I read these funny online web comics while trying to start a “free trial” and immediately getting asked for my credit card, and I swear I heard a tiny laugh track inside my skull. These Yes But Comics hit because they capture that daily two-step: you try to be a functional person, but the world answers with “yes, but” and throws a PDF menu at your face.

This dump leans into webcomics, relatable comics, and internet humor—the holy trio of short-form misery with great timing. It’s tiny hypocrisies, design flaws, and those moments where your brain goes, “I didn’t consent to being perceived this accurately.”

The laws of physics state that it is impossible to pull just one wet wipe without bringing its entire extended family with it.

Germaphobes view every romantic gesture as a potential biohazard.

Fitness is a hobby; helping others is cardio, and we don't do cardio on upper-body day.



"Be yourself," as long as yourself is a perfectly curated, wrinkle-free version of a person who only eats kale.



I love the aesthetic of 1970s Australian hard rock, but I strictly listen to lofi hip-hop beats to study/relax to.



There is nothing quite as special as receiving the exact same "exclusive" sentiment as the other 400 people in your apartment complex.



Your life might have no rules, but your fresh ink has a very specific 72-hour hygiene protocol.



I will happily pay a 20% convenience tax to a major corporation, but I will go to war with a grandmother over the price of organic strawberries.














The Yes But Comics magic is how clean the punch is. One panel sets up the polite version of reality. The next panel reveals the gremlin behind the curtain. And suddenly you’re staring at your own habits like they’re a security camera replay. Relatable comics live in that gap between who we think we are and what we actually do when nobody’s watching.
A lot of these webcomics orbit modern “convenience traps.” Everything is branded as effortless until you touch it. Meditation comes with an ad marathon. A website “menu” is a PDF ambush. A free trial is just a paid subscription wearing a trench coat. Internet humor loves this because we’re all quietly annoyed, and it’s satisfying to see the annoyance drawn with confidence.
Then there’s the hypocrisy cluster, which is basically the human condition in two frames. People who’ll read every side effect on a bottle, then act fearless in the dumbest possible setting. People who will sweat for fitness but refuse to lift a suitcase. People who want rebellion as an aesthetic, but also want routine and comfort and a clean outcome. Relatable comics don’t judge you. They just hold up a mirror and let you flinch.
And the physical comedy still lands because it’s universal: the airplane workspace lie, the “work from the beach” fantasy, the wet wipe that comes out as a whole family tree. These funny online web comics aren’t long, but they’re sharp enough to leave a mark.
If you want more quick-hit internet therapy, try Funny Tumblr Posts For Peak Internet Weirdness, Oddly Specific Memes For Niche Thoughts, and Single Panel Comics For People Pretending To Be Fine.
Jake Parker writes like a man who has lost multiple battles to PDF menus.





