Herp Derp Funny Book Rage Comics
Rage Comics a.k.a. "rage face comics" are not a single webcomic per se but a massive agglomeration of unrelated webcomics by different authors across the interwebs, united only by their distinct style and topics. Essentially a Cut-and-Paste Comic format with a shared pool of recurring face sprites, most rage comics tell short anecdotal stories with a punchline from their authors' lives.
Originating as a collection of anonymous webcomics posted on 4chan back in 2008, the format quickly spread across the web, thanks to its accessibility (pretty much anyone with Photoshop and online access can produce a rage comic within minutes) and the catchiness of many "rage faces". The original rage face was the "Rage Guy", to whom the format owes its title. More "rage faces" have been introduced, and by the early-mid 2010s, hundreds of rage comics were produced and uploaded online every day, alongside LOLCats and other memes. While the format has largely died out since 2016, rage comics are still considered an iconic part of early 2010s Internet culture, and some of the characters and formats that originated in them are still used today.
The most common rage comic template consists of four panels (not unlike Yonkoma) arranged in a 2x2 for better browser readability:
- The main character is introduced doing something ordinary.
- Something unusual happens.
- The character does something about it (alternatively: a Beat Panel).
- The character reacts, often with uncontrolled rage if the previous panel ended in failure.
Longer comics are also common, but they are almost never broader than two panels in a row (since most websites that host rage comics have a picture width restriction).
For a more or less complete list of popular rage faces, refer to Dan Awesome's Rage Maker
Tropes common to all rage comics:
- Alice and Bob: Most characters in the rage comics go by the names Derp, Herp (both male), Derpette, Derpina (female), and derivatives.
- Abusive Parents: The trolldad
occasionally hits this point.
- Artifact Title: Early strips universally ended with the Rage Guy raging. Nowadays, that is no longer the case but the title stuck.
- Atomic F-Bomb: The Rage Guy's signature
"FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU".
- Big "YES!": The "AWW YEA" guy
.
- Captain Obvious: The "You Don't Say?" guy
is used as a response to obvious statements, itself taken from a contour drawing of Nicolas Cage in the film Vampire's Kiss.
- Characterization Marches On: When the Trollface was originally created, he was actually shown as desperate and unsuccessful into pissing off his target. The creator's next use had him actually pull the face (called "cool face") to nervously cover from a police officer. This contrasts with the common usage, where the Trollface simply annoys/pranks people without a problem.
- Comic-Book Fantasy Casting: Several of the supporting faces (such as "You don't say", "True story", and "Watch out, we've got a badass") are trace-overs of real people.
- Curse Cut Short: The Rage Guy's "FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU".
- Cut-and-Paste Comic: All faces, especially the multi-purpose Cereal Guy
.
- Dastardly Whiplash: Sported by the "I Lied!" guy
.
- A Date with Rosie Palms: The Fap Guy
.
- Deadpan Snarker: Cereal Guy tends to be portrayed as this.
- Death Glare: "What's All This Racket?" guy
.
- The Determinator: The Actually It's Not Okay
guy.
- Distinguished Gentleman's Pipe: The Trolldad
.
- The Eeyore: The "Forever Alone" guy
.
- Enraged by Idiocy: The "Are You Serious?" guy
. The Are You Kidding Me?
guy.
- Everything's Better with Rainbows: The Puking Rainbows Guy
represents the supreme adoration and happiness.
- Face Framed in Shadow: The "Oh God, Why?" guy
.
- Filler: More often than not, "True story" is used to fill up a fourth panel in a comic that would otherwise only be three panels long.
- First World Problems: A lot of things that infuriate the Rage Guy are everyday minor inconveniences.
- Fish Eyes: the Derp face.
- Freddie Mercopy: The comics have the "Freddie Mercury pose
◊" which means an awesome victory, and even has a variant, the "So close pose
◊".
- Gender Flip: Some of the rage faces have a female variant that is entirely redrawn from the original.
- Glasses Pull: The astonished variation is done by the Mother of God guy
.
- Gonk: A lot of the rage faces are intentionally ugly.
- Guilty Pleasures: Whatever the Me Gusta guy
reacts to.
- High-Class Glass: The Sir
.
- Hair-Trigger Temper: Rage Guy himself. He can FFFFUUUU- at literally anything.
- I Lied: Pretty much the point of the "I Lied!" face
, though more often Played for Laughs than for drama.
- Idiot Ball: Expect anyone with the Herp Derp face
to carry it proudly.
- Imagine Spot: A lot of Me Gusta moments result from the characters realizing that their current (mundane) activity is similar to something awesome, like an action movie scene, and immediately imagining themselves in that spot.
- Insane Troll Logic: Occasionally done by the Trollface, followed by the mocking "Problem?". The "Troll Physics" genre of comics — fittingly starring Trollface himself — runs wild with this, with one of its most famous examples being "achieve flight by having two forklifts pick each other up" and the "flying in the rain by covering yourself in oil after pointing out that oil floats on water".
- Is That the Best You Can Do?: The "Bitch Please" guy
is used before one-upping an earlier statement. Said image is taken from an image of former NBA star Yao Ming laughing heartily during a 2009 postgame interview
.
- Jet Pack: Equipped on the Nothing To Do Here guy
.
- Kick the Dog: Many times one with the troll face will do this.
- Lazily Gender-Flipped Name: The main male character is typically referred to as Derp, while any female characters are Derpette or Derpina.
- Little "No": The "NO." guy
, though with more gravity than the normal.
- Long Hair Is Feminine: Most "female" faces are produced simply by strapping a wig of common hair color on a male-per-default preexisting sprite.
- My God, What Have I Done?: The "Oh God, Why?" guy
.
- The New '10s: Rage comics were a staple of early 2010s internet culture.
- Non-Standard Character Design: The "seriously?" faces are far more realistically drawn than the standard faces that aren't trace-overs, and they are some of the few to have uniquely designed female sprites.
- Not Bad: The "Not Bad." face
, patterned after Barack Obama's reaction during a royal visit to London
.
- Oh, Crap!: The aptly named Oh Crap guy
.
- Rage-Breaking Point: The Rage Guy
in a nutshell.
- Rage Quit: The Desk-Flipping Guy
.
- Signature Sound Effect: There's no mistaking Rage Guy's Atomic F-Bomb.
- Slice-of-Life Webcomics: Most commonly.
- Spit Take: Comics involving Cereal Guy usually have him doing this as a punchline, whether it's from seeing something shocking or being Instantly Proven Wrong.
- Suicidal Overconfidence: The "Challenge Accepted"
(inspired by Barney Stinson's Catchphrase from How I Met Your Mother) and "F**k Yea"
faces, but subverted with the "Challenge Considered"
face. Sometimes this trope is followed by the "Watch Out Guys, We've Got a Badass over Here" guy
, itself patterned after astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson.
- Touché: A sad, remorseful version with the "Okay..." guy
.
- Troll: The iconic Trollface
.
- Turn of the Millennium: First appeared towards the end of this decade.
- Twitchy Eye: The Angry Guy
◊
- Wine Is Classy: Drinking Like a Sir
.
Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Webcomic/RageComics
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