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* The animated band Studio Killers is made up of a human BigBeautifulWoman and an anthropomorphic fox and mink.

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* The animated band Studio Killers Music/StudioKillers is made up of a human BigBeautifulWoman and an anthropomorphic fox and mink.
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* The ''VideoGame/ShovelKnight'' world is populated by both humans and humanoid animals coexisting much acknowledgement from the characters outside of the occasional pun. Given the fact that most of the "Knights" are fully armored and masked, it's very possible several of them are animal people as well. In fact, a hidden NPC one can find looks identical to Shovel Knight himself... only with a giant fish head on his shoulders instead!
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* In ''VideoGame/StickyBusiness'', three of your regulars at your online sticker shop are Daisy (a cat), Inspector P. (an anthropomorphic raccoon), and [[BlatantLies "@notafrog"]], while the rest are humans and a vampire. [[spoiler:Daisy's case gets subverted when the picture she sends you at the end of her storyline reveals that she's a human.]]

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* In ''VideoGame/StickyBusiness'', three of your regulars at your online sticker shop are Daisy (a cat), Inspector P. (an anthropomorphic raccoon), and [[BlatantLies "@notafrog"]], while the rest are humans and a vampire. [[spoiler:Daisy's case gets subverted when the picture she sends you at the end of her storyline reveals that she's a human.human, while the cat is just her profile pic.]]
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* In ''VideoGame/StickyBusiness'', three of your regulars at your online sticker shop are Daisy (a cat), Inspector P. (an anthropomorphic raccoon), and [[BlatantLies "@notafrog"]], while the rest are humans. [[spoiler:Daisy's case gets subverted when the picture she sends you at the end of her storyline reveals that she's a human.]]

to:

* In ''VideoGame/StickyBusiness'', three of your regulars at your online sticker shop are Daisy (a cat), Inspector P. (an anthropomorphic raccoon), and [[BlatantLies "@notafrog"]], while the rest are humans.humans and a vampire. [[spoiler:Daisy's case gets subverted when the picture she sends you at the end of her storyline reveals that she's a human.]]
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I know it doesn't have a page yet, but still

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* In ''VideoGame/StickyBusiness'', three of your regulars at your online sticker shop are Daisy (a cat), Inspector P. (an anthropomorphic raccoon), and [[BlatantLies "@notafrog"]], while the rest are humans. [[spoiler:Daisy's case gets subverted when the picture she sends you at the end of her storyline reveals that she's a human.]]
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* ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'': With its LoadsAndLoadsOfRaces and MassiveRaceSelection, the series features plenty of both traditional humanoids and anthropomorphic animals. Those of the latter category that are playable in ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' include [[OurMinotaursAreDifferent tauren]] (and their antlered Highmountain offshoot), [[PandaingToTheAudience pandaren]], [[CunningLikeAFox vulpera]], and arguably [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent worgen]] (who can spend all their time in anthro wolf form) and [[SpaceElves draenei]] (who are [[LittleBitBeastly somewhat like blue goat people]]). In addition to those, there are dozens of non-playable animal-like sapient species to interact with.

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* ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'': With its LoadsAndLoadsOfRaces and MassiveRaceSelection, the series features plenty of both traditional humanoids and anthropomorphic animals. Those of the latter category that are playable in ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' include [[OurMinotaursAreDifferent tauren]] (and their antlered Highmountain offshoot), [[PandaingToTheAudience pandaren]], pandaren, [[CunningLikeAFox vulpera]], and arguably [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent worgen]] (who can spend all their time in anthro wolf form) and [[SpaceElves draenei]] (who are [[LittleBitBeastly somewhat like blue goat people]]). In addition to those, there are dozens of non-playable animal-like sapient species to interact with.
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* ''VideoGame/DuckTalesTheQuestforGold'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface mummies from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.

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* ''VideoGame/DuckTalesTheQuestforGold'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface {{Dogface}} mummies from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.
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* ''VideoGame/NappleTale'' revolves around a QuirkyTown that's home to a number of anthropomorphic animals...and plants...and twice as many standard humans that are plenty quirky in their own right.

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* ''VideoGame/NappleTale'' ''VideoGame/NappleTaleArsiaInDaydream'' revolves around a QuirkyTown that's home to a number of anthropomorphic animals...and plants...and twice as many standard humans that are plenty quirky in their own right.
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* ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'' initially had a [[JustifiedTrope justification]] for this: Crash and the other funny animals from the early games were mutants created by Dr. Neo Cortex, meaning that characters like Koala Kong, Pinstripe Potoroo and Ripper Roo are mutants just like Crash. As the series went on, however, [[TheArtifact this justification was abandoned]], with later games such as ''VideoGame/CrashTwinsanity'' and ''VideoGame/CrashTagTeamRacing'' featuring anthropomorphic animals that are clearly not mutants.

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* ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'' initially had a [[JustifiedTrope justification]] for this: Crash and the other funny animals from the early games were mutants [[UpliftedAnimal mutants]] created by Dr. Neo Cortex, meaning that characters like Koala Kong, Pinstripe Potoroo and Ripper Roo are mutants just like Crash. As the series went on, however, [[TheArtifact this justification was abandoned]], with later games such as ''VideoGame/CrashTwinsanity'' and ''VideoGame/CrashTagTeamRacing'' featuring anthropomorphic animals that are clearly not mutants.
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* ''VideoGame/CrashBandicoot'' initially had a [[JustifiedTrope justification]] for this: Crash and the other funny animals from the early games were mutants created by Dr. Neo Cortex, meaning that characters like Koala Kong, Pinstripe Potoroo and Ripper Roo are mutants just like Crash. As the series went on, however, [[TheArtifact this justification was abandoned]], with later games such as ''VideoGame/CrashTwinsanity'' and ''VideoGame/CrashTagTeamRacing'' featuring anthropomorphic animals that are clearly not mutants.
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* ''Film/TheWizardOfOz'' has a talking lion and talking monkeys. It's also the TropeNamer.

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* Subverted in ''Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood'' where the Land of Make-Believe has talking animals but it is made clear that it doesn't really exist.



* Subverted in ''Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood'' where the Land of Make-Believe has talking animals but it is made clear that it doesn't really exist.

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* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' milks this for all its worth. It's a setting where [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/05/25/i-kid-people-i-kid-youre-a-good-crowd/ police dogs can give Miranda warnings]], [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/09/28/stranger-danger/ a regular wolf might drop in for tea]] and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/10/14/see-you-at-the-party-officer/ have his own house for all practical definitions]]. Then we get into the magical {{animorphism}} and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/12/09/munchies-and-crunchies-in-here-somewhere/ you get some really awkward questions]].



* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' milks this for all its worth. It's a setting where [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/05/25/i-kid-people-i-kid-youre-a-good-crowd/ police dogs can give Miranda warnings]], [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/09/28/stranger-danger/ a regular wolf might drop in for tea]] and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/10/14/see-you-at-the-party-officer/ have his own house for all practical definitions]]. Then we get into the magical {{animorphism}} and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/12/09/munchies-and-crunchies-in-here-somewhere/ you get some really awkward questions]].

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* In ''Roleplay/DarwinsSoldiers'', anthros appear in the world and are treated much like humans are.



* In ''Roleplay/DarwinsSoldiers'', anthros appear in the world and are treated much like humans are.

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* Played with in [[https://www.awkwardzombie.com/comic/please-explain-this-anomaly this]] ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossing Webcomic/AwkwardZombie'' comic.



* Creator/JamieBarker's ''[[https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/chillzoo/list?title_no=641780 Chillzoo]]'' takes this trope to the max with its cast of humans, animals, a ghost and a robot.



* ''Webcomic/CycleOfLuv'' features a WorldOfFunnyAnimals that also features humans, non-anthropomorphic bugs, and [[ExaggeratedTrope objects that can think and sometimes talk]]



* Carson the talking muskrat of ''Webcomic/DorkTower'' is, well, a muskrat. As in, a literal muskrat. Apart from a couple of people [[YourCostumeNeedsWork commenting on his fursuit]], nobody seems to care, and he's even shown going to a hospital rather than a vet at least once.



* ''Webcomic/FrogRaccoonStrawberry'' takes place in such a world.



* Most characters in ''Webcomic/{{Goats}}'' are humans, but the central cast features a talking goat named Toothgnip and a talking chicken named Diablo. This might be explained by their connection to supernatural entities, but even people who don't know about that don't react to them. It's also implied this world has a population of (hopefully) unintelligent humans that the talking animals eat, averting CarnivoreConfusion.



* The world of ''Webcomic/TheStoryOfAnima'' [[http://tapastic.com/episode/42026 is populated by both humans and beastkin]].
* ''Webcomic/StubbleTrouble'' has a world where over half the population is anthropomorphic animals and no one seems to care. Human/furry relationships aren't a taboo, either.



* In ''Webcomic/YuckHeads'' Most of the characters are Funny Animals but there are also a few human characters. WordOfGod says that most of the people in Yuckufo are animals because the town is like an animal ghetto.

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* In ''Webcomic/YuckHeads'' Most of ''Webcomic/VampireBites'' takes place in a world that includes humans and anthropomorphic animals. Oddly though vampires, who the main characters are, are Funny Animals but there are also considered myth within the story.
* ''Webcomic/TheWhiteboard'': Originally the regular cast members were {{Funny Animal}}s in
a few human characters. WordOfGod says that most world where many of the people were featureless "bubblehead" humans, due to [[FurriesAreEasierToDraw furries being easier to draw]], but starting in Yuckufo are 2012 the artist started using funny animals because exclusively for all characters, regulars or otherwise. [[http://www.the-whiteboard.com/autotwb1853.html Fan-favorite recurring "bubbleheads" Larry and Daryl became squirrels]], from suggestions on the town is like an animal ghetto.forum.



* Played with in [[https://www.awkwardzombie.com/comic/please-explain-this-anomaly this]] ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossing Webcomic/AwkwardZombie'' comic.
* ''Webcomic/FrogRaccoonStrawberry'' takes place in such a world.
* ''Webcomic/TheWhiteboard'': Originally the regular cast members were {{Funny Animal}}s in a world where many of the people were featureless "bubblehead" humans, due to [[FurriesAreEasierToDraw furries being easier to draw]], but starting in 2012 the artist started using funny animals exclusively for all characters, regulars or otherwise. [[http://www.the-whiteboard.com/autotwb1853.html Fan-favorite recurring "bubbleheads" Larry and Daryl became squirrels]], from suggestions on the forum.
* ''Webcomic/StubbleTrouble'' has a world where over half the population is anthropomorphic animals and no one seems to care. Human/furry relationships aren't a taboo, either.
* Carson the talking muskrat of ''Webcomic/DorkTower'' is, well, a muskrat. As in, a literal muskrat. Apart from a couple of people [[YourCostumeNeedsWork commenting on his fursuit]], nobody seems to care, and he's even shown going to a hospital rather than a vet at least once.
* The world of ''Webcomic/TheStoryOfAnima'' [[http://tapastic.com/episode/42026 is populated by both humans and beastkin]].
* ''Webcomic/VampireBites'' takes place in a world that includes humans and anthropomorphic animals. Oddly though vampires, who the main characters are, are considered myth within the story.



* Most characters in ''Webcomic/{{Goats}}'' are humans, but the central cast features a talking goat named Toothgnip and a talking chicken named Diablo. This might be explained by their connection to supernatural entities, but even people who don't know about that don't react to them. It's also implied this world has a population of (hopefully) unintelligent humans that the talking animals eat, averting CarnivoreConfusion.
* ''Webcomic/CycleOfLuv'' features a WorldOfFunnyAnimals that also features humans, non-anthropomorphic bugs, and [[ExaggeratedTrope objects that can think and sometimes talk]]
* Creator/JamieBarker's ''[[https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/chillzoo/list?title_no=641780 Chillzoo]]'' takes this trope to the max with its cast of humans, animals, a ghost and a robot.

to:

* In ''Webcomic/YuckHeads'' Most of the characters in ''Webcomic/{{Goats}}'' are humans, Funny Animals but there are also a few human characters. WordOfGod says that most of the central cast features a talking goat named Toothgnip and a talking chicken named Diablo. This might be explained by their connection to supernatural entities, but even people who don't know about that don't react to them. It's also implied this world has a population of (hopefully) unintelligent humans that the talking in Yuckufo are animals eat, averting CarnivoreConfusion.
* ''Webcomic/CycleOfLuv'' features a WorldOfFunnyAnimals that also features humans, non-anthropomorphic bugs, and [[ExaggeratedTrope objects that can think and sometimes talk]]
* Creator/JamieBarker's ''[[https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/chillzoo/list?title_no=641780 Chillzoo]]'' takes this trope to
because the max with its cast of humans, animals, a ghost and a robot.town is like an animal ghetto.



* The ''[=FreeRIDErs=]'' setting is primarily composed of humans turned into nekos by machines called [=RIDEs=]. Not everyone has a RIDE, but those who spend too much time in one has a chance of ending up as a {{cat|Folk}}person.



* The ''Literature/TailsSeries'' is largely populated with talking animal creatures known as anthros. Said creatures are still trying to coexist with human beings, who aren't native to the galaxy the series takes place in.



* The ''[=FreeRIDErs=]'' setting is primarily composed of humans turned into nekos by machines called [=RIDEs=]. Not everyone has a RIDE, but those who spend too much time in one has a chance of ending up as a {{cat|Folk}}person.

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* The ''[=FreeRIDErs=]'' setting ''Literature/TailsSeries'' is primarily composed of humans turned into nekos by machines called [=RIDEs=]. Not everyone has a RIDE, but those largely populated with talking animal creatures known as anthros. Said creatures are still trying to coexist with human beings, who spend too much time in one has a chance of ending up as a {{cat|Folk}}person.aren't native to the galaxy the series takes place in.

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* A lot of characters on ''Series/Danger5'' are humanoid animals, or humans with animal heads, with no explanation. This extents to {{historical domain character}}s; for example, season 2 depicts Otto Skorzeny with the head of a wolf.



* A lot of characters on ''Series/Danger5'' are humanoid animals, or humans with animal heads, with no explanation. This extents to {{historical domain character}}s; for example, season 2 depicts Otto Skorzeny with the head of a wolf.



* ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' does this in an abstract and weird sense: while the main cast consists of funny animals and a few robots, it's stated occasionally that they actually live in [[http://achewood.saddestthing.com/wiki/index.php/Underground an underground world]] that exists alongside the human world (note [[http://m.assetbar.com/achewood/uua5xj1JB this strip]]). This means that every once in a while they'll run into a human character, such as Mark Twain or the preserved head of Keith Moon.



* ''Webcomic/SequentialArt'' has a main character sharing his living space with an anthropomorphic cat and a less furry but still anthro penguin. In fact, it soon begins to seem like normal animals are the minority in the comic (and most women are furries, but [[AuthorAppeal that's a different matter]]). This is lampshaded in one strip, in which the main character's attempts to gain police assistance are disregarded as the ramblings of a harmless lunatic when he mentions the species of his roommates. Though it might also have something to do with his previous calls concerning a boogyman.
* In ''Webcomic/LasLindas'', there's actually even pretty good back-story for this. Admittedly there aren't that many humans around, but...
* ''Webcomic/GeneCatlow'' is a furry comic that features humans, and has had lengthy plots utilizing the potential for FantasticRacism.

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* ''Webcomic/SequentialArt'' In the world of ''Webcomic/{{Concession}}'', WordOfGod is that furry/human segregation has only been stopped in the past decade, and they still don't interact much, but they show up sometimes. A human customer at the movie theater claimed to be there to "pick up some fine, fine pussy", and then revealed his girlfriend to be a guinea pig. ("You were expecting-" "A cat, yes, would have completed the joke...") Joel's mother Lorelei is annoyed that her boss, the mayor, is human, and says she half-expects him to "chain me up in the backyard".
* ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}''
has a human village not too far from a pack of (sapient) hyenas. And of course, the main character sharing his living space is a wombat.
* ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' has Florence Ambrose and Sam Starfall (okay, an alien octopusoid in a suit), the first being a sort of science experiment, and the second being a former accidental stowaway. To a certain extent, subverted
with an anthropomorphic cat and a less furry but still anthro penguin. In fact, it soon begins to seem Sam, who seems like normal animals are the minority in the comic (and most women are furries, [[ElephantInTheLivingRoom Alien In The Living Room]], but [[AuthorAppeal that's a different matter]]). This is lampshaded in one strip, in which the main character's attempts revealed to gain police assistance are disregarded as the ramblings have been of a harmless lunatic when he mentions the species of his roommates. Though it might also have something to do bit more interest before news spread around and FirstContact with his previous calls concerning species was written off as a boogyman.
* In ''Webcomic/LasLindas'', there's actually even pretty good back-story for this. Admittedly there aren't that many humans around, but...
* ''Webcomic/GeneCatlow''
wash. Florence is a furry comic that features humans, quick probably the only one of her species on the planet, and has had lengthy plots utilizing other than the potential for FantasticRacism.greeting of "Doggy!" doesn't get much species-related attention.



* ''Webcomic/FurWillFly'' also features a human TrappedInAnotherWorld of furries. The [[Webcomic/ComingUpViolet sequel]] features a new human.
* ''Webcomic/GeneCatlow'' is a furry comic that features humans, and has had lengthy plots utilizing the potential for FantasticRacism.



* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' milks this for all its worth. It's a setting where [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/05/25/i-kid-people-i-kid-youre-a-good-crowd/ police dogs can give Miranda warnings]], [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/09/28/stranger-danger/ a regular wolf might drop in for tea]] and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/10/14/see-you-at-the-party-officer/ have his own house for all practical definitions]]. Then we get into the magical {{animorphism}} and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/12/09/munchies-and-crunchies-in-here-somewhere/ you get some really awkward questions]].



* ''Webcomic/FurWillFly'' also features a human TrappedInAnotherWorld of furries. The [[Webcomic/ComingUpViolet sequel]] features a new human.
* ''Webcomic/TalesOfTheQuestor'' starts off focusing on the Rac Cona Daimh, effectively two foot tall talking raccoons, but adds in humans as time goes on. After the Wham Arc, Quentyn ends up effectively stuck in human lands, with other furries such as the bat-like goblins, bulldog-like orcs, and the far more equine than normal centaurs.
* ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' does this in an abstract and weird sense: while the main cast consists of funny animals and a few robots, it's stated occasionally that they actually live in [[http://achewood.saddestthing.com/wiki/index.php/Underground an underground world]] that exists alongside the human world (note [[http://m.assetbar.com/achewood/uua5xj1JB this strip]]). This means that every once in a while they'll run into a human character, such as Mark Twain or the preserved head of Keith Moon.

to:

* ''Webcomic/FurWillFly'' also features a human TrappedInAnotherWorld of furries. The [[Webcomic/ComingUpViolet sequel]] features a new human.
* ''Webcomic/TalesOfTheQuestor'' starts off focusing on the Rac Cona Daimh, effectively two foot tall talking raccoons, but adds in humans as time goes on. After the Wham Arc, Quentyn ends up effectively stuck in human lands, with other furries such as the bat-like goblins, bulldog-like orcs, and the far more equine than normal centaurs.
* ''Webcomic/{{Achewood}}'' does this in an abstract and weird sense: while the main cast consists of funny animals and a few robots, it's stated occasionally that they
In ''Webcomic/LasLindas'', there's actually live in [[http://achewood.saddestthing.com/wiki/index.php/Underground an underground world]] even pretty good back-story for this. Admittedly there aren't that exists alongside the human world (note [[http://m.assetbar.com/achewood/uua5xj1JB this strip]]). This means that every once in a while they'll run into a human character, such as Mark Twain or the preserved head of Keith Moon.many humans around, but...



* ''Webcomic/TheWorldOfVickiFox'' has humans in it, but they appear very seldom (usually only in crowd scenes) and have little impact on the stories.
* Although ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' is largely human-centric, there are two talking animal regulars (Bun-Bun and Kiki), and other talking animals occasionally show up as well.



* ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}'' has a human village not too far from a pack of (sapient) hyenas. And of course, the main character is a wombat.

to:

* ''Webcomic/{{Digger}}'' ''Webcomic/SequentialArt'' has a human village not too far from a pack of (sapient) hyenas. And of course, the main character sharing his living space with an anthropomorphic cat and a less furry but still anthro penguin. In fact, it soon begins to seem like normal animals are the minority in the comic (and most women are furries, but [[AuthorAppeal that's a different matter]]). This is lampshaded in one strip, in which the main character's attempts to gain police assistance are disregarded as the ramblings of a wombat.harmless lunatic when he mentions the species of his roommates. Though it might also have something to do with his previous calls concerning a boogyman.
* Although ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' is largely human-centric, there are two talking animal regulars (Bun-Bun and Kiki), and other talking animals occasionally show up as well.
* ''Webcomic/TalesOfTheQuestor'' starts off focusing on the Rac Cona Daimh, effectively two foot tall talking raccoons, but adds in humans as time goes on. After the Wham Arc, Quentyn ends up effectively stuck in human lands, with other furries such as the bat-like goblins, bulldog-like orcs, and the far more equine than normal centaurs.



* ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' has Florence Ambrose and Sam Starfall (okay, an alien octopusoid in a suit), the first being a sort of science experiment, and the second being a former accidental stowaway. To a certain extent, subverted with Sam, who seems like the [[ElephantInTheLivingRoom Alien In The Living Room]], but is revealed to have been of a bit more interest before news spread around and FirstContact with his species was written off as a wash. Florence is quick probably the only one of her species on the planet, and other than the greeting of "Doggy!" doesn't get much species-related attention.
* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' milks this for all its worth. It's a setting where [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/05/25/i-kid-people-i-kid-youre-a-good-crowd/ police dogs can give Miranda warnings]], [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/09/28/stranger-danger/ a regular wolf might drop in for tea]] and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/10/14/see-you-at-the-party-officer/ have his own house for all practical definitions]]. Then we get into the magical {{animorphism}} and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/12/09/munchies-and-crunchies-in-here-somewhere/ you get some really awkward questions]].
* In the world of ''Webcomic/{{Concession}}'', WordOfGod is that furry/human segregation has only been stopped in the past decade, and they still don't interact much, but they show up sometimes. A human customer at the movie theater claimed to be there to "pick up some fine, fine pussy", and then revealed his girlfriend to be a guinea pig. ("You were expecting-" "A cat, yes, would have completed the joke...") Joel's mother Lorelei is annoyed that her boss, the mayor, is human, and says she half-expects him to "chain me up in the backyard".

to:

* ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' ''Webcomic/TheWorldOfVickiFox'' has Florence Ambrose and Sam Starfall (okay, an alien octopusoid humans in a suit), the first being a sort of science experiment, and the second being a former accidental stowaway. To a certain extent, subverted with Sam, who seems like the [[ElephantInTheLivingRoom Alien In The Living Room]], but is revealed to have been of a bit more interest before news spread around and FirstContact with his species was written off as a wash. Florence is quick probably the only one of her species on the planet, and other than the greeting of "Doggy!" doesn't get much species-related attention.
* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'' milks this for all its worth. It's a setting where [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/05/25/i-kid-people-i-kid-youre-a-good-crowd/ police dogs can give Miranda warnings]], [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/09/28/stranger-danger/ a regular wolf might drop in for tea]] and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/10/14/see-you-at-the-party-officer/ have his own house for all practical definitions]]. Then we get into the magical {{animorphism}} and [[http://www.housepetscomic.com/2009/12/09/munchies-and-crunchies-in-here-somewhere/ you get some really awkward questions]].
* In the world of ''Webcomic/{{Concession}}'', WordOfGod is that furry/human segregation has only been stopped in the past decade, and they still don't interact much,
it, but they show up sometimes. A human customer at the movie theater claimed to be there to "pick up some fine, fine pussy", appear very seldom (usually only in crowd scenes) and then revealed his girlfriend to be a guinea pig. ("You were expecting-" "A cat, yes, would have completed little impact on the joke...") Joel's mother Lorelei is annoyed that her boss, the mayor, is human, and says she half-expects him to "chain me up in the backyard".stories.

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* Snoopy from ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' plays baseball, decorates his dog house, and can write stories on a typewriter, but still is treated as if he was a regular dog for the most part. However, when he is Joe Cool, Peppermint Patty sees him as the "kid with the big nose."



* Snoopy from ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' plays baseball, decorates his dog house, and can write stories on a typewriter, but still is treated as if he was a regular dog for the most part. However, when he is Joe Cool, Peppermint Patty sees him as the "kid with the big nose."



* In ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'' the Foxen are aliens that just happen to resemble anthropomorphic foxes, so they regularly interact with humans, even marrying each other.



* In ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'' the Foxen are aliens that just happen to resemble anthropomorphic foxes, so they regularly interact with humans, even marrying each other.



* A lot of characters on ''Series/Danger5'' are humanoid animals, or humans with animal heads, with no explanation. This extents to {{historical domain character}}s; for example, season 2 depicts Otto Skorzeny with the head of a wolf.



* A lot of characters on ''Series/Danger5'' are humanoid animals, or humans with animal heads, with no explanation. This extents to {{historical domain character}}s; for example, season 2 depicts Otto Skorzeny with the head of a wolf.



* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
** The games are set in this kind of world. In fact, the series seems to make a distinct differentiation between humans, anthropomorphs, and regular animals.[[note]]Sonic and friends act largely human and are treated like another [[FantasticSapientSpeciesTropes sapient species]] by the human characters. The tiny animals that Sonic rescues don't speak (and originally bounded away on all fours) and the other characters aren't able to communicate with [[TeamPet Chao or Big's pet, Froggy]] either. The original animal friends (Pecky, Ricky, etc) are shown to be mildly anthropomorphic but otherwise live as normal WoodlandCreatures.[[/note]] However, this wasn't all readily apparent until ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure'' (which is partly set on a city) came out, as the old games took place on islands and Sonic's friends were all animals, leading many to assume that Sonic's world was populated by anthropomorphs and there were no humans. Even Sega of America and Sega of Europe fell victim to this misconception, and as a result created the backstory and lore of "Mobius", a WorldOfFunnyAnimals where Sonic lived. This was the world where a lot of early Western Sonic adaptations were set, such as ''WesternAnimation/SonicTheHedgehogSatAM'' and the original run of the [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics Archie comics]]. However, this never held true in Japan, where the existence of humans was always taken for granted, and even the classic games and media had plenty of references and hints at them.[[note]]Such as the fact that [[BigBad Eggman]] and [[VideoGame/TailsSkyPatrol Witchcart]] are humans, the presence of urban-themed levels, and ''[[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehogTheScreenSaver Sonic the Screensaver]]'' and ''Anime/SonicTheAnimation'' outright showing Sonic and his friends in human-populated cities.[[/note]]
** Later spin-offs are a bit more vague; ''WesternAnimation/SonicBoom'' is set on a tiny island full of such sapient species, with only Eggman as something resembling a human, but there are hints here and there that humans do exist outside of the island, and the Ancient clan that takes up a lot of the lore is so diverse in terms of species it is very possible a human did end up part of their ranks. [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogIDW Sonic IDW]], on the other hand, takes after the games' "non-human world" exclusively, with nary a human in sight. Again, the "Mobius" term has been [[{{Jossed}} retired]] by SEGA internationally ever since ''Adventure'', with no spin-off media created afterwards utilizing it, sans a brief mention of it in the junior novel adaptation for ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog22022''.
** In 2022, the first episode of [[FourthWallMailSlot [=TailsTube=]]] had Tails [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nmzc8L8zTBk clarify how the population of Sonic's world is dispersed]]: humans typically live on the planet's larger continents like the ones that [[VideoGame/SonicAdventure Station Square]], [[VideoGame/SonicAdventure2 Central City]] or [[VideoGame/SonicUnleashed Spagonia]] are on, while anthropomorphic animals like Sonic and his friends are usually from the numerous smaller islands that can be found between them, with [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog1 South Island]] and [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog2 West Side Island]] being two standout examples.

to:

* ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
**
''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil'' features both humans and several species of {{Beast M|an}}en (the most common seem to be goats). Pey'j, one of the heroes, is even a pig!
* ''VideoGame/BlenderBros'' takes place in the far future where humans live alongside animal people called Animalmen.
The games are set in this kind of world. In fact, main villains, the series seems Zooligans, want to eradicate humans to make a distinct differentiation between humans, anthropomorphs, and regular animals.[[note]]Sonic and friends act largely human and are treated like another [[FantasticSapientSpeciesTropes sapient species]] by the human characters. The tiny animals that Sonic rescues don't speak (and originally bounded away on all fours) and the other characters aren't able to communicate with [[TeamPet Chao or Big's pet, Froggy]] either. The original animal friends (Pecky, Ricky, etc) are shown to be mildly anthropomorphic but otherwise live as normal WoodlandCreatures.[[/note]] However, this wasn't all readily apparent until ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure'' (which is partly set on a city) came out, as the old games took place on islands and Sonic's friends were all animals, leading many to assume that Sonic's world was populated by anthropomorphs and there were no humans. Even Sega of America and Sega of Europe fell victim to this misconception, and as a result created the backstory and lore of "Mobius", a WorldOfFunnyAnimals where Sonic lived. This was the world where a lot of early Western Sonic adaptations were set, such as ''WesternAnimation/SonicTheHedgehogSatAM'' and the original run of the [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics Archie comics]]. However, this never held true in Japan, where the existence of humans was always taken for granted, and even the classic games and media had plenty of references and hints at them.[[note]]Such as the fact that [[BigBad Eggman]] and [[VideoGame/TailsSkyPatrol Witchcart]] are humans, the presence of urban-themed levels, and ''[[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehogTheScreenSaver Sonic the Screensaver]]'' and ''Anime/SonicTheAnimation'' outright showing Sonic and his friends in human-populated cities.[[/note]]
** Later spin-offs are a bit more vague; ''WesternAnimation/SonicBoom'' is set on a tiny island full of such sapient species, with
only Eggman as something resembling a human, but there are hints here and there that humans do exist outside of the island, and the Ancient clan that takes up a lot of the lore is so diverse in terms of species it is very possible a human did end up part of their ranks. [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogIDW Sonic IDW]], on the other hand, takes after the games' "non-human world" exclusively, with nary a human in sight. Again, the "Mobius" term has been [[{{Jossed}} retired]] by SEGA internationally ever since ''Adventure'', with no spin-off media created afterwards utilizing it, sans a brief mention of it in the junior novel adaptation for ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog22022''.
** In 2022, the first episode of [[FourthWallMailSlot [=TailsTube=]]] had Tails [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nmzc8L8zTBk clarify how the population of Sonic's world is dispersed]]: humans typically live on the planet's larger continents like the ones that [[VideoGame/SonicAdventure Station Square]], [[VideoGame/SonicAdventure2 Central City]] or [[VideoGame/SonicUnleashed Spagonia]] are on, while anthropomorphic animals like Sonic and his friends are usually from the numerous smaller islands that can be found between them, with [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog1 South Island]] and [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog2 West Side Island]] being two standout examples.
Animalmen.



* ''VideoGame/DuckTalesTheQuestforGold'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface mummies from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.
* Humans, [[OurElvesAreDifferent elves]], [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame dwarves]] and goblins in ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' live in the same world as [[LoadsAndLoadsOfRaces several types of anthropomorphic animals]] (roughly one type for every type of animal, and even a few fungi). However, all beastmen species act like animals when found in the wild, or form hostile tribal societies if found underground. They need to be captured and trained by players until they become sapient and cooperative, at which point they can contribute to the player's fortress like any other race.
** [[AnimalisticAbomination Forgotten Beasts]] are also sentient, but are rarely civilized due to being AlwaysChaoticEvil. It's not ''impossible'' for them to be civilized, though, as sometimes -- and very rarely -- they can accidentally [[KlingonPromotion murder their way into positions of power]] within goblin civilizations during the 250 years of procedurally generated history every game world goes through. If they pull that off, you might find yourself having a nice meeting with a goblin ambassator who just so happens to be a [[OxymoronicBeing six-legged quadruped]] who can breath fire and is quite literally MadeOfIron.
* ''VideoGame/FarnhamFables'': Humans coexist with HumanoidAnimals, who are basically human in every way except external appearance.



* ''VideoGame/{{Kuukiyomi}}'': Being a GagSeries MinigameGame, it isn't surprising that it has both anthropomorphic and regular animals existing in this world.
** ''Kuukiyomi: Consider It'':
*** There's a situation where the player protagonist, who is a human, dates an anthropomorphic cow.
*** Another one is a situation where the player protagonist eats at the sushi bar while an anthropomorphic chicken is also in the same place. [[CarnivoreConfusion There's a type of sushi which the anthropomorphic chicken shouldn't eat.]]
*** In the Co-Op mode. There's a school specially for anthopomorphic animals.
** ''Kuukiyomi 2: Consider It More! -New Era-'': There's a situation where a human woman dates an anthropomorphic reindeer. However, there are also some situations involving regular animals with their human masters.
** ''Kuukiyomi 3: Consider It More and More!! -Father to Son'':
*** In the 55th situation, there's an anthropomorphic hare and a talking regular tortoise from ''Literature/TheTortoiseAndTheHare''.
*** In the 95th situation, the player controls the human baby to look at the player protagonist and her spouse while the baby is on the baby bed in the hospital. And there are anthropomorphic baby animals between the baby, who are sleeping on their beds.
* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'', there's an entire village full of nothing but animals. Justified as [[spoiler:the whole thing is a dream of the Wind Fish. Even the dreams of {{space whale}}s don't have to make sense.]]
* ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': The cast is a mix of humans and anthropomorphic animals. The town the PlayerCharacter is restoring eventually welcomes both a bird man and a cat man. Elsewhere, they can run into a rabbit, a pig or a monkey. Both apaprently exist alongside Goblin-like creatures, orcs and elves, as the former are the go-to generic NonPlayerCharacter race and the two latter are the other half of a couple {{Half Human Hybrid}}s.
* ''VideoGame/MagiciansQuestMysteriousTimes'' has human main characters, but when it comes to the supporting cast? Some of them are AmbiguouslyHuman (like Daisy, and a few of the students, such as Grace), some of them are AnimateInanimateObject-people or even {{Funny Plant}}s, and, of course, some of them are animals.



* ''VideoGame/ZackAndWikiQuestForBarbarosTreasure'' has Zack, a human KidHero pirate aboard a ship consisting entirely of rabbits save for his partner Wiki, who is a golden monkey bell.
* ''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil'' features both humans and several species of {{Beast M|an}}en (the most common seem to be goats). Pey'j, one of the heroes, is even a pig!
* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'', there's an entire village full of nothing but animals. Justified as [[spoiler:the whole thing is a dream of the Wind Fish. Even the dreams of {{space whale}}s don't have to make sense.]]

to:

* ''VideoGame/ZackAndWikiQuestForBarbarosTreasure'' has Zack, ''VideoGame/NappleTale'' revolves around a human KidHero pirate aboard QuirkyTown that's home to a ship consisting entirely number of rabbits save for his partner Wiki, who is a golden monkey bell.
anthropomorphic animals...and plants...and twice as many standard humans that are plenty quirky in their own right.
* ''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil'' features ''VideoGame/{{Overcooked}}'': The game's playable chefs consist of both humans and several species of {{Beast M|an}}en (the most common seem to be goats). Pey'j, one anthropomorphic animal people, as well as a few robots and mystical creatures. One of the heroes, is even a pig!
* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'', there's an entire village full of nothing but animals. Justified as [[spoiler:the whole thing
game's signature chefs is a dream of the Wind Fish. Even the dreams of {{space whale}}s don't have to make sense.]]raccoon in a wheelchair.



* ''VideoGame/RogueGalaxy'': The world is populated both by humans and by animal people. If they're meant to be aliens, they're aliens that by and large look exactly like Earth animals. One of your party members is a boxer dog-man. The game also averts NoCartoonFish in that there are lots of tropical fish-people.



* Humans, [[OurElvesAreDifferent elves]], [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame dwarves]] and goblins in ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' live in the same world as [[LoadsAndLoadsOfRaces several types of anthropomorphic animals]] (roughly one type for every type of animal, and even a few fungi). However, all beastmen species act like animals when found in the wild, or form hostile tribal societies if found underground. They need to be captured and trained by players until they become sapient and cooperative, at which point they can contribute to the player's fortress like any other race.
** [[AnimalisticAbomination Forgotten Beasts]] are also sentient, but are rarely civilized due to being AlwaysChaoticEvil. It's not ''impossible'' for them to be civilized, though, as sometimes -- and very rarely -- they can accidentally [[KlingonPromotion murder their way into positions of power]] within goblin civilizations during the 250 years of procedurally generated history every game world goes through. If they pull that off, you might find yourself having a nice meeting with a goblin ambassator who just so happens to be a [[OxymoronicBeing six-legged quadruped]] who can breath fire and is quite literally MadeOfIron.
* ''VideoGame/NappleTale'' revolves around a QuirkyTown that's home to a number of anthropomorphic animals...and plants...and twice as many standard humans that are plenty quirky in their own right.
* ''VideoGame/MagiciansQuestMysteriousTimes'' has human main characters, but when it comes to the supporting cast? Some of them are AmbiguouslyHuman (like Daisy, and a few of the students, such as Grace), some of them are AnimateInanimateObject-people or even {{Funny Plant}}s, and, of course, some of them are animals.
* ''VideoGame/DuckTalesTheQuestforGold'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface mummies from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.
* ''VideoGame/BlenderBros'' takes place in the far future where humans live alongside animal people called Animalmen. The main villains, the Zooligans, want to eradicate humans to make a world only for Animalmen.
* ''VideoGame/RogueGalaxy'': The world is populated both by humans and by animal people. If they're meant to be aliens, they're aliens that by and large look exactly like Earth animals. One of your party members is a boxer dog-man. The game also averts NoCartoonFish in that there are lots of tropical fish-people.

to:

* Humans, [[OurElvesAreDifferent elves]], [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame dwarves]] ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':
** The games are set in this kind of world. In fact, the series seems to make a distinct differentiation between humans, anthropomorphs,
and goblins in ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' live in regular animals.[[note]]Sonic and friends act largely human and are treated like another [[FantasticSapientSpeciesTropes sapient species]] by the same world as [[LoadsAndLoadsOfRaces several types of human characters. The tiny animals that Sonic rescues don't speak (and originally bounded away on all fours) and the other characters aren't able to communicate with [[TeamPet Chao or Big's pet, Froggy]] either. The original animal friends (Pecky, Ricky, etc) are shown to be mildly anthropomorphic animals]] (roughly one type but otherwise live as normal WoodlandCreatures.[[/note]] However, this wasn't all readily apparent until ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure'' (which is partly set on a city) came out, as the old games took place on islands and Sonic's friends were all animals, leading many to assume that Sonic's world was populated by anthropomorphs and there were no humans. Even Sega of America and Sega of Europe fell victim to this misconception, and as a result created the backstory and lore of "Mobius", a WorldOfFunnyAnimals where Sonic lived. This was the world where a lot of early Western Sonic adaptations were set, such as ''WesternAnimation/SonicTheHedgehogSatAM'' and the original run of the [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics Archie comics]]. However, this never held true in Japan, where the existence of humans was always taken for every type of animal, granted, and even the classic games and media had plenty of references and hints at them.[[note]]Such as the fact that [[BigBad Eggman]] and [[VideoGame/TailsSkyPatrol Witchcart]] are humans, the presence of urban-themed levels, and ''[[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehogTheScreenSaver Sonic the Screensaver]]'' and ''Anime/SonicTheAnimation'' outright showing Sonic and his friends in human-populated cities.[[/note]]
** Later spin-offs are
a few fungi). However, all beastmen bit more vague; ''WesternAnimation/SonicBoom'' is set on a tiny island full of such sapient species, with only Eggman as something resembling a human, but there are hints here and there that humans do exist outside of the island, and the Ancient clan that takes up a lot of the lore is so diverse in terms of species act like animals when found it is very possible a human did end up part of their ranks. [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogIDW Sonic IDW]], on the other hand, takes after the games' "non-human world" exclusively, with nary a human in sight. Again, the "Mobius" term has been [[{{Jossed}} retired]] by SEGA internationally ever since ''Adventure'', with no spin-off media created afterwards utilizing it, sans a brief mention of it in the wild, or form hostile tribal societies if found underground. They need to be captured and trained by players until they become sapient and cooperative, at which point they can contribute to junior novel adaptation for ''Film/SonicTheHedgehog22022''.
** In 2022,
the player's fortress like any other race.
** [[AnimalisticAbomination Forgotten Beasts]] are also sentient, but are rarely civilized due to being AlwaysChaoticEvil. It's not ''impossible'' for them to be civilized, though, as sometimes -- and very rarely -- they can accidentally [[KlingonPromotion murder their way into positions
first episode of power]] within goblin civilizations during [[FourthWallMailSlot [=TailsTube=]]] had Tails [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nmzc8L8zTBk clarify how the 250 years population of procedurally generated history every game Sonic's world goes through. If they pull is dispersed]]: humans typically live on the planet's larger continents like the ones that off, you might find yourself having a nice meeting with a goblin ambassator who just so happens to be a [[OxymoronicBeing six-legged quadruped]] who can breath fire and is quite literally MadeOfIron.
* ''VideoGame/NappleTale'' revolves around a QuirkyTown that's home to a number of
[[VideoGame/SonicAdventure Station Square]], [[VideoGame/SonicAdventure2 Central City]] or [[VideoGame/SonicUnleashed Spagonia]] are on, while anthropomorphic animals...animals like Sonic and plants...and twice as many standard humans that his friends are plenty quirky in their own right.
* ''VideoGame/MagiciansQuestMysteriousTimes'' has human main characters, but when it comes to the supporting cast? Some of them are AmbiguouslyHuman (like Daisy, and a few of the students, such as Grace), some of them are AnimateInanimateObject-people or even {{Funny Plant}}s, and, of course, some of them are animals.
* ''VideoGame/DuckTalesTheQuestforGold'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface mummies
usually from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.
* ''VideoGame/BlenderBros'' takes place in the far future where humans live alongside animal people called Animalmen. The main villains, the Zooligans, want to eradicate humans to make a world only for Animalmen.
* ''VideoGame/RogueGalaxy'': The world is populated both by humans and by animal people. If they're meant to be aliens, they're aliens
numerous smaller islands that by can be found between them, with [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog1 South Island]] and large look exactly like Earth [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog2 West Side Island]] being two standout examples.
* In ''VideoGame/TinkerQuarry'', some of the toys resemble humans, but most resemble
animals. One of your party members is a boxer dog-man. The game also averts NoCartoonFish And then, there's Adeline, the [[TokenHuman only real human]] in that there the Dollhouse. Justified because the other characters are lots LivingToys, so they can easily be made to look like anything, regardless of tropical fish-people.species.



* ''VideoGame/FarnhamFables'': Humans coexist with HumanoidAnimals, who are basically human in every way except external appearance.
* ''VideoGame/{{Overcooked}}'': The game's playable chefs consist of both humans and anthropomorphic animal people, as well as a few robots and mystical creatures. One of the game's signature chefs is a raccoon in a wheelchair.
* ''VideoGame/{{Kuukiyomi}}'': Being a GagSeries MinigameGame, it isn't surprising that it has both anthropomorphic and regular animals existing in this world.
** ''Kuukiyomi: Consider It'':
*** There's a situation where the player protagonist, who is a human, dates an anthropomorphic cow.
*** Another one is a situation where the player protagonist eats at the sushi bar while an anthropomorphic chicken is also in the same place. [[CarnivoreConfusion There's a type of sushi which the anthropomorphic chicken shouldn't eat.]]
*** In the Co-Op mode. There's a school specially for anthopomorphic animals.
** ''Kuukiyomi 2: Consider It More! -New Era-'': There's a situation where a human woman dates an anthropomorphic reindeer. However, there are also some situations involving regular animals with their human masters.
** ''Kuukiyomi 3: Consider It More and More!! -Father to Son'':
*** In the 55th situation, there's an anthropomorphic hare and a talking regular tortoise from ''Literature/TheTortoiseAndTheHare''.
*** In the 95th situation, the player controls the human baby to look at the player protagonist and her spouse while the baby is on the baby bed in the hospital. And there are anthropomorphic baby animals between the baby, who are sleeping on their beds.
* In ''VideoGame/TinkerQuarry'', some of the toys resemble humans, but most resemble animals. And then, there's Adeline, the [[TokenHuman only real human]] in the Dollhouse. Justified because the other characters are LivingToys, so they can easily be made to look like anything, regardless of species.
* ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': The cast is a mix of humans and anthropomorphic animals. The town the PlayerCharacter is restoring eventually welcomes both a bird man and a cat man. Elsewhere, they can run into a rabbit, a pig or a monkey. Both apaprently exist alongside Goblin-like creatures, orcs and elves, as the former are the go-to generic NonPlayerCharacter race and the two latter are the other half of a couple {{Half Human Hybrid}}s.

to:

* ''VideoGame/FarnhamFables'': Humans coexist with HumanoidAnimals, who are basically ''VideoGame/ZackAndWikiQuestForBarbarosTreasure'' has Zack, a human in every way except external appearance.
* ''VideoGame/{{Overcooked}}'': The game's playable chefs consist
KidHero pirate aboard a ship consisting entirely of both humans and anthropomorphic animal people, as well as a few robots and mystical creatures. One of the game's signature chefs is a raccoon in a wheelchair.
* ''VideoGame/{{Kuukiyomi}}'': Being a GagSeries MinigameGame, it isn't surprising that it has both anthropomorphic and regular animals existing in this world.
** ''Kuukiyomi: Consider It'':
*** There's a situation where the player protagonist,
rabbits save for his partner Wiki, who is a human, dates an anthropomorphic cow.
*** Another one is a situation where the player protagonist eats at the sushi bar while an anthropomorphic chicken is also in the same place. [[CarnivoreConfusion There's a type of sushi which the anthropomorphic chicken shouldn't eat.]]
*** In the Co-Op mode. There's a school specially for anthopomorphic animals.
** ''Kuukiyomi 2: Consider It More! -New Era-'': There's a situation where a human woman dates an anthropomorphic reindeer. However, there are also some situations involving regular animals with their human masters.
** ''Kuukiyomi 3: Consider It More and More!! -Father to Son'':
*** In the 55th situation, there's an anthropomorphic hare and a talking regular tortoise from ''Literature/TheTortoiseAndTheHare''.
*** In the 95th situation, the player controls the human baby to look at the player protagonist and her spouse while the baby is on the baby bed in the hospital. And there are anthropomorphic baby animals between the baby, who are sleeping on their beds.
* In ''VideoGame/TinkerQuarry'', some of the toys resemble humans, but most resemble animals. And then, there's Adeline, the [[TokenHuman only real human]] in the Dollhouse. Justified because the other characters are LivingToys, so they can easily be made to look like anything, regardless of species.
* ''VideoGame/{{Littlewood}}'': The cast is a mix of humans and anthropomorphic animals. The town the PlayerCharacter is restoring eventually welcomes both a bird man and a cat man. Elsewhere, they can run into a rabbit, a pig or a monkey. Both apaprently exist alongside Goblin-like creatures, orcs and elves, as the former are the go-to generic NonPlayerCharacter race and the two latter are the other half of a couple {{Half Human Hybrid}}s.
golden monkey bell.

Added: 5562

Changed: 487

Removed: 5593

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alphabetized


* ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'': Despite taking place on Mobius, as world that was mainly populated by anthros and existed separately from Earth, there was a few human characters along with Robotnik.



* ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'': Despite taking place on Mobius, as world that was mainly populated by anthros and existed separately from Earth, there was a few human characters along with Robotnik.



* ''Literature/LittleRedRidingHood''. While talking animals who live in houses are fairly common in Central European fairy tales, a wolf being able to disguise himself as an old human woman by wearing her clothes makes this one stand out.

to:

* ''Literature/LittleRedRidingHood''. While talking ''Literature/AliceInWonderland'' has a variety of {{Talking Animal}}s, {{Civilized Animal}}s, and {{Funny Animal}}s interacting with Alice and human(ish) individuals like the Queen of Hearts and her court.
* ''Literature/AnimalFarm'' has talking, literate
animals who live in houses are fairly common in Central European fairy tales, a wolf being able to disguise himself serving as an old human woman by wearing her clothes makes characterizations of real Soviets. It also ends with the pigs and the humans interacting on seemingly equal footing. Unlike most examples, this one stand out.serves a purpose in the story and is even noted by the narrator at the end. The humans represent the Czarist government of Russia, which was overthrown by the communists (represented by the pigs). Just as the citizens of Russia found themselves no better off under the Soviet government than they had been under the Czar, the animals see no difference between the pigs and the humans in the end.
* In the original ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'' books, the Tibble twins and their grandma were humans. They were re-done as furries for the animated series, though newer Arthur books (except the "Step into Reading" series) still depict the Tibbles as humans.
* In ''Literature/{{Babar}}'', we have intelligent elephants who can communicate with humans and rule a kingdom of anthropomorphic crocodiles and monkeys.
* Creator/DaveBarry tells an unusual version of the story of the grasshopper and the ant. The grasshopper has asked the ant for food, but before he can get a reply both are killed by mischievous Boy Scouts. Too bad; for they could've made a fortune with a pair of talking insects.
* The land of Vision in ''Literature/BraveStory'' is populated by both humans and several types of animal people. One of the main characters, Meena, is a CatGirl.



* ''Literature/WinnieThePooh'', of course, has Christopher Robin, though the characters are understood to be composed of his stuffed animals. According to the WordOfGod, Owl and Rabbit were real forest animals while the rest were toys. (This is reasonably clear in the original illustrations.)
* Alan Dean Foster's ''Literature/{{Spellsinger}}'' novels have {{Funny Animal}}s and humans co-existing, although there's some FantasticRacism with humans who somehow sense that this isn't the way it works in other worlds. It's also noted that humans are shorter than they are in our world, although whether this is an actual genetic difference or just due to the diet in a MedievalStasis world isn't revealed. Also InterspeciesRomance between Humans and the anthropomorphic animals is not frowned upon in this fantasy world, except for the main character Jon-Tom, who being from our world is the only character to find that concept a turnoff. Despite [[spoiler: Flor also being from our world, unlike Jon-Tom she not only has no culture shock, but she ends up dating an anthropomorphic rabbit (mentioned in passing)]].
* The land of Vision in ''Literature/BraveStory'' is populated by both humans and several types of animal people. One of the main characters, Meena, is a CatGirl.
* ''Literature/AnimalFarm'' has talking, literate animals serving as characterizations of real Soviets. It also ends with the pigs and the humans interacting on seemingly equal footing. Unlike most examples, this one serves a purpose in the story and is even noted by the narrator at the end. The humans represent the Czarist government of Russia, which was overthrown by the communists (represented by the pigs). Just as the citizens of Russia found themselves no better off under the Soviet government than they had been under the Czar, the animals see no difference between the pigs and the humans in the end.
* ''Literature/TheTaleOfDespereaux'', in both the books and movie.
* In ''Literature/TheWindInTheWillows'', most of the animals live in burrows (albeit in very human-like comfort) and have little or no interaction with humans. Mr. Toad, on the other hand, lives in an actual house, drives cars, is put on trial in a human court, held in a human prison, and escapes by disguising himself as a human washerwoman. During his escape no one suspects that he's Mr. Toad until he actually announces it when he rides off with a barge woman's horse. And he also interacts on a more-or-less equal basis with all the other animals.
* ''Literature/AliceInWonderland'' has a variety of {{Talking Animal}}s, {{Civilized Animal}}s, and {{Funny Animal}}s interacting with Alice and human(ish) individuals like the Queen of Hearts and her court.
* Creator/DaveBarry tells an unusual version of the story of the grasshopper and the ant. The grasshopper has asked the ant for food, but before he can get a reply both are killed by mischievous Boy Scouts. Too bad; for they could've made a fortune with a pair of talking insects.
* In ''Literature/{{Babar}}'', we have intelligent elephants who can communicate with humans and rule a kingdom of anthropomorphic crocodiles and monkeys.
* ''Literature/{{Wicked}}'' is based on the ''Literature/LandOfOz'' books. In the original books, ''all'' animals could talk in Oz. In ''Wicked'', there are two types of animals: talking Animals and normal animals. They can interbreed (some Animals are even born from animals) and Animals are historically treated like animals, however there are major political and social differences between the two. Most Ozians look down upon Animals and treat them with at minimum some degree of FantasticRacism. Elphaba, the future Wicked Witch of the West, is an activist for Animal rights alongside Dr. Dillamond, a Goat who teaches at Shiz University.
* Literature/PaddingtonBear has talking bears existing alongside humans, although not many of them appear to live in Great Britain.
* [[Literature/TheAdventuresOfFoxTayle Fox Tayle]] was created in a secret government laboratory, but the project was cancelled. Shep and Wolf were killed, but Fox escaped and now the FBI is chasing him. He's left as the [[LastOfHisKind only]] anthropomorphic animal on the planet.
* Bill Hand's series ''The Redaemian Chronicles'' take place in a medieval-style world where humans and Funny Animal rodents exist side by side.
* ''Literature/TheMagicPudding'' has {{Funny Animal}}s interacting with humans in an Australian setting (the hero is a Koala).
* ''Literature/GaspardAndLisa'', a series of picture books and an AnimatedAdaptation, has the titular characters and their family members as anthropomorphic dogs in the otherwise human society of France.



* In the original ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'' books, the Tibble twins and their grandma were humans. They were re-done as furries for the animated series, though newer Arthur books (except the "Step into Reading" series) still depict the Tibbles as humans.
* ''Literature/TheHobbit'' has a lot of talking animals, including giant wolves, birds and even wallets. There is also some anthropomorphism, for example Beorn's pets includes dogs that walk on their hind legs and carry trays and dishes on their forepaws. However, the more adult sequel, Literature/TheLordOfTheRings, has no anthropomorphic animals, and only a few characters can actually speak to animals. But it does have anthropomorphic tree-like creatures.



* Creator/GordonRDickson's ''Literature/TheDragonKnight'' series has talking dragons and wolves, with all other animals being perfectly normal.



* [[Literature/TheAdventuresOfFoxTayle Fox Tayle]] was created in a secret government laboratory, but the project was cancelled. Shep and Wolf were killed, but Fox escaped and now the FBI is chasing him. He's left as the [[LastOfHisKind only]] anthropomorphic animal on the planet.



* Creator/GordonRDickson's ''Literature/TheDragonKnight'' series has talking dragons and wolves, with all other animals being perfectly normal.

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* Creator/GordonRDickson's ''Literature/TheDragonKnight'' ''Literature/GaspardAndLisa'', a series of picture books and an AnimatedAdaptation, has the titular characters and their family members as anthropomorphic dogs in the otherwise human society of France.
* ''Literature/TheHobbit'' has a lot of
talking dragons and animals, including giant wolves, with all other birds and even wallets. There is also some anthropomorphism, for example Beorn's pets includes dogs that walk on their hind legs and carry trays and dishes on their forepaws. However, the more adult sequel, Literature/TheLordOfTheRings, has no anthropomorphic animals, and only a few characters can actually speak to animals. But it does have anthropomorphic tree-like creatures.
* ''Literature/LittleRedRidingHood''. While talking
animals who live in houses are fairly common in Central European fairy tales, a wolf being perfectly normal.able to disguise himself as an old human woman by wearing her clothes makes this one stand out.
* ''Literature/TheMagicPudding'' has {{Funny Animal}}s interacting with humans in an Australian setting (the hero is a Koala).


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* Literature/PaddingtonBear has talking bears existing alongside humans, although not many of them appear to live in Great Britain.
* Bill Hand's series ''The Redaemian Chronicles'' take place in a medieval-style world where humans and Funny Animal rodents exist side by side.


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* Alan Dean Foster's ''Literature/{{Spellsinger}}'' novels have {{Funny Animal}}s and humans co-existing, although there's some FantasticRacism with humans who somehow sense that this isn't the way it works in other worlds. It's also noted that humans are shorter than they are in our world, although whether this is an actual genetic difference or just due to the diet in a MedievalStasis world isn't revealed. Also InterspeciesRomance between Humans and the anthropomorphic animals is not frowned upon in this fantasy world, except for the main character Jon-Tom, who being from our world is the only character to find that concept a turnoff. Despite [[spoiler: Flor also being from our world, unlike Jon-Tom she not only has no culture shock, but she ends up dating an anthropomorphic rabbit (mentioned in passing)]].
* ''Literature/TheTaleOfDespereaux'', in both the books and movie.
* ''Literature/{{Wicked}}'' is based on the ''Literature/LandOfOz'' books. In the original books, ''all'' animals could talk in Oz. In ''Wicked'', there are two types of animals: talking Animals and normal animals. They can interbreed (some Animals are even born from animals) and Animals are historically treated like animals, however there are major political and social differences between the two. Most Ozians look down upon Animals and treat them with at minimum some degree of FantasticRacism. Elphaba, the future Wicked Witch of the West, is an activist for Animal rights alongside Dr. Dillamond, a Goat who teaches at Shiz University.
* In ''Literature/TheWindInTheWillows'', most of the animals live in burrows (albeit in very human-like comfort) and have little or no interaction with humans. Mr. Toad, on the other hand, lives in an actual house, drives cars, is put on trial in a human court, held in a human prison, and escapes by disguising himself as a human washerwoman. During his escape no one suspects that he's Mr. Toad until he actually announces it when he rides off with a barge woman's horse. And he also interacts on a more-or-less equal basis with all the other animals.
* ''Literature/WinnieThePooh'', of course, has Christopher Robin, though the characters are understood to be composed of his stuffed animals. According to the WordOfGod, Owl and Rabbit were real forest animals while the rest were toys. (This is reasonably clear in the original illustrations.)

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* In some later seasons of ''Animation/ThreeThousandWhysOfBlueCat'', the FunnyAnimal characters interact with humans. They get along pretty well.



* In some later seasons of ''Animation/ThreeThousandWhysOfBlueCat'', the FunnyAnimal characters interact with humans. They get along pretty well.



* There was a WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck comic book story (a spy spoof), and three Mickey Mouse stories (G-rated James Bond style, accompanied by Goofy, not a spoof), where all the other characters were human (and no pig or dog noses).
* ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics in general. The exact proportions vary DependingOnTheWriter. In some stories, the background citizens of Duckburg or Mouseton are approximately equal amounts humans (usually {{Dogfaces}}), birds of various species, pigs etc. while in others, apart from the main characters, there's not a single non-human in sight. When it's the former, the various anthropomorphic animals still refer to themselves as humans. The expanded canon also includes a TalkingAnimal or two, and even a few stories use AnimalTalk (notably for barnyard animals). There are also ''regular'' animals to top, which DependingOnTheWriter may or may not be the same that have AnimalTalk. And among ''those'', some behave in ways that imply that in spite of their inability to speak, they are still more sentient that our regular animals (see Pluto), while others are scientifically accurate to amazing levels. It's a mess.

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* There was a WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck comic book story (a spy spoof), In ''ComicBook/{{Bone}}'', you have talking opossums, bugs and three Mickey Mouse stories (G-rated James Bond style, accompanied by Goofy, not a spoof), where all ''dragon'', as well as the other characters were human (and no pig or dog noses).
* ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics in general. The exact proportions vary DependingOnTheWriter. In some stories,
[[MemeticMutation stupid, stupid rat creatures]]... then you have—um, whatever the background citizens of Duckburg or Mouseton heck the Bones are approximately equal amounts supposed to be... and then you have humans (usually {{Dogfaces}}), birds of various species, pigs etc. while in others, apart from as well.
* In ''ComicBook/CastleWaiting'', based on European fairy tales,
the main characters, there's not a single non-human in sight. When it's the former, the various cast includes an anthropomorphic animals still refer to themselves as humans. The expanded canon also includes a TalkingAnimal or two, horse (who flirts with human girls) and even a few stories use AnimalTalk (notably for barnyard animals). There are also ''regular'' animals to top, which DependingOnTheWriter may or may not be the same that have AnimalTalk. And among ''those'', some behave in ways that imply that in spite of their inability to speak, they are still more sentient that our regular animals (see Pluto), while others are scientifically accurate to amazing levels. It's a mess.stork, plus cameos by anthro dogs, rabbits, and cats -- and normal dogs, horses, and cats appear as well (although it's revealed one cat, at least, has human intelligence).



* ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'' was essentially in the same boat as Cerebus, except that the human world he inhabited happened to be the Mainstream Franchise/MarvelUniverse. Also unlike Cerebus, he definitely stood out, but most who saw him dismissed him as a dwarf in a duck suit.
* Franchise/SamAndMax are a dog and a rabbit, but in the comics almost everyone they run into is a human, as well the occasional talking rat or cockroach. Some ordinary, [[FurryConfusion non-anthropomorphised dogs]] can also be seen in the background of some panels. By the end of the Sam & Max Season Three game, characters across the franchise included a talking fish on a fake body, a non-talking but still sapient fish, some aliens, a race of molemen, a talking chicken, a sentient colony of spacefaring bacteria (Also technically an alien, but he deserves to mentioned separately), sentient computers, giant stone heads, Yog Soggoth, and all sorts of mythological creatures. And yet Sam and Max are still the only {{Funny Animal}}s in the cast, except for their rarely seen relatives, the anthropomorphic cockroach Sal, and maybe the molemen. And the giant rats and roaches on the moon, but they're aliens. Lampshaded in ''The Devil's Playhouse: They Stole Max's Brain!'' in which Sam discovers a canine-ish skull in a museum with a caption saying it belonged to 'one of a hideous and brutish evolutionary dead-end of man-dog hybrids' (obviously implying that Sam's species is separate to normal dogs and considered extinct). Sam complains about the racism and says the skull reminds him of his great uncle. The same museum has a statue of Anubis in the Ancient Egypt exhibit, which is slimmer and darker and has pointed ears but otherwise looks exactly the same as Sam, which Sam is quite happy about.



* ComicBook/DisneyMouseAndDuckComics in general. The exact proportions vary DependingOnTheWriter. In some stories, the background citizens of Duckburg or Mouseton are approximately equal amounts humans (usually {{Dogfaces}}), birds of various species, pigs etc. while in others, apart from the main characters, there's not a single non-human in sight. When it's the former, the various anthropomorphic animals still refer to themselves as humans. The expanded canon also includes a TalkingAnimal or two, and even a few stories use AnimalTalk (notably for barnyard animals). There are also ''regular'' animals to top, which DependingOnTheWriter may or may not be the same that have AnimalTalk. And among ''those'', some behave in ways that imply that in spite of their inability to speak, they are still more sentient that our regular animals (see Pluto), while others are scientifically accurate to amazing levels. It's a mess.
* There was a WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck comic book story (a spy spoof), and three Mickey Mouse stories (G-rated James Bond style, accompanied by Goofy, not a spoof), where all the other characters were human (and no pig or dog noses).



* In ''ComicBook/{{Bone}}'', you have talking opossums, bugs and a ''dragon'', as well as the [[MemeticMutation stupid, stupid rat creatures]]... then you have—um, whatever the heck the Bones are supposed to be... and then you have humans as well.



* In ''ComicBook/CastleWaiting'', based on European fairy tales, the main cast includes an anthropomorphic horse (who flirts with human girls) and a stork, plus cameos by anthro dogs, rabbits, and cats -- and normal dogs, horses, and cats appear as well (although it's revealed one cat, at least, has human intelligence).
* ''ComicBook/UsagiYojimbo'' had an inversion in that there was one, lone human in the series filled with {{talking animal}}s. One of the reasons why this only happened once is because Stan Sakai later hated the idea.
* The ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'' comics feature Talky Tawny, an erudite, well-spoken tiger who walks on his hind legs and wears leisure suits. He's since been retconned as a shapeshifting spirit of some kind, and how anthropomorphic he is tends to vary.



* R. Crumb's ''Mode O'Day'' comics take place in a world where humans and furries apparently live side by side, with no one ever commenting on it.

to:

* R. Crumb's ''Mode O'Day'' comics take place In ''ComicBook/{{Hillbilly}}'', all animals can talk, but they're still very much animals, living apart from humanity out in a the wilderness, and [[CarnivoreConfusion they still eat each other]].
* ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'' was essentially in the same boat as Cerebus, except that the human
world where humans and furries apparently live side by side, with no one ever commenting on it.he inhabited happened to be the Mainstream Franchise/MarvelUniverse. Also unlike Cerebus, he definitely stood out, but most who saw him dismissed him as a dwarf in a duck suit.



* R. Crumb's ''Mode O'Day'' comics take place in a world where humans and furries apparently live side by side, with no one ever commenting on it.
* Franchise/SamAndMax are a dog and a rabbit, but in the comics almost everyone they run into is a human, as well the occasional talking rat or cockroach. Some ordinary, [[FurryConfusion non-anthropomorphised dogs]] can also be seen in the background of some panels. By the end of the Sam & Max Season Three game, characters across the franchise included a talking fish on a fake body, a non-talking but still sapient fish, some aliens, a race of molemen, a talking chicken, a sentient colony of spacefaring bacteria (Also technically an alien, but he deserves to mentioned separately), sentient computers, giant stone heads, Yog Soggoth, and all sorts of mythological creatures. And yet Sam and Max are still the only {{Funny Animal}}s in the cast, except for their rarely seen relatives, the anthropomorphic cockroach Sal, and maybe the molemen. And the giant rats and roaches on the moon, but they're aliens. Lampshaded in ''The Devil's Playhouse: They Stole Max's Brain!'' in which Sam discovers a canine-ish skull in a museum with a caption saying it belonged to 'one of a hideous and brutish evolutionary dead-end of man-dog hybrids' (obviously implying that Sam's species is separate to normal dogs and considered extinct). Sam complains about the racism and says the skull reminds him of his great uncle. The same museum has a statue of Anubis in the Ancient Egypt exhibit, which is slimmer and darker and has pointed ears but otherwise looks exactly the same as Sam, which Sam is quite happy about.
* The ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'' comics feature Talky Tawny, an erudite, well-spoken tiger who walks on his hind legs and wears leisure suits. He's since been retconned as a shapeshifting spirit of some kind, and how anthropomorphic he is tends to vary.



* ''ComicBook/TopTen'' is a world where everything that was ever popular in comics was real. You've got very human superheroes living alongside aliens and Atlanteans and things, plus guys like Hyperdog (an intelligent dog in a humanoid exoskeleton) and Mr. Fischmann (a literal shark lawyer). The prequel makes it clear that funny animals used to be more common, just as they used to be a more popular genre before superheroes dominated the medium.

to:

* ''ComicBook/TopTen'' is a ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'': Despite taking place on Mobius, as world where everything that was ever popular in comics mainly populated by anthros and existed separately from Earth, there was real. You've got very a few human superheroes living alongside aliens and Atlanteans and things, plus guys like Hyperdog (an intelligent dog characters along with Robotnik.
* ''ComicBook/SuperAgentJonLeBon'': While the setting of Jon Le Bon is a WorldOfFunnyAnimals, sometimes human characters will show up for a gag
in a humanoid exoskeleton) and Mr. Fischmann (a literal shark lawyer). The prequel makes it clear that funny animals used to be more common, just as they used to be a more popular genre before superheroes dominated the medium. few panels.



* In ''ComicBook/{{Hillbilly}}'', all animals can talk, but they're still very much animals, living apart from humanity out in the wilderness, and [[CarnivoreConfusion they still eat each other]].
* ''ComicBook/SuperAgentJonLeBon'': While the setting of Jon Le Bon is a WorldOfFunnyAnimals, sometimes human characters will show up for a gag in a few panels.
* ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'': Despite taking place on Mobius, as world that was mainly populated by anthros and existed separately from Earth, there was a few human characters along with Robotnik.

to:

* In ''ComicBook/{{Hillbilly}}'', all animals can talk, but they're still very much animals, living apart from humanity out in the wilderness, and [[CarnivoreConfusion they still eat each other]].
* ''ComicBook/SuperAgentJonLeBon'': While the setting of Jon Le Bon
''ComicBook/TopTen'' is a WorldOfFunnyAnimals, sometimes human characters will show up for a gag in a few panels.
* ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'': Despite taking place on Mobius, as
world where everything that was mainly populated by anthros ever popular in comics was real. You've got very human superheroes living alongside aliens and existed separately from Earth, Atlanteans and things, plus guys like Hyperdog (an intelligent dog in a humanoid exoskeleton) and Mr. Fischmann (a literal shark lawyer). The prequel makes it clear that funny animals used to be more common, just as they used to be a more popular genre before superheroes dominated the medium.
* ''ComicBook/UsagiYojimbo'' had an inversion in that
there was a few one, lone human characters along in the series filled with Robotnik.{{talking animal}}s. One of the reasons why this only happened once is because Stan Sakai later hated the idea.



* The company in ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' has few, if any, concerns about humans having {{Funny Animal}}s as co-workers or even supervisors.



* The company in ''ComicStrip/{{Dilbert}}'' has few, if any, concerns about humans having {{Funny Animal}}s as co-workers or even supervisors.

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* Kind of inverted with Shinigami Captain Komamura Sajin of ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', who is an anthropomorphic wolf living in an afterlife where everyone else is human. While he appears to be some kind of supernatural creature or a mutant and clearly not an animal, he's fairly self-conscious about it, and initially wears a mask, because he thinks people would see him as a talking animals and not a person who looks similar to one.



* ''Manga/DoctorSlump'': Before ''Dragon Ball'' there was Toriyama's previous series, set in ''Penguin Village'', a place where {{Funny Animal}}s (especially anthropomorphic pigs), aliens, and even {{Animate Inanimate Object}}s live among humans. One of Arale's classmates is a rat and a some of the other "kids" are not human-looking either. The local doctor ([[NotThatKindOfDoctor not the one of the title]]) is a goat. Ironically penguins are probably the only animals who are almost never seen in Penguin Village, except in the last story arc when we discover that the mayor is an actual penguin. The main premise of the manga is RobotGirl Arale pretending to be human, but she has no real reason to do it in a village like that.



* ''Manga/DoctorSlump'': Before ''Dragon Ball'' there was Toriyama's previous series, set in ''Penguin Village'', a place where {{Funny Animal}}s (especially anthropomorphic pigs), aliens, and even {{Animate Inanimate Object}}s live among humans. One of Arale's classmates is a rat and a some of the other "kids" are not human-looking either. The local doctor ([[NotThatKindOfDoctor not the one of the title]]) is a goat. Ironically penguins are probably the only animals who are almost never seen in Penguin Village, except in the last story arc when we discover that the mayor is an actual penguin. The main premise of the manga is RobotGirl Arale pretending to be human, but she has no real reason to do it in a village like that.

to:

* ''Manga/DoctorSlump'': Before ''Dragon Ball'' there was Toriyama's previous series, set Subverted in ''Penguin Village'', ''Manga/GoodnightPunpun''. Punpun and his family are cartoony birds living amongst humans, however it's stylized. Punpun is [[FurryLens really a place where {{Funny Animal}}s (especially normal human]] who looks like a bird (and sometimes he doesn't even look like ''that'') to the viewer.
* ''Manga/HyperPolice'' has humans (now an endangered species) living alongside and even interbreeding with catgirls, kitsune, werewolves, pig-men, and minor gods.
* Downplayed in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia''. Some characters look like
anthropomorphic pigs), aliens, animals, but are in fact just mutant humans with various degrees of beast-like features. Still, there is at least one genuine example of anthropomorphism through Principal Nezu, who is explicitly said to be a mouse blessed with SuperIntelligence, and even {{Animate Inanimate Object}}s live among humans. One yet he doesn't look out of Arale's classmates is a rat and a some of place.
* For
the other "kids" are not human-looking either. The local doctor ([[NotThatKindOfDoctor not most part, ''Literature/NightOnTheGalacticRailroad'' uses cat-people as stands-in for people... but then about 75 minutes in, three humans get on the one of the title]]) is a goat. Ironically penguins are probably the only train.
* ''Manga/OnePiece'' justifies this by having anthropomorphic
animals who be their own separate race and culture, with each individual resembling some sort of furry mammal. The Fishmen are almost never seen in Penguin Village, also this to a certain degree, except in the last story arc when we discover that the mayor with fish and marine invertebrates.
* ''Anime/PorcoRosso''
is an actual penguin. The main premise of the manga about a World War I fighter pilot who apparently turned into a pig due to a {{curse}}. Everyone else is RobotGirl Arale pretending to be human, but she has no real reason to do it in a village like that.human. Nobody questions this.



* ''Manga/ShirokumaCafe'' is a cafe that is run by a polar bear and is frequented by both the animals who work at the nearby zoo and regular humans. The humans and animals get along perfectly well and the zoo even has a special fare price for animals who visit the zoo.
* The ''Anime/SonicTheAnimation'' short from 1994 features Sonic the Hedgehog in an unnamed city surrounded by humans.
* Freedom Planet from ''Anime/SonicTheHedgehogTheMovie'' consists of {{Funny Animal}}s, humans, and, in the case of Sera, {{cat girl}}s.



* ''Anime/PorcoRosso'' is about a World War I fighter pilot who apparently turned into a pig due to a {{curse}}. Everyone else is human. Nobody questions this.
* Kind of inverted with Shinigami Captain Komamura Sajin of ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', who is an anthropomorphic wolf living in an afterlife where everyone else is human. While he appears to be some kind of supernatural creature or a mutant and clearly not an animal, he's fairly self-conscious about it, and initially wears a mask, because he thinks people would see him as a talking animals and not a person who looks similar to one.
* ''Manga/ShirokumaCafe'' is a cafe that is run by a polar bear and is frequented by both the animals who work at the nearby zoo and regular humans. The humans and animals get along perfectly well and the zoo even has a special fare price for animals who visit the zoo.
* ''Manga/HyperPolice'' has humans (now an endangered species) living alongside and even interbreeding with catgirls, kitsune, werewolves, pig-men, and minor gods.
* For the most part, ''Literature/NightOnTheGalacticRailroad'' uses cat-people as stands-in for people... but then about 75 minutes in, three humans get on the train.
* Subverted in ''Manga/GoodnightPunpun''. Punpun and his family are cartoony birds living amongst humans, however it's stylized. Punpun is [[FurryLens really a normal human]] who looks like a bird (and sometimes he doesn't even look like ''that'') to the viewer.
* Freedom Planet from ''Anime/SonicTheHedgehogTheMovie'' consists of {{Funny Animal}}s, humans, and, in the case of Sera, {{cat girl}}s.
* The ''Anime/SonicTheAnimation'' short from 1994 features Sonic the Hedgehog in an unnamed city surrounded by humans.
* Downplayed in ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia''. Some characters look like anthropomorphic animals, but are in fact just mutant humans with various degrees of beast-like features. Still, there is at least one genuine example of anthropomorphism through Principal Nezu, who is explicitly said to be a mouse blessed with SuperIntelligence, and yet he doesn't look out of place.
* ''Manga/OnePiece'' justifies this by having anthropomorphic animals be their own separate race and culture, with each individual resembling some sort of furry mammal. The Fishmen are also this to a certain degree, except with fish and marine invertebrates.



* In some later seasons of ''Animation/ThreeThousandWhysOfBlueCat'', the FunnyAnimal characters interact with humans. They get along pretty well.


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* In some later seasons of ''Animation/ThreeThousandWhysOfBlueCat'', the FunnyAnimal characters interact with humans. They get along pretty well.

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* The Savage Coast boxed set fully incorporates such furry races as lupins (dogs), rakasta (cats), and tortles (three guesses) into its Hispanic-flavored D&D setting. Then again, it's all but traditional for ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' settings to have {{loads and loads of races}} to begin with.

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* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
**
The Savage Coast boxed set for ''TabletopGame/{{Mystara}}'' fully incorporates such furry races as lupins (dogs), rakasta (cats), and tortles (three guesses) into its Hispanic-flavored D&D setting. Then again, it's all but traditional for ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' for settings to have {{loads and loads of races}} to begin with.with.
** ''TabletopGame/TheDelversGuideToBeastWorld'' is a third party D&D setting which used to be a WorldOfFunnyAnimals before humans arrived from another world about fifteen years ago.

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!!Examples:

to:

!!Examples:
!!Example Subpages:

[[index]]
* LionsAndTigersAndHumansOhMy/WesternAnimation
[[/index]]

!!Other Examples:




[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresFromTheBookOfVirtues''
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'' is an excellent example. Humans (both with regular skin colours and [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation odd ones]]), anthropomorphic animals, regular animals, aliens, and robots all exist in Mobius, and there seems to be no problem. For example, in one episode an anthropomorphic rabbit is reading a newspaper and is holding a normal dog by the leash. Just seconds later, an anthropomorphic dog comes into the shot! Weird stuff.
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': Although when you have a world populated by dragons, vampires, fluffy people, candy people, why-wolves, elementals, gem people, undead, rainicorns, plant creatures, hot dog people, gods and a sentient game console, talking animals such as Jake the dog are the least strange thing in the Land of OOO. However, Finn is the only human seen in the series (with the exception of the mutant human tribe he meets in one episode), and his species is considered endangered according to the Adventure Time wiki page. Most of the inhabitants that resemble humans in OOO are classified as humanoid or mutant.
** The "Islands" mini-series in Season 8 confirms the existence of humans outside of Ooo. It also confirms that one recurring character, [[spoiler:Susan Strong]], was human all along.
* In ''Albert Asks: What is Life?'', Albert and Zora routinely interact with humans from both history and present day, who never at all find it odd seeing a [[MixAndMatchCritters hamster-bird hybrid]] and a talking turtle wandering around.
* Played with in ''WesternAnimation/AlfredJKwak''. While a human does show up he's in fact the ''least'' human of any creature; he's a beastlike caveman shown for entertainment to the talking animals in circus shows, and presumably zoos.
* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunks'': Songwriter finds (abducts?) some (freakishly large) talking chipmunks in the forest, puts them in co-ordinated clothing and makes them sing pop songs. And they befriend three giant female talking chipmunks owned/parented by some wealthy dowager. Nothing weird about that. [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs Nothing at all]]. Interestingly, there is an episode where Alvin finds another chipmunk in the park, also his size and intelligent with Harry, a schemer and their mom Vinny the same way. Also the Thanksgiving special showed their relatives as well. It seems as though in the universe of the show, chipmunks just look like that... An Easter special also revealed that various other anthropomorphic rodents and rabbits exist in the ''Chipmunks'' universe.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' takes place in [[WorldOfWeirdness the City of Elmore]], where all the animals and [[EverythingTalks every single object]] [[TalkingAnimal is capable of thought and speech]], with some of them [[FunnyAnimal living like humans]], forming the town's "population". However, humans--'''[[MediumBlending live-action]]''' humans-- have frequently been shown on the TV and internet without comment. This, along with the [[MediumBlending photographic backgrounds]], imply [[ToonTown the world outside of Elmore is mostly the same as real life and populated by regular humans]]. And then there's [[BizarroEpisode "The Sweaters"]], which shows Elmore has some ''animated'' humans, but [[NonStandardCharacterDesign the way they look]], how they act, and the places they hang around are leagues more bizarre than any of the nonhumans in the show.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheBearWhoSleptThroughChristmas'': Bears and humans exist in the same world but unlike other examples of this trope, they live separately in their own societies with no evidence that they regularly interact with each other.
* ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'': The classic cartoons are populated mostly by FunnyAnimals with Betty Boop and Koko the Clown usually being the only humans onscreen. The reason for this is that Betty Boop was originally conceived as a FunnyAnimal character.
* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'' has a similar setup to ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'' (which it predates by three years), as {{Intelligent Gerbil}}s from another world wind up fighting their enemies in an American city (in this case, UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}).
* ''WesternAnimation/BoJackHorseman'' takes place in a world much like our own, except that humans coexist with {{Funny Animal}}s (and there are a lot of different kinds of animals featured; even ''insects'' are anthropomorphic in this world!). {{Interspecies Romance}}s are quite common, and some real-life celebrities have {{Fictional Counterpart}}s who are animals, such as [[Creator/QuentinTarantino Quentin Tarantulino]] and Creator/EthanHawke (who's literally a hawk). There's also pretty much every variation of the {{Species Surname}} trope: Bojack Horseman [[PlayedStraight is indeed a horse]] (or a horseman if you will), Vanessa Gecko [[SubvertedTrope is human]], Maggot Gyllenhaal has her species [[ALizardNamedLiz as her first name]], Matthew Fox and Scott Wolf appear together and have [[ParodiedTrope each others species' as surnames]], Vincent Adultman [[ZigZaggingTrope is a human male but not an adult]] (but it's [[JustifiedTrope not his real name anyway]]), Officer Meow Meow Fuzzyface [[ImpliedTrope sure sounds like a cat name]], Neal [=McBeal=]'s name [[GeniusBonus rhymes with his species]] but it's unclear whether he's just [[JustForPun a seal who's in the navy]] or [[LogicalExtreme an actual Navy S.E.A.L.]] and then there are tons of characters [[AvertedTrope with completely normal names]].
* ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'': A couple of episodes showed the existence of humans, including one particularly disturbing incident in the episode "[=CatDogPig=]", involving an experiment in democracy. Tired of being unable to agree on anything with Dog, Cat started strapping other animals (all of different species, to prevent their new combined name from repeating itself) to his and Dog's conjoined body in repeated unsuccessful attempts to increase votes for his side and become the majority. In the scene that shows the logical conclusion, a bat is recruited into the resulting conglomeration... ''by a naked bald human.''
** There was also a minor character who appeared periodically named [[IronicNickname Mr. Sunshine]]. He looked like a small green humanoid with a pig's tail. None of the characters know exactly what species he is. However, WordOfGod revealed that he was originally intended to be a monkey.
** Another episode had a human training a dog in a Dog Park (which was also populated by animal people walking non-anthropomorphic dogs, including another two legged, clothed dog).
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'': Humans, Funny Animals, and regular animals all coexist. Cats, dogs, and mice talk and act relatively human, although cats and dogs are still kept as pets and mice are still regularly chased (and presumably eaten) by the cats. Rabbits and newts are also kept as pets, but they have no human traits. Bears and even a woolly mammoth have also appeared, but they didn't talk either. No one, not even the show's humans, considers any of this unusual. And Kraken are magical aliens.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Chowder}}'' is all over the place with this. Its world is populated by humans, {{Talking Animal}}s, {{Funny Animal}}s, MixAndMatchCritters, mythological creatures, and extinct animals.
** To wit: Chowder and Panini are [=bear/cat/rabbit=] mash-ups, Mung Daal is a blue human, Truffles is a fairy, Schnitzel is a rock monster, Gazpacho is a woolly mammoth, and Endive is an orange human (or possibly an ogre). Random townspeople are everything else.
** In fact, the only confirmed humans we ever see are {{exp|y}}ies of the Franchise/SuperMarioBros.
*** And the weirdos that come out during a blackout.
* ''WesternAnimation/ClassicalBaby'': The HBO series features anthropomorphic animals, normal-looking animals, everything inbetween, and humans side-by-side with no issue.
* ''WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts'':
** There were several shorts that featured humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
*** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
** A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
*** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.
* ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' is another show with a human-TalkingAnimal-Funny Animal trifecta. While Courage is an ordinary dog, a few recurring characters (such as the psychotic Katz and Shirley the Medium, who appeared to be a Chihuahua) were Funny Animals. Ironically, [[KnightOfCerebus not a goddamn thing about Katz was funny]].
* ''WesternAnimation/DanielTigersNeighborhood'', an animated spinoff of ''Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood'' has Daniel Tiger and several funny animals as his friends and family, but also several human characters.
* Creator/{{Disney}} has used this idea in several animated series:
** ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' had "toons" and realistically drawn humans in the same world. Not surprising since Bonkers was a CaptainErsatz of [[Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit Roger Rabbit]].
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'', the titular heroes and their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is especially strange, as one of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing with a female human.
*** For some reason, there was at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Duckman}}'' has ducks and pigs and chickens and teddy bears and humans and [[MixAndMatchCritters weird hybrids]] and plenty of other animals.
* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' takes the idea and goes into some weird places. Brian, the Griffin's dog, walks and talks the same as the human cast. For the first few episodes he was treated as a dog who just happened to talk, but in later seasons he starts dating and having sex with humans (who don't even seem to be that concerned that he is a dog), almost has an affair with Lois, and even has an illegitimate ''human'' child who is ([[LampshadeHanging somehow]]) six years older than him.
** Lampshaded in one episode where Brian hits on a human woman, her response "You're a dog..." and walks away in disgust. By reading this, one could assume it was a play on words because "dog" is a insult in the real world. Except in the episode she said it as a matter-of-fact, not as an insult.
** Not to mention the episode where he was arrested for drinking at a humans-only water fountain.
** He also has a gay cousin named Jasper, who has a human boyfriend. Yet his mother was an ordinary, non-sapient dog, and apparently so were his brothers and sisters. The owner of the puppy mill Brian was born in didn't recognize him until Brian reminded him "I was the one who could talk."
** In the SpinOff ''WesternAnimation/TheClevelandShow'', one of Cleveland's neighbors is a bear who works for the cable company.
--->'''Cleveland''': Aaah, a bear!\\
'''Tim the Bear''': Aaah, a black man! Aaah! You see? It don't feel so good, does it? It's very reductive.
** Contrast ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'' where the only animals that can talk are those who've had human minds implanted into them, and people still find that barely worth commenting on. Klaus [[DependingOnTheWriter occasionally]] has a social life and Stan doesn't even try to keep him secret from the public like he does Roger. Reginald the Koala is shown to hold down a public job and date humans.
* The 1950s ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' TV series.
* ''WesternAnimation/FlipTheFrog'': Practically every human, Funny Animal, NearlyNormalAnimal, IntellectualAnimal, and even AnimateInanimateObject interacts with each other on regular basis.
* ''The Frog Show'' also known as ''[[MarketBasedTitle Frog et Fou Furet]]'' in French. Not only it stars a yellow ferret and a frog, but it also features a group of other humans including a princess and her knight, and a witch.
* ''WesternAnimation/GetMuggsy'' (a spin-off from a kids' club founded by the now-defunct shopping mall company Mills Corporation) has a beaver, raccoon, opossum and spider all interacting with humans repeatedly.
* Quite a few Creator/HannaBarbera cartoons had this. While a lot of HB 'toons featured run-of-the-mill {{Talking Animal}}s, there were also shows such as ''WesternAnimation/TopCat'', ''WesternAnimation/YogiBear'', and ''WesternAnimation/HongKongPhooey''. In ''WesternAnimation/HongKongPhooey'', Penry is the only anthropomorphic animal in the series... which is probably supposed to make even more ridiculous the fact that nobody thinks a lowly police janitor could be Hong Kong Phooey.
* ''WesternAnimation/HarveyBirdmanAttorneyAtLaw'' is especially guilty of this. Although most of the animal characters are anthropomorphic (being Hanna-Barbera characters), such as Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound. However, are also non-anthropomorphic characters as well, such as Birdman's eagle (who's his legal secretary) and a bear that works for Birdman's law firm that randomly pops in each episode. In one episode, Mentok the Mind Taker switches the brains of an attorney with an ordinary, non-sentient dog and in another, Phil Ken Sebben tries to house train Augie Doggie and break him among a group of ordinary dogs after Mentok sentences him to aggressiveness training after being accused of baring his teeth at the judge during a trial case for biting someone.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheHillbillyBears'': The BearyFunny Rugg and Hopper families seem to be the only {{Funny Animal}}s around. Everyone else is either human on a [[FurryConfusion regular animal]].
* ''WesternAnimation/TheHoundcats'': The 1972 series is a [[JustForFun/XMeetsY mash-up]] of ''Series/MissionImpossible'', ''Series/TheWildWildWest'' and the short-lived ''Series/{{Bearcats}}''. As with ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', the titular heroes are the only {{Talking Animal}}s in their world (in this case, the American Southwest circa UsefulNotes/WorldWarI).
* ''WesternAnimation/JasonAndTheHeroesOfMountOlympus'' has both humans and anthropomorphic animals interacting freely with each other, and portraying gods and goddesses in [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek mythology]]. Two of the main characters are Mercury and Venus, respectively a rabbit and a squirrel.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Jellystone}}'': Since this is a mass crossover among Creator/HannaBarbera characters, humans and anthropomorphic animals coexist in this world.
* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyBravo'' is composed mainly of humans, yet the main character often has run-ins with {{Talking Animal}}s. One episode has him going on a blind date with an antelope; as if that wasn't enough, at dinner his food (a crab) [[CarnivoreConfusion turns out to be his date's ex!]] CheckPlease. In another episode, he went on a date with a girl who turned out to be a werewolf. Oddly enough in seasons 2 and 3, the animals are more realistic and they do not talk, otherwise why would Johnny wish to a Genie for a talking monkey when talking monkeys already existed in season 1? But when the show made it to season 4, the animals started talking again. No explanation is ever given for this. Even more uncannily, there was even an episode where a MadScientist had tried to create a race of anthropomorphic animals from humans, and that the foolish casanova ended up becoming a part of his experiments; one punchline in that particular episode involves Johnny making one of his usual pick-up lines about a foxy lady receptionist for the scientist, only for the "camera" to pan over and reveal that [[IncrediblyLamePun the woman is ''literally'' a furry fox-woman]].
* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'': Dukey the dog is an UpliftedAnimal experiment created by Susan and Mary, specifically as a friend for Johnny.
* ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'': The stop-motion animated series on [[Creator/DisneyChannel Playhouse Disney]] had human characters (clowns) going to school with anthro characters along various stages of the SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism and the main character having a "pet lion," though he too attended school and could talk.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLionhearts'' has a literal example, with the title lions in a world otherwise populated by humans.
* ''Literature/LittleBear'': The books (and TV show) has {{Funny Animal}}s (Little Bear and his family), {{Talking Animal}}s (most of Little Bear's friends), Little Bear's friend Emily and her grandmother (who are both humans), ''and'' Emily's non-anthropomorphic, non-talking dog, Tutu.
* Most ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'', ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'', and ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' animal characters, depending on the episode or short.
** ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'' is set in a fictive land with Tasmanian devils and other animals... and few humans as well.
** ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'' is even more-so this than the original WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, as its premise involves Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and other equally anthropomorphic animal characters from the Looney Tunes Show living their day-to-day lives amongst an otherwise human populace, without either sort ever batting an eye at the differences between each other when put into direct confrontation. A little different from the original Looney Tunes, as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck's human-like behaviors were often implied to be outside of the norm for animals in their world, and characters like Sylvester and Tweety seemed to communicate with their master in the same way that WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'' has this as part of the premise, where the human Adam Lyon is enrolled into a school of nothing but Funny Animals.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyAndFriends'' is the only ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'' series to feature realistic human characters. Some of the humans are from another world and regularly travel to Ponyland from there, while others are legitimately from the pony world.
* ''WesternAnimation/OggyAndTheCockroaches'', which has the titular Oggy living in an otherwise human world.
%%* ''WesternAnimation/ThePenguinsOfMadagascar''
* ''WesternAnimation/TheProblemSolverz'' has Alfe, who is part human, part dog, and part anteater, working alongside the human Horace and half-robot Roba. Then there's Tux Dog, a tall, wealthy, and well-dressed canine whose enemy is Bad Cat, a giant cat with an even bigger casino. Nobody questions any of this, but given the show's [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} unusual world]]...
* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': In a show whose cast includes a talking gumball dispenser, an [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Abominable Snowman]], a troll, a ghost and a lollipop man, a six-foot blue jay and a talking raccoon are the most ''ordinary'' characters. In fact, the majority of certifiably human characters in the show are enemy characters or clueless friends of Muscle Man.
* In the various incarnations of ComicStrip/{{Rupert|Bear}} (also a bear), both humans and animals lived in Rupert's world. Most of the citizens of Rupert's hometown were animal, though several of Rupert's friends, TheProfessor and [[ChineseGirl Tiger Lily]], were human, as were residents of several nearby towns like Appleton. Nutwood Forest is also populated by sentient but otherwise "normal" {{Talking Animal}}s!
* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'': [[FantasyKitchenSink The world of Earth]] [[BadFuture in the distant future]] has a considerably diverse population. There are of course humans (though their numbers have been reduced greatly due to genocidal massacres by [[EvilOverlord Aku]]), [[CivilizedAnimal anthropomorphic]] [[FunnyAnimals animals]] (including a group of dogs who worked as archaeologists for a living), extraterrestrials (large numbers of aliens immigrated from other planets, [[TheEmpire especially those conquered by Aku]]), robots (an absurdly large amount of them, some of whom [[AmbiguousRobots superficially resemble organic creatures]]), and various magical beings (including demons, ogres, fairies, spirits, gods, etc).
* ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'', DependingOnTheWriter.
* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': The world is populated by anthropomorphic sea life (and one squirrel), with humans only appearing when they are seen abovewater. However, there is Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy, who are ordinary-looking humans (and, contrary to the name, not merpeople at all). The same thing applies to most of their RoguesGallery, partucularly Man-Ray. King Neptune and his daughter Mindy in TheMovie are full-on merpeople, as was the alternate version of Neptune seen in the episode "Neptune's Spatula".
* Used very strangely in the ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' TV series. While in the original ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lion King|1994}}'' film and other sequels no humans are seen or ever mentioned, in the series the eponymous duo frequently meet and interact casually with humans, who never once find it a tad bit odd that there is a talking warthog and meerkat walking around. This in addition to them understanding, using, and keeping human stuff. Bizarre, to say the least.
* ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'': Being from the same artist and creative team of ''[=BoJack=] Horseman'', the show also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including the title characters).
* In the ChristmasSpecial ''WesternAnimation/TwasTheNightBeforeChristmas'', the humans and the humanoid sapient mice of Junctionville openly interact on at least a professional basis, i.e. a clockmaker has a mouse assistant and the human mail carriers have mice counterparts who ride on their bags to deal with the mouse population's mail.
* ''WesternAnimation/WeBareBears'': Humans don't seem to find talking bears walking around the city too unusual; they do get stares from their lack of manners, but they are usually treated roughly the same way that a human would be in the same situation. There are a few other animals that can speak, such as recurring character Nom Nom the koala, and even the ones that don't exhibit IntellectualAnimal tendencies.
[[/folder]]
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* ''VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog'':

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* ''VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog'':''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'':



* ''[[Franchise/DuckTales DuckTales: The Quest for Gold]]'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface mummies from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.

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* ''[[Franchise/DuckTales DuckTales: The Quest for Gold]]'': ''VideoGame/DuckTalesTheQuestforGold'': The mummy looks very human, in contrast to the dogface mummies from the show. This seems to be a slight oversight by the programmers.

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* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunks.'' Songwriter finds (abducts?) some (freakishly large) talking chipmunks in the forest, puts them in co-ordinated clothing and makes them sing pop songs. And they befriend three giant female talking chipmunks owned/parented by some wealthy dowager. Nothing weird about that. [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs Nothing at all]]. Interestingly, there is an episode where Alvin finds another chipmunk in the park, also his size and intelligent with Harry, a schemer and their mom Vinny the same way. Also the Thanksgiving special showed their relatives as well. It seems as though in the universe of the show, chipmunks just look like that... An Easter special also revealed that various other anthropomorphic rodents and rabbits exist in the ''Chipmunks'' universe.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunks.'' ''WesternAnimation/AlvinAndTheChipmunks'': Songwriter finds (abducts?) some (freakishly large) talking chipmunks in the forest, puts them in co-ordinated clothing and makes them sing pop songs. And they befriend three giant female talking chipmunks owned/parented by some wealthy dowager. Nothing weird about that. [[WhatDoYouMeanItWasntMadeOnDrugs Nothing at all]]. Interestingly, there is an episode where Alvin finds another chipmunk in the park, also his size and intelligent with Harry, a schemer and their mom Vinny the same way. Also the Thanksgiving special showed their relatives as well. It seems as though in the universe of the show, chipmunks just look like that... An Easter special also revealed that various other anthropomorphic rodents and rabbits exist in the ''Chipmunks'' universe.



* The classic ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' cartoons are populated mostly by FunnyAnimals with Betty Boop and Koko the Clown usually being the only humans onscreen. The reason for this is that Betty Boop was originally conceived as a FunnyAnimal character.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'': The classic ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' cartoons are populated mostly by FunnyAnimals with Betty Boop and Koko the Clown usually being the only humans onscreen. The reason for this is that Betty Boop was originally conceived as a FunnyAnimal character.



* A couple of episodes of ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' showed the existence of humans, including one particularly disturbing incident in the episode "[=CatDogPig=]", involving an experiment in democracy. Tired of being unable to agree on anything with Dog, Cat started strapping other animals (all of different species, to prevent their new combined name from repeating itself) to his and Dog's conjoined body in repeated unsuccessful attempts to increase votes for his side and become the majority. In the scene that shows the logical conclusion, a bat is recruited into the resulting conglomeration... ''by a naked bald human.''

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'': A couple of episodes of ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' showed the existence of humans, including one particularly disturbing incident in the episode "[=CatDogPig=]", involving an experiment in democracy. Tired of being unable to agree on anything with Dog, Cat started strapping other animals (all of different species, to prevent their new combined name from repeating itself) to his and Dog's conjoined body in repeated unsuccessful attempts to increase votes for his side and become the majority. In the scene that shows the logical conclusion, a bat is recruited into the resulting conglomeration... ''by a naked bald human.''



* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'', humans, Funny Animals, and regular animals all coexist. Cats, dogs, and mice talk and act relatively human, although cats and dogs are still kept as pets and mice are still regularly chased (and presumably eaten) by the cats. Rabbits and newts are also kept as pets, but they have no human traits. Bears and even a woolly mammoth have also appeared, but they didn't talk either. No one, not even the show's humans, considers any of this unusual. And Kraken are magical aliens.

to:

* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'', humans, ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'': Humans, Funny Animals, and regular animals all coexist. Cats, dogs, and mice talk and act relatively human, although cats and dogs are still kept as pets and mice are still regularly chased (and presumably eaten) by the cats. Rabbits and newts are also kept as pets, but they have no human traits. Bears and even a woolly mammoth have also appeared, but they didn't talk either. No one, not even the show's humans, considers any of this unusual. And Kraken are magical aliens.



* The HBO series ''WesternAnimation/ClassicalBaby'' features anthropomorphic animals, normal-looking animals, everything inbetween, and humans side-by-side with no issue.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/ClassicalBaby'': The HBO series ''WesternAnimation/ClassicalBaby'' features anthropomorphic animals, normal-looking animals, everything inbetween, and humans side-by-side with no issue.issue.
* ''WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts'':
** There were several shorts that featured humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
*** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
** A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
*** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.



* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.



-->'''Cleveland''': Aaah, a bear!
-->'''Tim the Bear''': Aaah, a black man! Aaah! You see? It don't feel so good, does it? It's very reductive.

to:

-->'''Cleveland''': --->'''Cleveland''': Aaah, a bear!
-->'''Tim
bear!\\
'''Tim
the Bear''': Aaah, a black man! Aaah! You see? It don't feel so good, does it? It's very reductive.



* In ''WesternAnimation/FlipTheFrog'', practically every human, Funny Animal, NearlyNormalAnimal, IntellectualAnimal, and even AnimateInanimateObject interacts with each other on regular basis.

to:

* In ''WesternAnimation/FlipTheFrog'', practically ''WesternAnimation/FlipTheFrog'': Practically every human, Funny Animal, NearlyNormalAnimal, IntellectualAnimal, and even AnimateInanimateObject interacts with each other on regular basis.



* ''WesternAnimation/HarveyBirdmanAttorneyAtLaw'' Is especially guilty of this. Although most of the animal characters are anthropomorphic (being Hanna-Barbera characters), such as Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound. However, are also non-anthropomorphic characters as well, such as Birdman's eagle (who's his legal secretary) and a bear that works for Birdman's law firm that randomly pops in each episode. In one episode, Mentok the Mind Taker switches the brains of an attorney with an ordinary, non-sentient dog and in another, Phil Ken Sebben tries to house train Augie Doggie and break him among a group of ordinary dogs after Mentok sentences him to aggressiveness training after being accused of baring his teeth at the judge during a trial case for biting someone.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheHillbillyBears'', the BearyFunny Rugg and Hopper families seem to be the only {{Funny Animal}}s around. Everyone else is either human on a [[FurryConfusion regular animal]].
* The 1972 series ''WesternAnimation/TheHoundcats'' is a [[JustForFun/XMeetsY mash-up]] of ''Series/MissionImpossible'', ''Series/TheWildWildWest'' and the short-lived ''Series/{{Bearcats}}''. As with ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', the titular heroes are the only {{Talking Animal}}s in their world (in this case, the American Southwest circa UsefulNotes/WorldWarI).

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/HarveyBirdmanAttorneyAtLaw'' Is is especially guilty of this. Although most of the animal characters are anthropomorphic (being Hanna-Barbera characters), such as Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound. However, are also non-anthropomorphic characters as well, such as Birdman's eagle (who's his legal secretary) and a bear that works for Birdman's law firm that randomly pops in each episode. In one episode, Mentok the Mind Taker switches the brains of an attorney with an ordinary, non-sentient dog and in another, Phil Ken Sebben tries to house train Augie Doggie and break him among a group of ordinary dogs after Mentok sentences him to aggressiveness training after being accused of baring his teeth at the judge during a trial case for biting someone.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheHillbillyBears'', the ''WesternAnimation/TheHillbillyBears'': The BearyFunny Rugg and Hopper families seem to be the only {{Funny Animal}}s around. Everyone else is either human on a [[FurryConfusion regular animal]].
* ''WesternAnimation/TheHoundcats'': The 1972 series ''WesternAnimation/TheHoundcats'' is a [[JustForFun/XMeetsY mash-up]] of ''Series/MissionImpossible'', ''Series/TheWildWildWest'' and the short-lived ''Series/{{Bearcats}}''. As with ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', the titular heroes are the only {{Talking Animal}}s in their world (in this case, the American Southwest circa UsefulNotes/WorldWarI).



* Dukey the dog in ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'' is an UpliftedAnimal experiment created by Susan and Mary, specifically as a friend for Johnny.
* ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'', a stop-motion animated series on [[Creator/DisneyChannel Playhouse Disney]] had human characters (clowns) going to school with anthro characters along various stages of the SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism and the main character having a "pet lion," though he too attended school and could talk.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'': Dukey the dog in ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'' is an UpliftedAnimal experiment created by Susan and Mary, specifically as a friend for Johnny.
* ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'', a ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'': The stop-motion animated series on [[Creator/DisneyChannel Playhouse Disney]] had human characters (clowns) going to school with anthro characters along various stages of the SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism and the main character having a "pet lion," though he too attended school and could talk.



* The ''Literature/LittleBear'' books (and TV show) has {{Funny Animal}}s (Little Bear and his family), {{Talking Animal}}s (most of Little Bear's friends), Little Bear's friend Emily and her grandmother (who are both humans), ''and'' Emily's non-anthropomorphic, non-talking dog, Tutu.

to:

* ''Literature/LittleBear'': The ''Literature/LittleBear'' books (and TV show) has {{Funny Animal}}s (Little Bear and his family), {{Talking Animal}}s (most of Little Bear's friends), Little Bear's friend Emily and her grandmother (who are both humans), ''and'' Emily's non-anthropomorphic, non-talking dog, Tutu.



** ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'' is set in a fictive land with Tasmanian devils and other animals...and few humans as well.
** ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'' is even more-so this than the original WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, as its premise involves Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and other equally anthropomorphic animal characters from the Looney Tunes Show living their day-to-day lives amongst an otherwise human populace, without either sort ever batting an eye at the differences between each other when put into direct confrontation. A little different from the original Looney Tunes, as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck's human-like behaviors were often implied to be outside of the norm for animals in their world, and characters like Sylvester and Tweetie seemed to communicate with their master in the same way that WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did.

to:

** ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'' is set in a fictive land with Tasmanian devils and other animals... and few humans as well.
** ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'' is even more-so this than the original WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, as its premise involves Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck Duck, and other equally anthropomorphic animal characters from the Looney Tunes Show living their day-to-day lives amongst an otherwise human populace, without either sort ever batting an eye at the differences between each other when put into direct confrontation. A little different from the original Looney Tunes, as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck's human-like behaviors were often implied to be outside of the norm for animals in their world, and characters like Sylvester and Tweetie Tweety seemed to communicate with their master in the same way that WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did.



* Part of the premise of ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'', where the human Adam Lyon is enrolled into a school of nothing but Funny Animals.

to:

* Part ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'' has this as part of the premise of ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'', premise, where the human Adam Lyon is enrolled into a school of nothing but Funny Animals.



* In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', [[FantasyKitchenSink the world of Earth]] [[BadFuture in the distant future]] has a considerably diverse population. There are of course humans (though their numbers have been reduced greatly due to genocidal massacres by [[EvilOverlord Aku]]), [[CivilizedAnimal anthropomorphic]] [[FunnyAnimals animals]] (including a group of dogs who worked as archaeologists for a living), extraterrestrials (large numbers of aliens immigrated from other planets, [[TheEmpire especially those conquered by Aku]]), robots (an absurdly large amount of them, some of whom [[AmbiguousRobots superficially resemble organic creatures]]), and various magical beings (including demons, ogres, fairies, spirits, gods, etc).

to:

* In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'': [[FantasyKitchenSink the The world of Earth]] [[BadFuture in the distant future]] has a considerably diverse population. There are of course humans (though their numbers have been reduced greatly due to genocidal massacres by [[EvilOverlord Aku]]), [[CivilizedAnimal anthropomorphic]] [[FunnyAnimals animals]] (including a group of dogs who worked as archaeologists for a living), extraterrestrials (large numbers of aliens immigrated from other planets, [[TheEmpire especially those conquered by Aku]]), robots (an absurdly large amount of them, some of whom [[AmbiguousRobots superficially resemble organic creatures]]), and various magical beings (including demons, ogres, fairies, spirits, gods, etc).



* The world of ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' is populated by anthropomorphic sea life (and one squirrel), with humans only appearing when they are seen abovewater. However, there is Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy, who are ordinary-looking humans (and, contrary to the name, not merpeople at all). The same thing applies to most of their RoguesGallery, partucularly Man-Ray. King Neptune and his daughter Mindy in TheMovie are full-on merpeople, as was the alternate version of Neptune seen in the episode "Neptune's Spatula".

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': The world of ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' is populated by anthropomorphic sea life (and one squirrel), with humans only appearing when they are seen abovewater. However, there is Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy, who are ordinary-looking humans (and, contrary to the name, not merpeople at all). The same thing applies to most of their RoguesGallery, partucularly Man-Ray. King Neptune and his daughter Mindy in TheMovie are full-on merpeople, as was the alternate version of Neptune seen in the episode "Neptune's Spatula".

Added: 6550

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Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
a-z order in western animation.


* In ''Albert Asks: What is Life?'', Albert and Zora routinely interact with humans from both history and present day, who never at all find it odd seeing a [[MixAndMatchCritters hamster-bird hybrid]] and a talking turtle wandering around.



* The HBO series ''WesternAnimation/ClassicalBaby'' features anthropomorphic animals, normal-looking animals, everything inbetween, and humans side-by-side with no issue.



* Creator/{{Disney}} has used this idea in several animated series:
** ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' had "toons" and realistically drawn humans in the same world. Not surprising since Bonkers was a CaptainErsatz of [[Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit Roger Rabbit]].
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'', the titular heroes and their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is especially strange, as one of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing with a female human.
*** For some reason, there was at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.



* The 1950s ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' TV series.
* In ''WesternAnimation/FlipTheFrog'', practically every human, Funny Animal, NearlyNormalAnimal, IntellectualAnimal, and even AnimateInanimateObject interacts with each other on regular basis.
* ''The Frog Show'' also known as ''[[MarketBasedTitle Frog et Fou Furet]]'' in French. Not only it stars a yellow ferret and a frog, but it also features a group of other humans including a princess and her knight, and a witch.



* In ''WesternAnimation/TheHillbillyBears'', the BearyFunny Rugg and Hopper families seem to be the only {{Funny Animal}}s around. Everyone else is either human on a [[FurryConfusion regular animal]].



* ''WesternAnimation/{{Jellystone}}'': Since this is a mass crossover among Creator/HannaBarbera characters, humans and anthropomorphic animals coexist in this world.



* Dukey the dog in ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'' is an UpliftedAnimal experiment created by Susan and Mary, specifically as a friend for Johnny.



* ''WesternAnimation/TheLionhearts'' has a literal example, with the title lions in a world otherwise populated by humans.



* ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'' is even more-so this than the original WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, as its premise involves Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and other equally anthropomorphic animal characters from the Looney Tunes Show living their day-to-day lives amongst an otherwise human populace, without either sort ever batting an eye at the differences between each other when put into direct confrontation. A little different from the original Looney Tunes, as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck's human-like behaviors were often implied to be outside of the norm for animals in their world, and characters like Sylvester and Tweetie seemed to communicate with their master in the same way that WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did.

to:

* Most ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'', ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'', and ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' animal characters, depending on the episode or short.
** ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'' is set in a fictive land with Tasmanian devils and other animals...and few humans as well.
**
''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'' is even more-so this than the original WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes, as its premise involves Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and other equally anthropomorphic animal characters from the Looney Tunes Show living their day-to-day lives amongst an otherwise human populace, without either sort ever batting an eye at the differences between each other when put into direct confrontation. A little different from the original Looney Tunes, as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck's human-like behaviors were often implied to be outside of the norm for animals in their world, and characters like Sylvester and Tweetie seemed to communicate with their master in the same way that WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry did.did.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.



* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyAndFriends'' is the only ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'' series to feature realistic human characters. Some of the humans are from another world and regularly travel to Ponyland from there, while others are legitimately from the pony world.
* ''WesternAnimation/OggyAndTheCockroaches'', which has the titular Oggy living in an otherwise human world.
%%* ''WesternAnimation/ThePenguinsOfMadagascar''
* ''WesternAnimation/TheProblemSolverz'' has Alfe, who is part human, part dog, and part anteater, working alongside the human Horace and half-robot Roba. Then there's Tux Dog, a tall, wealthy, and well-dressed canine whose enemy is Bad Cat, a giant cat with an even bigger casino. Nobody questions any of this, but given the show's [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} unusual world]]...
* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': In a show whose cast includes a talking gumball dispenser, an [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Abominable Snowman]], a troll, a ghost and a lollipop man, a six-foot blue jay and a talking raccoon are the most ''ordinary'' characters. In fact, the majority of certifiably human characters in the show are enemy characters or clueless friends of Muscle Man.



* Being from the same artist and creative team, ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'' also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including the title characters).














* Creator/{{Disney}} has used this idea in several animated series (besides the aforementioned ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'').
** ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' had "toons" and realistically drawn humans in the same world. Not surprising since Bonkers was a CaptainErsatz of [[Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit Roger Rabbit]].
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'', the titular heroes and their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is especially strange, as one of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing with a female human.
*** For some reason, there was at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.

















to:

* Being from In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', [[FantasyKitchenSink the same artist and creative team, ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'' also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including world of Earth]] [[BadFuture in the title characters).














* Creator/{{Disney}}
distant future]] has used this idea in several animated series (besides the aforementioned ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'').
** ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' had "toons" and realistically drawn
a considerably diverse population. There are of course humans in the same world. Not surprising since Bonkers was a CaptainErsatz of [[Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit Roger Rabbit]].
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'', the titular heroes and
(though their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict numbers have been reduced greatly due to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is
genocidal massacres by [[EvilOverlord Aku]]), [[CivilizedAnimal anthropomorphic]] [[FunnyAnimals animals]] (including a group of dogs who worked as archaeologists for a living), extraterrestrials (large numbers of aliens immigrated from other planets, [[TheEmpire especially strange, as one those conquered by Aku]]), robots (an absurdly large amount of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing with a female human.
*** For
them, some reason, there was at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess
of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; whom [[AmbiguousRobots superficially resemble organic creatures]]), and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
various magical beings (including demons, ogres, fairies, spirits, gods, etc).
* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.
















''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'', DependingOnTheWriter.



* Used very strangely in the ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' TV series. While in the original ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lion King|1994}}'' film and other sequels no humans are seen or ever mentioned, in the series the eponymous duo frequently meet and interact casually with humans, who never once find it a tad bit odd that there is a talking warthog and meerkat walking around. This in addition to them understanding, using, and keeping human stuff. Bizarre, to say the least.
* ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'': Being from the same artist and creative team of ''[=BoJack=] Horseman'', the show also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including the title characters).



* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': In a show whose cast includes a talking gumball dispenser, an [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Abominable Snowman]], a troll, a ghost and a lollipop man, a six-foot blue jay and a talking raccoon are the most ''ordinary'' characters. In fact, the majority of certifiably human characters in the show are enemy characters or clueless friends of Muscle Man.

* ''WesternAnimation/TheProblemSolverz'' has Alfe, who is part human, part dog, and part anteater, working alongside the human Horace and half-robot Roba. Then there's Tux Dog, a tall, wealthy, and well-dressed canine whose enemy is Bad Cat, a giant cat with an even bigger casino. Nobody questions any of this, but given the show's [[{{Cloudcuckooland}} unusual world]]...
* ''WesternAnimation/TheLionhearts'' has a literal example, with the title lions in a world otherwise populated by humans.
* ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'', DependingOnTheWriter.
* Most ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'', ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'', and ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' animal characters, depending on the episode or short.
%%* ''WesternAnimation/ThePenguinsOfMadagascar''
* Dukey the dog in ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'' is an UpliftedAnimal experiment created by Susan and Mary, specifically as a friend for Johnny.
* ''The Frog Show'' also known as ''[[MarketBasedTitle Frog et Fou Furet]]'' in French. Not only it stars a yellow ferret and a frog, but it also features a group of other humans including a princess and her knight, and a witch.
* The 1950s ''WesternAnimation/FelixTheCat'' TV series.
* In ''WesternAnimation/FlipTheFrog'', practically every human, Funny Animal, NearlyNormalAnimal, IntellectualAnimal, and even AnimateInanimateObject interacts with each other on regular basis.


* Used very strangely in the ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'' TV series. While in the original ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lion King|1994}}'' film and other sequels no humans are seen or ever mentioned, in the series the eponymous duo frequently meet and interact casually with humans, who never once find it a tad bit odd that there is a talking warthog and meerkat walking around. This in addition to them understanding, using, and keeping human stuff. Bizarre, to say the least.

* In ''Albert Asks: What is Life?'', Albert and Zora routinely interact with humans from both history and present day, who never at all find it odd seeing a [[MixAndMatchCritters hamster-bird hybrid]] and a talking turtle wandering around.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyAndFriends'' is the only ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'' series to feature realistic human characters. Some of the humans are from another world and regularly travel to Ponyland from there, while others are legitimately from the pony world.
* ''WesternAnimation/TazMania'' is set in a fictive land with Tasmanian devils and other animals...and few humans as well.

* ''WesternAnimation/OggyAndTheCockroaches'', which has the titular Oggy living in an otherwise human world.




* In ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', [[FantasyKitchenSink the world of Earth]] [[BadFuture in the distant future]] has a considerably diverse population. There are of course humans (though their numbers have been reduced greatly due to genocidal massacres by [[EvilOverlord Aku]]), [[CivilizedAnimal anthropomorphic]] [[FunnyAnimals animals]] (including a group of dogs who worked as archaeologists for a living), extraterrestrials (large numbers of aliens immigrated from other planets, [[TheEmpire especially those conquered by Aku]]), robots (an absurdly large amount of them, some of whom [[AmbiguousRobots superficially resemble organic creatures]]), and various magical beings (including demons, ogres, fairies, spirits, gods, etc).
* The HBO series ''WesternAnimation/ClassicalBaby'' features anthropomorphic animals, normal-looking animals, everything inbetween, and humans side-by-side with no issue.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheHillbillyBears'', the BearyFunny Rugg and Hopper families seem to be the only {{Funny Animal}}s around. Everyone else is either human on a [[FurryConfusion regular animal]].

* ''WesternAnimation/{{Jellystone}}'': Since this is a mass crossover among Creator/HannaBarbera characters, humans and anthropomorphic animals coexist in this world.

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Removed: 8131

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None


* ''WesternAnimation/BoJackHorseman'' takes place in a world much like our own, except that humans coexist with {{Funny Animal}}s (and there are a lot of different kinds of animals featured; even ''insects'' are anthropomorphic in this world!). {{Interspecies Romance}}s are quite common, and some real-life celebrities have {{Fictional Counterpart}}s who are animals, such as [[Creator/QuentinTarantino Quentin Tarantulino]] and Creator/EthanHawke (who's literally a hawk). There's also pretty much every variation of the {{Species Surname}} trope: Bojack Horseman [[PlayedStraight is indeed a horse]] (or a horseman if you will), Vanessa Gecko [[SubvertedTrope is human]], Maggot Gyllenhaal has her species [[ALizardNamedLiz as her first name]], Matthew Fox and Scott Wolf appear together and have [[ParodiedTrope each others species' as surnames]], Vincent Adultman [[ZigZaggingTrope is a human male but not an adult]] (but it's [[JustifiedTrope not his real name anyway]]), Officer Meow Meow Fuzzyface [[ImpliedTrope sure sounds like a cat name]], Neal [=McBeal=]'s name [[GeniusBonus rhymes with his species]] but it's unclear whether he's just [[JustForPun a seal who's in the navy]] or [[LogicalExtreme an actual Navy S.E.A.L.]] and then there are tons of characters [[AvertedTrope with completely normal names]].
* Being from the same artist and creative team, ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'' also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including the title characters).
* The ''Literature/LittleBear'' books (and TV show) has {{Funny Animal}}s (Little Bear and his family), {{Talking Animal}}s (most of Little Bear's friends), Little Bear's friend Emily and her grandmother (who are both humans), ''and'' Emily's non-anthropomorphic, non-talking dog, Tutu.
* In the various incarnations of ComicStrip/{{Rupert|Bear}} (also a bear), both humans and animals lived in Rupert's world. Most of the citizens of Rupert's hometown were animal, though several of Rupert's friends, TheProfessor and [[ChineseGirl Tiger Lily]], were human, as were residents of several nearby towns like Appleton. Nutwood Forest is also populated by sentient but otherwise "normal" {{Talking Animal}}s!
* ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' is another show with a human-TalkingAnimal-Funny Animal trifecta. While Courage is an ordinary dog, a few recurring characters (such as the psychotic Katz and Shirley the Medium, who appeared to be a Chihuahua) were Funny Animals. Ironically, [[KnightOfCerebus not a goddamn thing about Katz was funny]].

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/BoJackHorseman'' takes place in a world much like our own, except that humans coexist ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresFromTheBookOfVirtues''
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'' is an excellent example. Humans (both
with {{Funny Animal}}s (and there are a lot of different kinds of animals featured; even ''insects'' are regular skin colours and [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation odd ones]]), anthropomorphic in this world!). {{Interspecies Romance}}s are quite common, and some real-life celebrities have {{Fictional Counterpart}}s who are animals, such as [[Creator/QuentinTarantino Quentin Tarantulino]] regular animals, aliens, and Creator/EthanHawke (who's literally a hawk). There's also pretty much every variation of the {{Species Surname}} trope: Bojack Horseman [[PlayedStraight is indeed a horse]] (or a horseman if you will), Vanessa Gecko [[SubvertedTrope is human]], Maggot Gyllenhaal has her species [[ALizardNamedLiz as her first name]], Matthew Fox robots all exist in Mobius, and Scott Wolf appear together and have [[ParodiedTrope each others species' as surnames]], Vincent Adultman [[ZigZaggingTrope is a human male but not an adult]] (but it's [[JustifiedTrope not his real name anyway]]), Officer Meow Meow Fuzzyface [[ImpliedTrope sure sounds like a cat name]], Neal [=McBeal=]'s name [[GeniusBonus rhymes with his species]] but it's unclear whether he's just [[JustForPun a seal who's in the navy]] or [[LogicalExtreme an actual Navy S.E.A.L.]] and then there are tons of characters [[AvertedTrope with completely seems to be no problem. For example, in one episode an anthropomorphic rabbit is reading a newspaper and is holding a normal names]].
* Being from
dog by the same artist and creative team, ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'' also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including leash. Just seconds later, an anthropomorphic dog comes into the title characters).
shot! Weird stuff.
* The ''Literature/LittleBear'' books (and TV show) has {{Funny Animal}}s (Little Bear and his family), {{Talking Animal}}s (most of Little Bear's friends), Little Bear's friend Emily and her grandmother (who are both humans), ''and'' Emily's non-anthropomorphic, non-talking dog, Tutu.
* In the various incarnations of ComicStrip/{{Rupert|Bear}} (also
''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': Although when you have a bear), both humans and animals lived in Rupert's world. Most of the citizens of Rupert's hometown were animal, though several of Rupert's friends, TheProfessor and [[ChineseGirl Tiger Lily]], were human, as were residents of several nearby towns like Appleton. Nutwood Forest is also world populated by dragons, vampires, fluffy people, candy people, why-wolves, elementals, gem people, undead, rainicorns, plant creatures, hot dog people, gods and a sentient but otherwise "normal" {{Talking Animal}}s!
* ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog''
game console, talking animals such as Jake the dog are the least strange thing in the Land of OOO. However, Finn is another show with a human-TalkingAnimal-Funny Animal trifecta. While Courage the only human seen in the series (with the exception of the mutant human tribe he meets in one episode), and his species is an ordinary dog, a few considered endangered according to the Adventure Time wiki page. Most of the inhabitants that resemble humans in OOO are classified as humanoid or mutant.
** The "Islands" mini-series in Season 8 confirms the existence of humans outside of Ooo. It also confirms that one
recurring characters (such as the psychotic Katz and Shirley the Medium, who appeared to be a Chihuahua) were Funny Animals. Ironically, [[KnightOfCerebus not a goddamn thing about Katz character, [[spoiler:Susan Strong]], was funny]].human all along.



* ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' had "toons" and realistically drawn humans in the same world. Not surprising since Bonkers was a CaptainErsatz of [[Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit Roger Rabbit]].
* Quite a few Creator/HannaBarbera cartoons had this. While a lot of HB 'toons featured run-of-the-mill {{Talking Animal}}s, there were also shows such as ''WesternAnimation/TopCat'', ''WesternAnimation/YogiBear'', and ''WesternAnimation/HongKongPhooey''. In ''WesternAnimation/HongKongPhooey'', Penry is the only anthropomorphic animal in the series... which is probably supposed to make even more ridiculous the fact that nobody thinks a lowly police janitor could be Hong Kong Phooey.



* Part of the premise of ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'', where the human Adam Lyon is enrolled into a school of nothing but Funny Animals.

to:

* Part ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' takes place in [[WorldOfWeirdness the City of Elmore]], where all the animals and [[EverythingTalks every single object]] [[TalkingAnimal is capable of thought and speech]], with some of them [[FunnyAnimal living like humans]], forming the town's "population". However, humans--'''[[MediumBlending live-action]]''' humans-- have frequently been shown on the TV and internet without comment. This, along with the [[MediumBlending photographic backgrounds]], imply [[ToonTown the world outside of Elmore is mostly the same as real life and populated by regular humans]]. And then there's [[BizarroEpisode "The Sweaters"]], which shows Elmore has some ''animated'' humans, but [[NonStandardCharacterDesign the way they look]], how they act, and the places they hang around are leagues more bizarre than any of the premise of ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'', where nonhumans in the show.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheBearWhoSleptThroughChristmas'': Bears and humans exist in the same world but unlike other examples of this trope, they live separately in their own societies with no evidence that they regularly interact with each other.
* The classic ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' cartoons are populated mostly by FunnyAnimals with Betty Boop and Koko the Clown usually being the only humans onscreen. The reason for this is that Betty Boop was originally conceived as a FunnyAnimal character.
* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'' has a similar setup to ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'' (which it predates by three years), as {{Intelligent Gerbil}}s from another world wind up fighting their enemies in an American city (in this case, UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}).
* ''WesternAnimation/BoJackHorseman'' takes place in a world much like our own, except that humans coexist with {{Funny Animal}}s (and there are a lot of different kinds of animals featured; even ''insects'' are anthropomorphic in this world!). {{Interspecies Romance}}s are quite common, and some real-life celebrities have {{Fictional Counterpart}}s who are animals, such as [[Creator/QuentinTarantino Quentin Tarantulino]] and Creator/EthanHawke (who's literally a hawk). There's also pretty much every variation of the {{Species Surname}} trope: Bojack Horseman [[PlayedStraight is indeed a horse]] (or a horseman if you will), Vanessa Gecko [[SubvertedTrope is human]], Maggot Gyllenhaal has her species [[ALizardNamedLiz as her first name]], Matthew Fox and Scott Wolf appear together and have [[ParodiedTrope each others species' as surnames]], Vincent Adultman [[ZigZaggingTrope is a
human Adam Lyon male but not an adult]] (but it's [[JustifiedTrope not his real name anyway]]), Officer Meow Meow Fuzzyface [[ImpliedTrope sure sounds like a cat name]], Neal [=McBeal=]'s name [[GeniusBonus rhymes with his species]] but it's unclear whether he's just [[JustForPun a seal who's in the navy]] or [[LogicalExtreme an actual Navy S.E.A.L.]] and then there are tons of characters [[AvertedTrope with completely normal names]].
* A couple of episodes of ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' showed the existence of humans, including one particularly disturbing incident in the episode "[=CatDogPig=]", involving an experiment in democracy. Tired of being unable to agree on anything with Dog, Cat started strapping other animals (all of different species, to prevent their new combined name from repeating itself) to his and Dog's conjoined body in repeated unsuccessful attempts to increase votes for his side and become the majority. In the scene that shows the logical conclusion, a bat
is enrolled recruited into the resulting conglomeration... ''by a school naked bald human.''
** There was also a minor character who appeared periodically named [[IronicNickname Mr. Sunshine]]. He looked like a small green humanoid with a pig's tail. None
of nothing but the characters know exactly what species he is. However, WordOfGod revealed that he was originally intended to be a monkey.
** Another episode had a human training a dog in a Dog Park (which was also populated by animal people walking non-anthropomorphic dogs, including another two legged, clothed dog).
* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'', humans,
Funny Animals.Animals, and regular animals all coexist. Cats, dogs, and mice talk and act relatively human, although cats and dogs are still kept as pets and mice are still regularly chased (and presumably eaten) by the cats. Rabbits and newts are also kept as pets, but they have no human traits. Bears and even a woolly mammoth have also appeared, but they didn't talk either. No one, not even the show's humans, considers any of this unusual. And Kraken are magical aliens.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Chowder}}'' is all over the place with this. Its world is populated by humans, {{Talking Animal}}s, {{Funny Animal}}s, MixAndMatchCritters, mythological creatures, and extinct animals.
** To wit: Chowder and Panini are [=bear/cat/rabbit=] mash-ups, Mung Daal is a blue human, Truffles is a fairy, Schnitzel is a rock monster, Gazpacho is a woolly mammoth, and Endive is an orange human (or possibly an ogre). Random townspeople are everything else.
** In fact, the only confirmed humans we ever see are {{exp|y}}ies of the Franchise/SuperMarioBros.
*** And the weirdos that come out during a blackout.
* ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' is another show with a human-TalkingAnimal-Funny Animal trifecta. While Courage is an ordinary dog, a few recurring characters (such as the psychotic Katz and Shirley the Medium, who appeared to be a Chihuahua) were Funny Animals. Ironically, [[KnightOfCerebus not a goddamn thing about Katz was funny]].
* ''WesternAnimation/DanielTigersNeighborhood'', an animated spinoff of ''Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood'' has Daniel Tiger and several funny animals as his friends and family, but also several human characters.



* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyBravo'' is composed mainly of humans, yet the main character often has run-ins with {{Talking Animal}}s. One episode has him going on a blind date with an antelope; as if that wasn't enough, at dinner his food (a crab) [[CarnivoreConfusion turns out to be his date's ex!]] CheckPlease. In another episode, he went on a date with a girl who turned out to be a werewolf. Oddly enough in seasons 2 and 3, the animals are more realistic and they do not talk, otherwise why would Johnny wish to a Genie for a talking monkey when talking monkeys already existed in season 1? But when the show made it to season 4, the animals started talking again. No explanation is ever given for this. Even more uncannily, there was even an episode where a MadScientist had tried to create a race of anthropomorphic animals from humans, and that the foolish casanova ended up becoming a part of his experiments; one punchline in that particular episode involves Johnny making one of his usual pick-up lines about a foxy lady receptionist for the scientist, only for the "camera" to pan over and reveal that [[IncrediblyLamePun the woman is ''literally'' a furry fox-woman]].



* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'', humans, Funny Animals, and regular animals all coexist. Cats, dogs, and mice talk and act relatively human, although cats and dogs are still kept as pets and mice are still regularly chased (and presumably eaten) by the cats. Rabbits and newts are also kept as pets, but they have no human traits. Bears and even a woolly mammoth have also appeared, but they didn't talk either. No one, not even the show's humans, considers any of this unusual. And Kraken are magical aliens.
* A couple of episodes of ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' showed the existence of humans, including one particularly disturbing incident in the episode "[=CatDogPig=]", involving an experiment in democracy. Tired of being unable to agree on anything with Dog, Cat started strapping other animals (all of different species, to prevent their new combined name from repeating itself) to his and Dog's conjoined body in repeated unsuccessful attempts to increase votes for his side and become the majority. In the scene that shows the logical conclusion, a bat is recruited into the resulting conglomeration... ''by a naked bald human.''
** There was also a minor character who appeared periodically named [[IronicNickname Mr. Sunshine]]. He looked like a small green humanoid with a pig's tail. None of the characters know exactly what species he is. However, WordOfGod revealed that he was originally intended to be a monkey.
** Another episode had a human training a dog in a Dog Park (which was also populated by animal people walking non-anthropomorphic dogs, including another two legged, clothed dog).
* Creator/{{Disney}} has used this idea in several animated series (besides the aforementioned ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'').
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'', the titular heroes and their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is especially strange, as one of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing with a female human.
*** For some reason, there was at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.

to:

* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Catscratch}}'', humans, Funny Animals, and regular animals all coexist. Cats, dogs, and mice talk and act relatively human, although cats and dogs are still kept as pets and mice are still regularly chased (and presumably eaten) ''WesternAnimation/GetMuggsy'' (a spin-off from a kids' club founded by the cats. Rabbits now-defunct shopping mall company Mills Corporation) has a beaver, raccoon, opossum and newts are spider all interacting with humans repeatedly.
* Quite a few Creator/HannaBarbera cartoons had this. While a lot of HB 'toons featured run-of-the-mill {{Talking Animal}}s, there were
also kept shows such as pets, but they have no human traits. Bears ''WesternAnimation/TopCat'', ''WesternAnimation/YogiBear'', and even a woolly mammoth have also appeared, but they didn't talk either. No one, not even ''WesternAnimation/HongKongPhooey''. In ''WesternAnimation/HongKongPhooey'', Penry is the show's humans, considers any of this unusual. And Kraken are magical aliens.
* A couple of episodes of ''WesternAnimation/CatDog'' showed the existence of humans, including one particularly disturbing incident
only anthropomorphic animal in the episode "[=CatDogPig=]", involving an experiment in democracy. Tired of being unable series... which is probably supposed to agree on anything with Dog, Cat started strapping other animals (all of different species, to prevent their new combined name from repeating itself) to his and Dog's conjoined body in repeated unsuccessful attempts to increase votes for his side and become make even more ridiculous the majority. In the scene fact that shows the logical conclusion, nobody thinks a bat is recruited into the resulting conglomeration... ''by a naked bald human.''
** There was also a minor character who appeared periodically named [[IronicNickname Mr. Sunshine]]. He looked like a small green humanoid with a pig's tail. None
lowly police janitor could be Hong Kong Phooey.
* ''WesternAnimation/HarveyBirdmanAttorneyAtLaw'' Is especially guilty of this. Although most
of the animal characters know exactly what species he is. are anthropomorphic (being Hanna-Barbera characters), such as Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound. However, WordOfGod revealed that he was originally intended to be a monkey.
** Another episode had a human training a dog in a Dog Park (which was
are also populated by animal people walking non-anthropomorphic dogs, including another two legged, clothed dog).
* Creator/{{Disney}} has used this idea
characters as well, such as Birdman's eagle (who's his legal secretary) and a bear that works for Birdman's law firm that randomly pops in several animated series (besides each episode. In one episode, Mentok the aforementioned ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'').
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'',
Mind Taker switches the titular heroes and their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in
brains of an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is especially strange, as one of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing
attorney with an ordinary, non-sentient dog and in another, Phil Ken Sebben tries to house train Augie Doggie and break him among a female human.
*** For some reason, there was
group of ordinary dogs after Mentok sentences him to aggressiveness training after being accused of baring his teeth at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has
judge during a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.
trial case for biting someone.



* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'' has a similar setup to ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'' (which it predates by three years), as {{Intelligent Gerbil}}s from another world wind up fighting their enemies in an American city (in this case, UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}).
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Chowder}}'' is all over the place with this. Its world is populated by humans, {{Talking Animal}}s, {{Funny Animal}}s, MixAndMatchCritters, mythological creatures, and extinct animals.
** To wit: Chowder and Panini are [=bear/cat/rabbit=] mash-ups, Mung Daal is a blue human, Truffles is a fairy, Schnitzel is a rock monster, Gazpacho is a woolly mammoth, and Endive is an orange human (or possibly an ogre). Random townspeople are everything else.
** In fact, the only confirmed humans we ever see are {{exp|y}}ies of the Franchise/SuperMarioBros.
*** And the weirdos that come out during a blackout.
* The world of ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' is populated by anthropomorphic sea life (and one squirrel), with humans only appearing when they are seen abovewater. However, there is Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy, who are ordinary-looking humans (and, contrary to the name, not merpeople at all). The same thing applies to most of their RoguesGallery, partucularly Man-Ray. King Neptune and his daughter Mindy in TheMovie are full-on merpeople, as was the alternate version of Neptune seen in the episode "Neptune's Spatula".
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'' is an excellent example. Humans (both with regular skin colours and [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation odd ones]]), anthropomorphic animals, regular animals, aliens, and robots all exist in Mobius, and there seems to be no problem. For example, in one episode an anthropomorphic rabbit is reading a newspaper and is holding a normal dog by the leash. Just seconds later, an anthropomorphic dog comes into the shot! Weird stuff.
* In the ChristmasSpecial ''WesternAnimation/TwasTheNightBeforeChristmas'', the humans and the humanoid sapient mice of Junctionville openly interact on at least a professional basis, i.e. a clockmaker has a mouse assistant and the human mail carriers have mice counterparts who ride on their bags to deal with the mouse population's mail.
* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': In a show whose cast includes a talking gumball dispenser, an [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Abominable Snowman]], a troll, a ghost and a lollipop man, a six-foot blue jay and a talking raccoon are the most ''ordinary'' characters. In fact, the majority of certifiably human characters in the show are enemy characters or clueless friends of Muscle Man.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'' ''WesternAnimation/JasonAndTheHeroesOfMountOlympus'' has a similar setup to ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'' (which it predates by three years), as {{Intelligent Gerbil}}s from another world wind up fighting their enemies in an American city (in this case, UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}).
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Chowder}}'' is all over the place with this. Its world is populated by humans, {{Talking Animal}}s, {{Funny Animal}}s, MixAndMatchCritters, mythological creatures, and extinct animals.
** To wit: Chowder and Panini are [=bear/cat/rabbit=] mash-ups, Mung Daal is a blue human, Truffles is a fairy, Schnitzel is a rock monster, Gazpacho is a woolly mammoth, and Endive is an orange human (or possibly an ogre). Random townspeople are everything else.
** In fact, the only confirmed
both humans we ever see are {{exp|y}}ies of the Franchise/SuperMarioBros.
*** And the weirdos that come out during a blackout.
* The world of ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' is populated by
and anthropomorphic sea life (and one squirrel), animals interacting freely with humans only appearing when they each other, and portraying gods and goddesses in [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek mythology]]. Two of the main characters are seen abovewater. However, there is Mermaid Man Mercury and Barnacle Boy, who are ordinary-looking humans (and, contrary to Venus, respectively a rabbit and a squirrel.
* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyBravo'' is composed mainly of humans, yet
the name, not merpeople at all). The same thing applies to most of their RoguesGallery, partucularly Man-Ray. King Neptune and his daughter Mindy in TheMovie are full-on merpeople, as was the alternate version of Neptune seen in the main character often has run-ins with {{Talking Animal}}s. One episode "Neptune's Spatula".
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'' is an excellent example. Humans (both
has him going on a blind date with regular skin colours an antelope; as if that wasn't enough, at dinner his food (a crab) [[CarnivoreConfusion turns out to be his date's ex!]] CheckPlease. In another episode, he went on a date with a girl who turned out to be a werewolf. Oddly enough in seasons 2 and [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation odd ones]]), 3, the animals are more realistic and they do not talk, otherwise why would Johnny wish to a Genie for a talking monkey when talking monkeys already existed in season 1? But when the show made it to season 4, the animals started talking again. No explanation is ever given for this. Even more uncannily, there was even an episode where a MadScientist had tried to create a race of anthropomorphic animals, regular animals, aliens, animals from humans, and robots all exist in Mobius, and there seems to be no problem. For example, in that the foolish casanova ended up becoming a part of his experiments; one punchline in that particular episode an anthropomorphic rabbit is reading involves Johnny making one of his usual pick-up lines about a newspaper foxy lady receptionist for the scientist, only for the "camera" to pan over and is holding a normal dog by reveal that [[IncrediblyLamePun the leash. Just seconds later, an anthropomorphic dog comes into the shot! Weird stuff.
woman is ''literally'' a furry fox-woman]].
* In the ChristmasSpecial ''WesternAnimation/TwasTheNightBeforeChristmas'', the humans and the humanoid sapient mice of Junctionville openly interact ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'', a stop-motion animated series on at least a professional basis, i.e. a clockmaker has a mouse assistant and the human mail carriers have mice counterparts who ride on their bags to deal with the mouse population's mail.
* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': In a show whose cast includes a talking gumball dispenser, an [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Abominable Snowman]], a troll, a ghost and a lollipop man, a six-foot blue jay and a talking raccoon are the most ''ordinary'' characters. In fact, the majority of certifiably
[[Creator/DisneyChannel Playhouse Disney]] had human characters in the show are enemy (clowns) going to school with anthro characters or clueless friends along various stages of Muscle Man. the SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism and the main character having a "pet lion," though he too attended school and could talk.
* The ''Literature/LittleBear'' books (and TV show) has {{Funny Animal}}s (Little Bear and his family), {{Talking Animal}}s (most of Little Bear's friends), Little Bear's friend Emily and her grandmother (who are both humans), ''and'' Emily's non-anthropomorphic, non-talking dog, Tutu.



* Part of the premise of ''WesternAnimation/MyGymPartnersAMonkey'', where the human Adam Lyon is enrolled into a school of nothing but Funny Animals.
* In the various incarnations of ComicStrip/{{Rupert|Bear}} (also a bear), both humans and animals lived in Rupert's world. Most of the citizens of Rupert's hometown were animal, though several of Rupert's friends, TheProfessor and [[ChineseGirl Tiger Lily]], were human, as were residents of several nearby towns like Appleton. Nutwood Forest is also populated by sentient but otherwise "normal" {{Talking Animal}}s!
* Being from the same artist and creative team, ''WesternAnimation/TucaAndBertie'' also features human characters coexisting with animals (mostly BirdPeople including the title characters).














* Creator/{{Disney}} has used this idea in several animated series (besides the aforementioned ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'').
** ''WesternAnimation/{{Bonkers}}'' had "toons" and realistically drawn humans in the same world. Not surprising since Bonkers was a CaptainErsatz of [[Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit Roger Rabbit]].
** In ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'', the titular heroes and their evil reptilian overlords bring their conflict to AnotherDimension--namely Anaheim, California.
** In ''WesternAnimation/QuackPack'', WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck, [[WesternAnimation/DaisyDuck Daisy]] and the nephews are the only {{Funny Animal}}s in an all-human world. No explanation is given.
*** The Quack Pack one is especially strange, as one of the nephews has a one episode crush/flirtation thing with a female human.
*** For some reason, there was at least ''one'' episode in the series that featured "[[DogFace dog-nosed]]" supporting characters; the one where Donald has to serve one more day in the navy.
** ''WesternAnimation/LegendOfTheThreeCaballeros'' has a variant: mortals are all FunnyAnimals, but the gods (Xandra, Goddess of Adventure; the Roman pantheon; and the Mexican God of the Dead) all take human form.
* Creator/{{Disney}} also had several WesternAnimation/ClassicDisneyShorts of this humans with funny animals vein, especially WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck and WesternAnimation/HumphreyTheBear shorts, the latter of which had a main human character, Adubon Woodlore.
** In the WartimeCartoon "WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace", every character except Donald and the rooster are human. "Trick or Treat" had a TokenHuman character, Witch Hazel, alongside Huey, Dewey, and Louie.
* A few of the "How to" and "George Geef" WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} shorts had humans alongside {{Dogfaces}} or InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs.
** "How to Dance" had the human "Firehouse Five Plus Two" featured alongside InexplicablyIdenticalIndividuals Goofs. "Father's Day Off" had Goofy (George G. Geef in this cartoon) carry a ''human'' baby around in part of the cartoon as well as some human extras along with the usual {{Dogfaces}}.
* ''WesternAnimation/MickeyMouseFunhouse'' has WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse and his friends interacting with humans, mostly in the world the gang visits. They also coexist with the dognose characters.

















* The world of ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' is populated by anthropomorphic sea life (and one squirrel), with humans only appearing when they are seen abovewater. However, there is Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy, who are ordinary-looking humans (and, contrary to the name, not merpeople at all). The same thing applies to most of their RoguesGallery, partucularly Man-Ray. King Neptune and his daughter Mindy in TheMovie are full-on merpeople, as was the alternate version of Neptune seen in the episode "Neptune's Spatula".
* In the ChristmasSpecial ''WesternAnimation/TwasTheNightBeforeChristmas'', the humans and the humanoid sapient mice of Junctionville openly interact on at least a professional basis, i.e. a clockmaker has a mouse assistant and the human mail carriers have mice counterparts who ride on their bags to deal with the mouse population's mail.
* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': In a show whose cast includes a talking gumball dispenser, an [[BigfootSasquatchAndYeti Abominable Snowman]], a troll, a ghost and a lollipop man, a six-foot blue jay and a talking raccoon are the most ''ordinary'' characters. In fact, the majority of certifiably human characters in the show are enemy characters or clueless friends of Muscle Man.



* ''WesternAnimation/HarveyBirdmanAttorneyAtLaw'' Is especially guilty of this. Although most of the animal characters are anthropomorphic (being Hanna-Barbera characters), such as Yogi Bear and Huckleberry Hound. However, are also non-anthropomorphic characters as well, such as Birdman's eagle (who's his legal secretary) and a bear that works for Birdman's law firm that randomly pops in each episode. In one episode, Mentok the Mind Taker switches the brains of an attorney with an ordinary, non-sentient dog and in another, Phil Ken Sebben tries to house train Augie Doggie and break him among a group of ordinary dogs after Mentok sentences him to aggressiveness training after being accused of baring his teeth at the judge during a trial case for biting someone.
* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'': Although when you have a world populated by dragons, vampires, fluffy people, candy people, why-wolves, elementals, gem people, undead, rainicorns, plant creatures, hot dog people, gods and a sentient game console, talking animals such as Jake the dog are the least strange thing in the Land of OOO. However, Finn is the only human seen in the series (with the exception of the mutant human tribe he meets in one episode), and his species is considered endangered according to the Adventure Time wiki page. Most of the inhabitants that resemble humans in OOO are classified as humanoid or mutant.
** The "Islands" mini-series in Season 8 confirms the existence of humans outside of Ooo. It also confirms that one recurring character, [[spoiler:Susan Strong]], was human all along.
* ''WesternAnimation/GetMuggsy'' (a spin-off from a kids' club founded by the now-defunct shopping mall company Mills Corporation) has a beaver, raccoon, opossum and spider all interacting with humans repeatedly.



* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresFromTheBookOfVirtues''
* ''WesternAnimation/DanielTigersNeighborhood'', an animated spinoff of ''Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood'' has Daniel Tiger and several funny animals as his friends and family, but also several human characters.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresFromTheBookOfVirtues''
* ''WesternAnimation/DanielTigersNeighborhood'', an animated spinoff of ''Series/MisterRogersNeighborhood'' has Daniel Tiger and several funny animals as his friends and family, but also several human characters.




* ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'', a stop-motion animated series on [[Creator/DisneyChannel Playhouse Disney]] had human characters (clowns) going to school with anthro characters along various stages of the SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism and the main character having a "pet lion," though he too attended school and could talk.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/JoJosCircus'', a stop-motion animated series on [[Creator/DisneyChannel Playhouse Disney]] had human characters (clowns) going to school with anthro characters along various stages of the SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism and the main character having a "pet lion," though he too attended school and could talk.



* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' takes place in [[WorldOfWeirdness the City of Elmore]], where all the animals and [[EverythingTalks every single object]] [[TalkingAnimal is capable of thought and speech]], with some of them [[FunnyAnimal living like humans]], forming the town's "population". However, humans--'''[[MediumBlending live-action]]''' humans-- have frequently been shown on the TV and internet without comment. This, along with the [[MediumBlending photographic backgrounds]], imply [[ToonTown the world outside of Elmore is mostly the same as real life and populated by regular humans]]. And then there's [[BizarroEpisode "The Sweaters"]], which shows Elmore has some ''animated'' humans, but [[NonStandardCharacterDesign the way they look]], how they act, and the places they hang around are leagues more bizarre than any of the nonhumans in the show.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' takes place in [[WorldOfWeirdness the City of Elmore]], where all the animals and [[EverythingTalks every single object]] [[TalkingAnimal is capable of thought and speech]], with some of them [[FunnyAnimal living like humans]], forming the town's "population". However, humans--'''[[MediumBlending live-action]]''' humans-- have frequently been shown on the TV and internet without comment. This, along with the [[MediumBlending photographic backgrounds]], imply [[ToonTown the world outside of Elmore is mostly the same as real life and populated by regular humans]]. And then there's [[BizarroEpisode "The Sweaters"]], which shows Elmore has some ''animated'' humans, but [[NonStandardCharacterDesign the way they look]], how they act, and the places they hang around are leagues more bizarre than any of the nonhumans in the show.



* The classic ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' cartoons are populated mostly by FunnyAnimals with Betty Boop and Koko the Clown usually being the only humans onscreen. The reason for this is that Betty Boop was originally conceived as a FunnyAnimal character.

to:

* The classic ''WesternAnimation/BettyBoop'' cartoons are populated mostly by FunnyAnimals with Betty Boop and Koko the Clown usually being the only humans onscreen. The reason for this is that Betty Boop was originally conceived as a FunnyAnimal character.



* ''WesternAnimation/JasonAndTheHeroesOfMountOlympus'' has both humans and anthropomorphic animals interacting freely with each other, and portraying gods and goddesses in [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek mythology]]. Two of the main characters are Mercury and Venus, respectively a rabbit and a squirrel.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/JasonAndTheHeroesOfMountOlympus'' has both humans and anthropomorphic animals interacting freely with each other, and portraying gods and goddesses in [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Greek mythology]]. Two of the main characters are Mercury and Venus, respectively a rabbit and a squirrel.



* ''WesternAnimation/TheBearWhoSleptThroughChristmas'': Bears and humans exist in the same world but unlike other examples of this trope, they live separately in their own societies with no evidence that they regularly interact with each other.

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* ''WesternAnimation/TheBearWhoSleptThroughChristmas'': Bears and humans exist in the same world but unlike other examples of this trope, they live separately in their own societies with no evidence that they regularly interact with each other.
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* ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'': Despite taking place on Mobius, as world that was mainly populated by anthros and existed separately from Earth, there was a few human characters along with Robotnik.
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[[folder:Eastern Animation]]
* Czech children's cartoon, ''Animation/TheLittleMole'' (Czech: ''Krtek'' or ''Krteček''), is this for the most part. Animals are naked and they live in their natural habitat (in this case, the forest), but they are very sapient and act decidly human-like. And there are humans in the cartoon and they seem aware of this as they interact with animals very much like they would interact with other humans. For example, there is an episode where Krtek becomes a movie star and signs his autographs to his fans (all are shown to be human).
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->'''Teacher''': So the first Little Pig went to the store. He asked the merchant, 'I'd like to buy some straw please.' And what do you think the man said?\\

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->'''Teacher''': So the [[Literature/ThreeLittlePigs first Little Pig went to the store. He asked the merchant, 'I'd like to buy some straw please.' ']] And what do you think the man said?\\
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* ''WesternAnimation/SantasMagicCrystal'' has Poro the anthopomorphic reindeer in a world otherwise populated with humans and ChristmasElves.

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