measures twice, keeps spare batteries with the duct tape, and files jokes where the shop light hits just right.

Michael Hartley, or just "Mike," is an editor and seasoned meme historian whose articles have traced the evolution of meme humor from early Impact-font classics to today’s TikTok sensations. With nearly a decade spent as senior editor at ViralHype and as a regular contributor to Cheezburger, Mike has dissected the rise of meme legends such as Bad Luck Brian, Success Kid, and Doge. When he's not hunting down meme gold for Thunder Dungeon, Mike teaches workshops on meme marketing and the psychology behind shareable content.

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