40 Dark Humor Comics From MyGumsAreBleeding That Are Bleak And Somehow Hilarious
Updated on February 2, 2026
Dark humor comics are what happen when you take a bad day, compress it into four panels, and add a punchline sharp enough to leave a mark. They’re not here to inspire you. They’re here to sit next to you in the dark like, “Yeah… same.” This MyGumsAreBleeding dump leans hard into dark humor, dark comedy logic, and the kind of webcomics that feel like they were written by someone who’s been staring at the ceiling at 3 a.m. (respectfully).
If you’re in the mood for funny comics that are objectively wrong but emotionally accurate, you’re in the right place.
Dark Humor Comics With Bleakness








































The “Anonymous Alcoholics” bit is the perfect misunderstanding: Anonymous aesthetics applied to regular human mess. Masks on, drinks up, absolutely no cybersecurity skills in sight.
Then there’s the afterlife tipping screen comic, which is basically dark comedy distilled. Nothing says “eternal peace” like an iPad swivel and a suggested 30% on your entrance to Heaven.
The bank robber who wants to steal “the friends we made along the way” is why dark humor comics work so well: it takes a comforting cliché and turns it into a threat in two seconds flat.
Also, the microtransaction roast aimed at Diablo Immortal is painfully on-target. The joke isn’t even about spending money—it’s about the imaginary person developers think is playing: someone drowning in cash and begging for relief.
The creepy internal monologue parody of You but with a gamer twist is pure webcomics menace. If a hoodie could narrate, it would sound like that.
And the “NSA agent shows up with flowers” one is bleak in the funniest way—National Security Agency as your most consistent relationship is a laugh that tastes like pennies.
If you’re looking for more dark humor comics like MyGumsAreBleeding, check out 40 Yetiarrow Comics You Need To See, 25 Whoops Comics For a Humorous Whoopsie, and 35 Web Toons From Yes, But.
Jake Parker writes with the energy of someone taking notes on the apocalypse, then underlining the funniest parts.