These Liz Climo comics from her They Can Talk series are for anyone who wants cute comics with sharp little punchlines and zero emotional labor. If you love animal comics, wholesome humor, and relatable memes that feel like a warm drink but with better timing, this set is basically a reset button.

























































Today’s theme: animals are confident, wrong, and adorable about it.
The genius of Liz Climo comics is how they make the smallest misunderstanding feel like a full philosophical event. A pet sees one human behavior and instantly builds an entire story around it. The logic is flawed. The conviction is perfect. And the punchline lands because it’s exactly how animals would interpret our nonsense if they had the words.
Cats, especially, remain undefeated. They want attention. They want boundaries. They want you to do the task, but also don’t do the task. That’s not mixed signals, that’s management. These animal comics capture that vibe in the cleanest way—sweet faces, absolute attitude, and the kind of silent judgment that could power a small city.
Dogs bring the opposite energy: pure sincerity, pure panic, and a constant desire to be best friends with everything. Wholesome humor hits hardest when it’s simple like that. A dog can turn one passing stranger into a full emergency. A quick thought becomes a full-body response. Relatable memes wish they were this honest.
And then you get the wild-card They Can Talk animals who are just operating on instinct and chaos. Birds derailed by crumbs. Geese treating curiosity like a sport. Ocean creatures trying to “help” in ways that make the situation dramatically worse. Liz Climo comics make it all feel gentle and obvious, like, “Of course this is how they’d see it,” and then you’re laughing again.
If you want more cute chaos, go next with 25 Pet Memes That Understand Your Household, 40 Funny Animal Photos That Went Off Script, and 45 Wholesome Animal Posts That Fixed My Mood.
I’m Laura Bennett, and I will always fall for wholesome humor—especially when it’s delivered by an animal with incorrect confidence.