Follow TV Tropes

Following

Quirky Work / Western Animation

Go To

By creator

  • [adult swim]'s original animation block is filled to the brim with a variety of oddities, starting from Space Ghost Coast to Coast (an anarchic, animated "talk show"):
    • Aqua Teen Hunger Force, the misadventures of a trio of talking fast-food items, and their put-upon neighbor.
    • Perfect Hair Forever, a parody of anime in general and shonen anime in particular. The hero's mentor and the main villain look identical aside from one being nearly bald and the other having kaleidoscopic Anime Hair, and minions include Catman (who is just a guy in a cat costume) and Terry/Twisty, a walking, talking tree with a Split Personality (who later seems to do a Heel–Face Turn but that's around the point where the show stopped following the plot and started just being a Random Events Plot).
    • Sealab 2021, which has surreal, rambling plots and often outright insane characters.
    • Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, a show with the eponymous superhero-turned-lawyer as its protagonist. Many of his cases are based around jokes referencing old, sometimes obscure American cartoons.
    • The Brak Show, which parodies the trope in its WJT form in the episode "Sexy New Brak Show Go".
    • Black Dynamite, which focuses on fantastically warped versions of characters from out-of-date African American culture and just plain weirdness.
    • The rest of [adult swim], and quite possibly all other media that has ever been made, is put to absolute shame by Xavier: Renegade Angel. The main character is a creature with the legs of a goat, six nipples, the beak of a bird, and a snake for a hand. One episode ends with a casino being destroyed by sentient drops of blood. And that's one of the relatively normal episodes.
    • Mike Tyson Mysteries, which is exactly what it sounds like — an Affectionate Parody of Hanna-Barbera's 70's "mystery-solvers" cartoons, starring a foppish ghost, a talking pigeon, a teenaged Asian girl, and Mike Tyson As Himself.
    • 12 oz. Mouse. Some describe it as Incomprehensible Art: The Cartoon. No surprise given that it's Stylistic Suck mixed with bizarre pseudo-drama.
    • Rick and Morty falls more on the bizarre end of this trope. While sci-fi comedy is nothing new by any means, it has never been this demented. Planets and alternate universes with hamsters living in humans' butts, structures and organisms modeled on a cob down to the molecular level, sentient furniture beings that use humans as furniture and eat phones, sentient phones that use pizza as furniture, anthropomorphic pizza slices that eat humans... that's only the tip of the iceberg.
    • Superjail!, a series about a demented Willy Wonka expy running a colorful jail full of bloody murder.
    • Metalocalypse, which focuses on five mentally unstable metal musicians who rule the world and are angels of death and violence.
    • Assy McGee is a Buddy Cop Show where the protagonist is a walking, talking ass.
    • Off the Air: About 99.999999999999% of the clips are this.
  • Aardman Animations animations are often filled with British terms that non-Brits might not be familiar with.
    • Rex the Runt manages to be the epitome of this. A bunch of claymation dogs and their adventures through time, outer-space, 'inside brains'...
    • The Presentators is one of these; an extremely short-lived series about a trio of otherwise-normal Cartoon Creatures hosting a TV show, featuring theme parks based on countries, hats that make music when lifted from the table, and reality-warping weather maps that can crush people with giant pencils.
  • The Fleischer Studios were cuckoo with anything they did. There's a ghost of a walrus singing a song written by Cab Calloway, rotoscoped from Cab Calloway's dancing; as well as Koko the Clown's antics.
    • It says something about the studio that their most normal work is the Popeye shorts, which are about a hero that gets Super-Strength from eating spinach.
  • A lot of Hanna-Barbera shows are this, depending on how obscure they are. A show featuring a talking dog Kung-fu hero? A show where a woman is constantly in danger of being brutally murdered? And even those shows are fairly well known.
    • The H-B crossover series Jellystone! is what happens when you combine the H-B library with Chowder, Regular Show, and Nichijou. Choice plots include Yogi voring everyone, Cindy turning the entire town into gelatin, El Kabong transforming into a guitar, evil animatronics at a pizza arcade, a destructive VR game, and a random Animesque battle sequence.
  • There are many quirks from Teletoon:
    • Jimmy Two-Shoes makes you wonder the following: how many other versions of Hell have giant talking sandwiches (among other objects), what a month in which everyone falls asleep for a day would be like, what evil pickles would taste like, why biker clowns exists, what to make of a perfume that turns wearers into giraffes, how fun racing fleas are, whether evil space unicorns migrate, and wheteher a demon version of the Tooth Fairy slumbers? It's probably worth noting that a lot of these happened in Season 2 as opposed to the more defined Miseryville of Season 1.
    • Spliced. The premise being about Mix-and-Match Critters is just the top of the barrel, where the very first episode involves bowling pin aliens invading Earth.
    • There's one particular pure, undiluted clusterfuck in Wishfart, a series best described as The Fairly OddParents! on crack. The main characters are a non-traditional leprechaun, a talking puffin, and a Stringy-Haired Ghost Girl. Every episode title is a non-sequitur uttered in the episode. And a normal episode for the series would be the leprechaun eating cabbage to impress a mermaid that leads to snowmen declaring war on everyone. Even the freakin' title screams weird!note 
    • Yakkity Yak, an obscure and short-lived Gag Series that also aired on Nickelodeon in 2003. It's about the adventures of a yak who lives in the town of Onion Falls and dreams about being a comedian. By itself, that's weird enough, but to add to it, his best friend is a pineapple-headed person, his agent is a trilobite, and a mad scientist with hair that changes colour based on his mood and a robot daughter/assistant lives in his basement.
By individual show
  • Obscure 1990s cartoon The Adventures Of T-Rex is set in a world that's a spoof of Film Noir and Vaudeville cliches and has The Family for the Whole Family as villains. The heroes put on sentai-style Powered Armor that's Color-Coded for Your Convenience to fight crime. Oh, and all the characters are anthropomorphic dinosaurs.
  • Adventure Time, the bizarre adventures of a boy and his dog in a post-apocalyptic fantasy world, much of which is totally surreal. The show itself also has the de facto infamous "Food Chain", animated by Masaaki Yuasa. It is bizarre even by the show's own standards. At one point the characters turn into birds and sing an aria from The Magic Flute, and it just gets stranger from there...
  • The Amazing World of Gumball is this in terms of animation (a mix of stop-motion, computer-generated effects and traditional animation), characters (the protagonist is a blue cat with an orange fish as his adopted brother, and his parents are a pink bunny married with another blue cat; his schoolmates include a Tyrannosaurus rex, a paper-made bear, a cactus and a cloud) and events (very silly incidents that are taken too seriously). Many episodes revolve around the characters reacting to and examining tropes the way a normal person would, making their setup all the funnier.
  • Avez-vous déjà vu... ? can easily beat FLCL and Azumanga Daioh for the title of the weirdest series in the world. Although it seems like all the information about this... strangeness... is in French, you can find some videos on the Internet by googling the title. It was made by Alain Chabat, who's considered the king of the weird in France.
  • Baby Jake is about the eponymous character as part of a baby's face on an animated body who gets its babbling translated by the character's 6-year old brother, while they reside in a windmill in England. To parents, it's irritating and annoying. To others, it makes them go "What the hell did I just watch?"
    • From the other side of the pond is the W(H)AT Go, Baby!, a series of shorts that aired during Playhouse Disney in the 2000s and briefly returned in 2012 when it rebranded to Disney Junior. Like Baby Jake, the characters are animated photographs.
  • Bojack Horseman competes with Regular Show in that the fact that nobody finds anthropomorphic animal actors in a human-filled world and walking in broad daylight to be odd brings questions to first-time viewers' minds.
  • Breadwinners: Two talking ducks run a bread delivery business and do things like sneak into girl summer camps and chase cops with a chainsaw.
  • The Buzz on Maggie easily qualifies for this trope just by virtue of being an otherwise rather archetypal tween-girl sitcom set in an anthropomorphic-sentient-bug-infested garbage dump where basically everything is made out of trash and other assorted human refuse.
  • CatDog involves a pair of Conjoined Twins who happen to be a cat and a dog who live with their blue mouse-like neighbor and constantly go through complete and utter misery while dealing with a gang of literal Greaser dogs, a green rabbit who has at least one new job every episode, and were raised by a yeti-like creature and a frog with a big nose and the voice of Billy Bob Thornton. It's disturbingly bizarre as well, thanks to the plethora of disturbing imagery and Deranged Animation.
  • Celebrity Deathmatch: Take two or more celebrities, put them in a wrestling ring and make them duke it out until one of them is left alive. Then make the whole setting a World of Ham. With lots of bloodshed and violence, this show is a prime example of all the weirdness possible that can be captured in claymation form.
  • Centaurworld, a typical episode of which involves a talking horse competing in a drag queen show or a kleptomaniac antelope counseling her kidnappers through their OCD. Centaurworld's off-putting-ness is used as a setting element; it's a planet that exists alongside a fairly realistic medieval Earth, and the protagonist (who got stranded in it from the latter) has extreme difficulty coping with the weirdness there.
  • ChalkZone shows viewers that kids having adventures in a world inhabited by walking, talking chalk drawings means lots of weirdness, alright.
  • Chapi Chapo, consists of the playful adventures of two small... children that manipulate innumerable boxes, and sometimes even physical laws.
  • One of the earliest French CGI series, Chipie & Clyde, a series about a selfish wolf called Clyde who live in a loft and his antagonist, a girl called Chipie, who is able to send him by magic to make a test each time he says the F word. In the same case, Les Quarxs, a scientist who shows some weird creatures that came from nowhere which caused him some serious problems in his work.
  • Chowder. Sentient food, No Fourth Wall, and Dr. Seuss-like weirdness? Yup. Definitely an example.
  • The Clangers, a '70s British children's show which was about pink alien mice that spoke in whistles; one could call it a BBT (Bizarre British Thing).
  • Coconut Fred's Fruit Salad Island. Take SpongeBob SquarePants and VeggieTales, throw them in a blender, add a whole load of plots so nonsensical and random that you head will be spinning by the time the episode's over, and make them into a cartoon. Voila, one of the weirdest cartoons ever made.
  • Cow and Chicken is about a couple, who both happen to be a pair of legs, who have two children: a cow and a chicken. The duo are harassed in every episode by an insane, crossdressing demon who emphasizes his lack of pants and the former of the two can turn into a Spanish-speaking superhero. What.
  • HBO's late-90s show Crashbox was a rare edutainment example— the premise of the show was a bunch of robots inside a giant, steampunk-ish computer would create game cartridges for segments where the viewers would learn stuff, ranging from a robotic match teacher who taught "Psycho Math", to a talking pair of ears who would try to guess where they were based on the noises they heard.
  • Doctor Snuggles has a lot of elements best understood in the context of British culture with a 1970s vibe to it. You have British elements like an idyllic countryside and tea drinking; psychedelic animation; a Funny Animal supporting cast to the title character; plus talking trees!
  • Drawn Together, TV's first animated reality show where characters die and come back in the same episode without explanation, making it the most unrealistic animated show ever created. Really think about how completely insane that is. Word of God implied nothing in this show is ever meant to make any sense other than that it's funny.
  • Epic (1984) is apparently set in the distant past and features two children raised by dingoes who must find a way to remain with them; As the writer and director Yoram Gross put it: "A rather Australian film - I can't say very successful, a little bit too much experimental film, too much abstract story."
  • Family Guy is filled with pop-culture references, many of which only a few people will get. Other than that, there are episodes with plots like Peter buying an army tank at a car dealership, Brian and Stewie going back to the Pilot and attempting to stop 9/11 only for it to backfire, Peter discovering the house is technically not on American soil and nearly starting a war, Peter and Lois getting pursued by an angry Mel Gibson in a second honeymoon gone awry, Chris's evil talking pimple encouraging him to do horrible things, and so forth. There’s also the fact that Stewie is a sadistic baby bent on killing Lois, and there's another kid whose face is on upside-down.
  • Fat Dog Mendoza: The adventures of a boy in a superhero costume and his dog (which looks more like a giant cat's head with legs and a tail). They're best friends with a girl who has purple hair, their teacher has two heads (one named Polly, the other Esther), the villains include a guy with feet for hands and another with a giant green head... and that's just the premise.
  • Freakazoid! If you're a newcomer to the show, and not tearing your hair out in frustration, crying "WHAT!? THE!? HELL?!?" by the time the chimpanzee line rolls around in its opening theme, then you should probably check yourself into the nearest psychiatric ward. And that's just one of the many, MANY oddities that this show likes to throw at you.
  • Future-Worm!: A boy makes a time machine out of his own lunch box and befriends the eponymous character, an unbelievably badass worm, complete with a beard. Hilarity Ensues.
  • Gravity Falls: Twin Peaks style supernatural animated weirdness, and on Disney to boot. Though not as weird as everyone else on this list, the aptly titled "Weirdmageddon" trilogy is filled with such characters as The Horrifying Sweaty One-Armed Monstrosity, who politely asks if it wouldn't be too much trouble for you to get in his mouth, a keyhole monster named Keyhole, and many other odd henchmen working for Bill Cipher, who prides himself on his weirdness.
  • The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy is what happens when you combine this trope with Black Comedy and Grossout Show. Episode premises have included a principal and a hippo being turned into rappers, Billy turning the world into a 30s-era cartoon by juggling chickens, an invisible fart-imitating duck annoying everyone, and a parody of Hanna-Barbera cartoon characters trying to conquer the world by stealing beds.
  • Hoze Houndz is a huge. Think Fireman Sam but if it was made by Furry Fandom members on a lot of drugs. One piece of fanart on DeviantArt had a comment recalling an episode "where the main characters go to a fast-food restaurant and they get toys that were actually superpower accessories." In other words, a typical episode.
  • John Dillermand is a Danish children's TV series about a man and his very long and prehensile penis, that can act independently of him and get him into trouble.
  • Kaeloo: The entire cast are mentally unstable talking animals, they live on a planet that runs on magic (with no buildings, stores, schools, offices, etc.), there's ridiculous amounts of violence and destruction, and the characters have access to time machines, love potions and the like.
  • King of the Hill comes across this way to anyone who isn't from Middle America or the Deep South, given their focus on the good 'ol ways and Texas being the biggest "professional football fanatic" state. Ironically though, King of the Hill may be the ultimate anti-quirk Series. On top of that, the lead character feels this way about anything outside his comfort zone.
  • Little Elvis Jones and the Truckstoppers consists of a foundling who may or may not be the heir to Elvis Presley, he and his friends having a profitable band, and conflict with an asshole corporate bigwig who uses Unobtanium to cheat at marbles and constantly subjects his one minion to Electric Torture.
  • The Looney Tunes shorts directed by Bob Clampett thrive on this, being some of the craziest, most imaginatively bizarre cartoons ever made. Landmark shorts like Porky in Wackyland and The Great Piggy Bank Robbery barely scratch the surface.
  • The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack. Just watch the opening. Though, much of the oddness comes from the sheer amount of horror being used as Black Comedy.
  • MOT, a French animated series based on an already strange series of comic books by Azpiri and Nacho. The titular character is a purple (green in the comics) monster who is able to travel through time with his human companion Leo. MOT comes out from Leo's closet to take him to all sorts of places, while Leo is determined to keep MOT's existence a secret from his family and his neighbor Zelda (who is constantly spying on him).
  • Nina Needs to Go! turned out to look off-putting for most foreign markets, as the concept of a grandma who does insane stunts to take her grandkid to the bathroom on time seemed to be a little bit over the top and strange for them.
  • OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes: First off, God in this universe is a corncob. Next, Santa Claus is a school principal. Video games are referred to as "videos game" [sic], there's a talking sun, a strawberry girl, a robot barber, a Real Magic Skeleton (yes, he's called that), a guy with cobras for hands, a salesman with cookies for eyes, and everyone has their own trading card and "Hero Level". And there's the Off-Model animation, and all the very specific anime and Cartoon Network jokes that only a few people will get.
  • Oscar's Orchestra on CBBC. Set in the very distant future, about a group of sentient music instruments (Oscar is a grand blue piano, and their leader) fighting the music-hating world dictator Thaddius Vent.
  • Panique au Village (A Town Called Panic) is a bizarre Belgian stop-motion shorts series. Also, Pic Pic André Shoow by the same authors.
  • The Patrick Star Show thrives on Surreal Humor and crazy plots. There's an episode where Patrick goes back in time to teach his mother to be a race car, one where their house grows chicken legs and runs around town, one about Patrick getting stuck in the couch, one where Patrick and his grandfather get into an all-out war over trying to cross the stairs at the same time...
  • PB&J Otter is an animated series from the same people as Doug about a trio of river otters who live on a houseboat on a lake of undetermined location who do a "Noodle Dance" to solve problems, and live alongside a variety of neighbors including millionaire poodles, a toilet seat-collecting "mayor", and "watchbird" cranes.
  • Peepoodo & the Super Fuck Friends, a French animated series which heavily parodies children's cartoons in the vein of Happy Tree Friends and Kaeloo, and although there are some very helpful lessons on sexuality scattered throughout, it's packed with unbelievably graphic and raunchy content. (one episode even discusses coprophilia and urophilia) Also, almost every single one of the characters has their junk hanging out.
  • Phineas and Ferb could be best summed up as Ed, Edd n Eddy on crack. The series revolves around two boys who decide to spend a supposedly 104-day summer vacation by doing all sorts of crazy & inane activities (mainly making crazy inventions in their backyard), all while their older sister tries to get them busted for it. And then there's the stranger elements such as each episode's subplot where the family pet becomes a secret agent and fights an evil German mad scientist, and random appearances by a giant floating baby head.
  • Pib and Pog is essentially Britain's answer to Zambot 3, with the maniacal humor and guise as a preschool show, though unlike the latter it's accompanied by the soothing voice of a narrator.
  • Pickle and Peanut If the name alone didn't tip you off, how about spoonfuls of Deranged Animation, excessive Art Shifts, Medium Blending, and just all-out weirdness.
  • Pingu is a Claymation series about a Bratty Half-Pint little boy penguin, who can stretch and squash himself into any shape he desires, who speaks a non-sensical babble thus leaving the stories of the show to be told through inference via body language, and of which several episodes have been Banned in China due to horror and Toilet Humor.
  • La planète de Donkey Kong (especially its final years under the DKTV title) is pretty weird by design: it's basically a post-modern sketch show featuring a handful of the Donkey Kong characters, who behave very differently from their portrayals in any other media, and features humour and subject matter raunchier than what you'd expect for something based on a Nintendo property. The frequent references to French pop culture and that most of the skits are built around untranslatable puns are the icing on the weird cake.
  • The Problem Solverz, a rather polarizing cartoon about a man, a robot, and a "dog-anteater" (he looks more like a turd with limbs and a face) who do Exactly What It Says on the Tin.
  • Ready Jet Go! has a family of aliens with unpronounceable names on their home planet and vegetable names on Earth, and their pet is a dog-cat-rabbit thing that speaks using sound effects. This makes for lots of absurd jokes.
  • Regular Show has the tagline "It's anything but [regular]". The cast comprises a mish-mash of humans, animals, creatures and inanimate objects, and every episode has surreal events, their resolutions being even more so. It also has its In-Universe bizarro show: Planet Chasers Starlight Excellent. It's so nonsensical, it traps your mind within the videotape.
  • The short Rejected, by Don Hertzfeldt. "You're watching the Family Learning Channel. And now, angry ticks fire out of my nipples."
  • The Ren & Stimpy Show was not known only for its bizarre, grossout humor, but also off-kilter music choices...
  • Les Renés, a series about a cyclop family, created by the French artist Hervé Di Rosa and based on all of his bizarre paintings.
  • Robotomy. A kid's show about robots going to school is one thing, but one where something (or someone) is destroyed every other scene, the cast is almost entirely mentally unstable, and the ENTIRE planet is a war zone is pure quirk.
  • The Secret Show, a show about two secret agents going on adventures that include explosive boogers and a sentient evil brain that feeds on fear.
  • Parodied in The Simpsons, when an already manically bizarre promotional videotape for the Japanese cleaning product Mr. Sparkle includes, for no apparent reason, a brief clip of a reporter asking a two-headed cow, "Any plans for summer?" Then the cow shatters with a look of horror on its face(s) upon viewing Mr. Sparkle.
  • Soupe Opéra: Definitely another small part of French weirdness. Fruit and vegetables move around and form animals, all to '90s-sounding music.
  • South Park occasionally veers into this territory, especially in its more nonsensical episodes. Being a series that relies heavily on American popular culture and news, an outsider may find an easier time comprehending the episodes with Talking Poo. In the directors' commentary of FLCL, the director and the interviewer commented that South Park comes across as a big-time creative dissonance in Japan since so many of the popular culture references are lost.
  • SpongeBob SquarePants could be seen this way by people who aren't used to it. A show that takes place underwater (even though that doesn’t really matter), is about a talking kitchen utensil who lives in a fruit, has pet snail that acts like a cat, one of his friends is a squirrel in a space suit, and that’s just what’s considered mundane.
    • The show's third movie, The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run features two rather bizarre characters: a tumbleweed with a human's face and a human who lives in an underwater version of Atlantic City.
  • Steven Universe: The title character is a half-alien, half-human boy with three alien aunts, one of which is actually two smaller aunts, but also herself, and one human dad. He is also his mom, who is also the alter ego of a space goddess who became fascinated with humanity and waged war against her older sisters to save the Earth from being hollowed out for its organic resources. He owns a pink lion who was revived from the dead with his mother's tears whose mane contains a pocket dimension that functions as a hold-all storage unit.
  • TaleSpin is an old Disney cartoon about the golden age of seaplane travel. What makes it very bizarre is that characters are very, very randomly taken from The Jungle Book (1967), a work with a vastly different tone and plot. They have been anthropomorphized and revisioned, with Shere Khan for example going from a regular wild tiger living in a forest to a bipedal businessman.
  • The 80's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was bizarre to anyone familiar with the original Mirage Comics. Lampshaded during Turtles Forever. After transporting into the dimension of the 1987 TMNT cartoon, the 2003 Turtles witness the heroics of their 1987 counterparts as they rescue April from evil leprechauns, monster bowling balls, mutant pizza slices, and... well, Raphael says the last one:
    2003 Raphael: Was that a mutant... banana?
    2003 Michelangelo: This dimension is seriously messed-up.
  • Teen Titans made reference to this, as the weirder episodes (such as those involving insane Reality Warper villains like Mad Mod and Mumbo Jumbo) usually had the theme song done in Japanese whereas the more "serious" episodes had it in English. Follow-up series Teen Titans Go!, while less Animesque, just outright drops the seriousness and embraces glurge.
  • From much of the same team as Bojack Horseman, we have Tuca & Bertie, taking place in a similar World of Funny Animals with much more offbeat humor, which is faster-paced to boot. The first episode alone involves the titular duo searching for an urn belonging to Bertie's boyfriend Speckle, containing his grandmother's ashes, ultimately leading to the two chasing a turtle through the city into a bakery, where the ashes are baked into a cake... only for Speckle's grandmother to be reincarnated as a cake. She then tells Speckle to eat her, so she can live on in his stomach.
  • The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat has extremely Deranged Animation and Surreal Humour, which Felix often uses to his advantage. It's essentially what the classic Felix shorts would look like combined with with the works of Max and Dave Fleischer and The Ren & Stimpy Show.
  • Uncle Grandpa. From the moment Uncle Grandpa reappears in the picture frame after disappearing from view from outside, and then walking into frame from the side (if not sooner), it's been made incredibly clear that this show isn't simply on a rocket train to Weirdsville, it already arrived long ago, made itself at home and set up shop.
  • Wander over Yonder. Take Looney Tunes, the wackiness of SpongeBob SquarePants, the character designs of Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, and a space setting. Now, put them in a blender, and voila! A weird, wacky little cartoon.
    • If you think that's weird, from the same creator as Cow and Chicken is YooHoo & Friends, which is exactly what you get when you take some obscure Korean preschool cartoon based on a cute toyline and Westernize it by re-dubbing and re-animating it into a fourth-wall breaking comedy show about five greedy executives who are turned into cute, fluffy animals by the Father Time (voiced by the Flavor Flav), and in order to wish themselves back into being humans, they must do good deeds and help out the environment. If literally any of that was confusing to you, you now know exactly what you're in for.
  • What’s the Big Idea? is a show all about philosophy...for preschoolers, which certainly sounds weird, and even if it doesn't, it's hard to picture in your head.
  • WordWorld: Everything and everyone is made of the letters in their name, and new objects (and even new characters) can be created by just putting the appropriate letters next to each other. It's especially strange by PBS standards.
    Eat the ghost cake! Eat the ghost cake!
  • Wunschpunsch is wild. Who thought a series wherein a cat and a raven are forced to stop their witch owners' spells from destroying the city they live in could be so crazy?

Top