Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Webcomic / FifteenMinds

Go To

1[[http://fifteenminds.tumblr.com/ Fifteen Minds]] is a Tumblr run by artist [[http://jaho-12.tumblr.com/ Jaho-12]] as a repository for, in the artist's words, "little, friendly, sometimes strange stories". The stories on this Tumblr are standalone comics told entirely in images, posted page by page, without so much as a single word, and vary greatly in subject matter. Stories currently on the Tumblr include:
2
3* ''[[http://fifteenminds.tumblr.com/tagged/bluemoonblossom/chrono Blue Moon Blossom]]'' (April 14th, 2018 - July 20th, 2018; 31 pages): A red-furred bunny and a turquoise-colored sauropod go on an adventure together through a beautiful world, gathering friends along the way.
4* ''[[http://fifteenminds.tumblr.com/tagged/Legend%20of%20legendary%20mighty%20knight/chrono Legend of Legendary Mighty Knight]]'' (August 24th, 2018 - August 17th, 2019; 28 pages): An errant knight goes on misadventures for less-than-heroic reasons with their slug-cat mount, making friends along the way. HilarityEnsues.
5* ''[[https://fifteenminds.tumblr.com/tagged/Gemini/chrono Gemini]]'' (August 19th, 2019 - Present): When a magenta-furred rabbit alien is forced to flee the destruction of their planet, they encounter a peculiar young child and try to figure out what comes next.
6
7----
8
9!!Tropes found in the stories of Fifteen Minds include:
10
11[[foldercontrol]]
12[[folder:Tropes found across multiple stories or that apply to the stories as a whole]]
13* AmbiguousGender: None of the characters in any of the stories have any really clear gender indicators, and since there's no dialogue or written language, nothing is ever stated on the topic.
14** [[ZigZaggingTrope The red dragon... might be male?]] ''Legend of Legendary Mighty Knight'' ends with the red dragon and a black dragon getting together. Both dragons are drawn with eyelashes- the red only with lower lashes, and the black with upper lashes, but then the red dragon puts on a bowtie and a flower, making the black dragon blush and swoon.
15* BeautifulVoid: The worlds that ''Blue Moon Blossom'' and ''Gemini'' take place in- a slightly fantastical, Earthlike world, and a galaxy, respectively -are drawn in a simple, minimally-shaded, unlined style that draws attention to the colors in the scenery and animals. A lot of different animals and aliens are depicted over the course of the comic in contexts that don't portray them as characters, but only a handful of particular individuals could even be considered characters. The comics in general do not depict text or name their characters in- or out of universe. ''Blue Moon Blossom'' in particular takes its minimalist cast even further than most examples of this trope by only minimally characterizing the ones we could count as characters.
16* CartoonCreature
17** From ''Blue Moon Blossom'', we have the fortune teller. All of the other animals depicted have very clear real-world animal inspirations, if they're not simply cartoony versions of real groups of animals outright, but the fortune teller appears to be some kind of abstract blob creature with at least one arm, assuming that the star-patterned, violet-blue-green gradient-colored thing is in fact their body and not, say, a robe. Their upper face is completely obscured by a stereotypical fortune teller's decorated shawl, and it has a distinctly human-like nose, in a setting where there's no humans to be seen and everyone else either has no noses or teeny cartoony noses.
18** The child in ''Gemini'' has pointed ears and a rounded head like a cat, plus a thin, pointed horn-like protuberance rising out of the middle of their cranium, gray fur/skin, and no visible tail. Other "cats" are depicted that seem to have a kinship with the child, but they have blue fur/skin and no "horn".
19* FullyDressedCartoonAnimal
20** Oddly enough, the bunny and [[spoiler:their parent]] from ''Blue Moon Blossom'' are the only characters who seem to be wearing full outfits, assuming that they're actually wearing cloaks with pockets for their ears and don't actually have colored fur, of course. (And by that extent, the fortune teller, assuming they're actually wearing a robe or something and don't actually have a star pattern on their body.) The other animals seen are {{Accessory Wearing Cartoon Animal}}s at most, and stick to wearing just accessories or protective gear, like an apron.
21** The rabbit aliens in ''Gemini'' are depicted wearing sleek futuristic space-jumpsuits with footwear.
22* InfiniteCanvas: A subtler usage of this shows up from time to time in the comics, in the form of the usual portrait-oriented panels stacked vertically but drawn as a single tall, continuous piece, giving this trope's effect. Appears on page 28 of ''Blue Moon Blossom'', and page 1 of ''Legend of Legendary Mighty Knight''.
23* MixAndMatchCritters
24** In the panel of ''Blue Moon Blossom'' that takes place under the sea, cephalopods with mantles (the large part of an octopus we think of as its 'head') resembling cats' heads can be seen. There's also another cephalopod with little protrusions shaped like a bear's ears and a LampreyMouth on its mantle.
25** The protagonist's mount in ''Legend of Legendary Mighty Knight'' appears to be a cat's head on a slug's body, with pale gray coloring that evokes a ghost. [[MegaNeko It's also roughly the size of a car.]]
26** Page 7 of ''Legend'' shows small crocodilians with wings like flies and sticky tongues like frogs.
27* NamelessNarrative: Due to the lack of text, none of the characters in any of the stories are ever named. The most we ever get from the artist on the subject is out-of-universe descriptors for the characters, such as "bunny and dino" for the leads of ''Blue Moon Blossom'', hence the monikers used throughout this article.
28* SeriesMascot: Following the completion of ''Blue Moon Blossom'', the frog from that story has been commandeered by the author as the mascot of ''Fifteen Minds'' as a whole, and has begun to supplant the cartoon astronaut that had previously been associated with their Jaho-12 Tumblr in avatars for their social media accounts.
29* SilenceIsGolden: The stories of Fifteen Minds are all completely wordless webcomics. No written language is ever depicted in the comics, whether in the art or as dialogue, narration, or sounds, save for occasional out-of-universe "THE END" or title/chapter panels. This design choice deliberately leaves a lot of the stories' circumstances up to interpretation, keeps the focus on the art and events, and (perhaps unintentionally) makes the comics practically immune to language barriers. The artist doesn't generally say much at all about their comics, either. ''Blue Moon Blossom'' is notable for not even implying the existence of written language or that dialogue happens. Later comics all imply dialogue somehow, but go no further.
30* TheTeaser: None of the stories so far have begun with the title. ''Legend of Legendary Mighty Knight'' got a title card on the second page, but in ''Blue Moon Blossom''[='s=] case, the title was only revealed in the Tumblr tags. ''Gemini'' got a title card on the first page, but it was at the ''end'' of the page, after watching the protagonist crying as they escape their planet blowing up.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:''Blue Moon Blossom'']]
34* AccessoryWearingCartoonAnimal: The characters of this comic seem to only occasionally have a couple accessories, if they wear any clothes at all- the koalas' glasses, and several of the [[spoiler:rabbits]], who sometimes wear flowers, or the florist who wears an apron. At the end, [[spoiler:the bunny's whole party]] is adorned with blue flowers.
35* AmbiguouslyEvil: The koalas, [[spoiler:at first]]. The bunny and dino are visibly creeped out by them when passing through their lands, and they all wear [[ScaryShinyGlasses opaque glasses that shine in the darkness]]. One of the koalas stalks the bunny and dino with a sack on their back and snoops on the fortune teller's vision of the temple, implying that they were going to attempt to steal [[spoiler:the rabbit spirit or possibly other]] treasure in the temple. [[spoiler:But when the rabbit spirit's temple starts collapsing, they quickly have a change of heart as they help the bunny and dino escape with the rabbit spirit and join them instead. This koala, at least, remains in DarkIsNotEvil territory for the rest of the story.]]
36* AmbiguousSituation: The comic does not have a very urgent feel to it, ruling out the possibility that the journey was about finding a way to restore the village. So, why is [[spoiler:the bunny]] so far from home, anyway? How did the bunny and the dino end up together in the first place? Did the bunny set out to search for the rabbit spirit, or did they just happen upon it? Who, or what was [[spoiler:the bunny's parent]] reaching for? And if the second-to-last page really is supposed to be read as [[spoiler:the dino being some kind of rabbit deity/prophet in disguise]], then how much did they know about what was going on?
37* BigBad: The snake-demon, which turned a village to stone.
38* BigCreepyCrawlies: At one point, the bunny and dino have to travel through a LethalLavaLand, with volcanoes crawling with enormous shadowy caterpillars that are nearly as long as the mountains are tall.
39* BigGood: The rabbit spirit is a powerful LivingMacGuffin that happily joins the bunny's adventuring party. It gladly defends the party from snake-spirits, [[spoiler:and even restores the other rabbits to life with the last of its power]]. [[spoiler:But by the end, an argument could be made that the ''real'' BigGood is the dino, given that it appears to be a rabbit prophet or possibly even god in disguise.]]
40* BittersweetEnding: The comic ends with [[spoiler:the bunny's village restored, at the cost of the rabbit spirit's life. The bunny remains in their village, and their friends must return home.]]
41* {{Cephalothorax}}: The frogs take this further by not having any visible limbs or limb-like appendages at all, implying that they get around solely by hopping.
42* CerebusSyndrome: The first eight pages of the story (of a total of 31) barely show the reader anything about the plot to come- it just appears to be the bunny and dino enjoying the scenery in some unspoiled wilderness. There are exactly two plot-relevant hints in those eight pages, but the significance of only one of them gets made clear anytime soon.
43* ChekhovsGun: The [[spoiler:rabbit statue]] hints towards many things later in the story. Since the comic is mainly just pretty art of pretty, unspoiled landscapes before and a good while after this, the simple depiction of [[spoiler:a man-made (rabbit-made?) object]] against yet more pretty landscapes is subtle enough that a first-time reader might not think anything of it, let alone realize it's a ChekhovsGun except in hindsight.
44* CivilizedAnimal: In contrast to [[NearlyNormalAnimal the other animals depicted in-story]], the [[spoiler:rabbits]] are by far the most civilized, down to being exclusively bipedal rather than quadrupedal like their real-world counterparts. They've built enormous statues, left inscriptions behind, built temples, and have apparently carved a major settlement into a mountain that's full of all kinds of material culture, ranging from florists and houses of worship, to coffeehouses and even an optometrist. Koalas may also be on this level, given that they all wear glasses that have to come from somewhere and have access to fabric, but their lands are never shown in much detail. It's also possible that the koalas trade with the [[spoiler:rabbits]] or some other unseen species of CivilizedAnimal for their glasses, or that the fabric seen in use by koalas is scavenged.
45* CollapsingLair: The golden temple where the bunny and dino [[spoiler:found the rabbit spirit]] starts to collapse as soon as [[spoiler:the spirit]] is released from the crystal it'd been sealed in.
46* DarkestHour: [[spoiler:The bunny]] finds [[spoiler:their parent]] turned to stone and touches them, themself turning to stone as they cry.
47* DoNotGoGentle: [[spoiler:As the rabbit spirit is dying, as its last action, it flies over to the pit of rabbits that were turned to stone and crumbles away, restoring them all to life.]]
48* DoomedHometown: Inverted; [[spoiler:the bunny]] returns to their hometown to find that it was ravaged by incorporeal snake demons that turned all the inhabitants to stone, leaving [[spoiler:the bunny and the rabbit spirit]] to restore the village. The others tried to fight back, as evidenced by the villagers wielding swords and other weapons, but to no avail.
49* EleventhHourSuperpower: [[spoiler:When the bunny is turned to stone, the rabbit spirit joins the rest of the adventuring party in mourning, but when it gets close enough to the bunny, it restores them to life. The rabbit spirit's expressions indicate that it didn't know it could do this beforehand, and it turns out to be a very important power a bit later.]]
50* EyesDoNotBelongThere: The giant snake-demon [[spoiler:that assaulted the bunny's village]] combines this with {{Cyclops}} as it has one single large primary eye and a bunch of smaller eyes all across its head and up and down its body.
51* FertileFeet: When the rabbit spirit [[spoiler:is crumbling away]], dark blue flowers in a shade of blue seen nowhere else bloom underneath it as it flies.
52* FrothyMugsOfWater: The coffee shop in the village has signage that shows what appears to be a mug of coffee, but the party inside and general atmosphere around the establishment implies that its patrons may be drinking some kind of alcohol instead. The drinks shown are also served in clear mugs or stein-looking vessels, and the drinks themselves are quite light-colored. Coffee with cream added can be that shade of brown, but who parties with coffee? The censorship aspect of the trope is downplayed because the comic is not deliberately aimed at children, there's no explanation of what they're drinking, and the drinks are probably depicted this way more out of simplicity than anything else.
53* FunnyBackgroundEvent: On Page 20, amidst the comic's DarkestHour, there is a villager in the shaded foreground that got turned to stone while in the midst of [[InappropriateHunger stuffing their face with apples]].
54* GodWasMyCopilot: Implied with [[spoiler:the dino's]] final fate- [[spoiler:it visits the rabbit statue in the forest, briefly assumes the spectral form of the rabbit apparently depicted by the statue, then fades into the statue, heavily implying that the statue, with its vaguely Buddhist aesthetic, is really depicting a prophet or deity of some kind]].
55* HeadPet: The frog is very small, and is usually sitting on somebody's head. The bunny and koala are all seen riding on the dino's head at various points, too.
56* InappropriateHunger: One of the villagers was still stuffing their face as they turned to stone, surrounded by their fellow villagers taking up swords, crying, running in terror, praying in desperation, or clutching their terrified children.
57* KnightOfCerebus: The appearance of [[spoiler:the fortune teller]] on page 9 is when the plot kicks into gear, and shifts the story from episodic SceneryPorn to a straight-up adventure, albeit still a very beautiful, SceneryPorn-laden one.
58* LivingMacGuffin: The rabbit spirit, a glowy sprite-like being [[spoiler:found in a golden temple]] with the power to turn away evil spirits [[spoiler:and summon blue flowers. It can also change beings that have been turned to stone back to normal]].
59* MinimalistCast: There are maybe eight characters total in this entire short comic- the bunny, the dino, the koala, the frog, the rabbit spirit, the fortune teller, [[spoiler:the bunny's parent]], and if we stretch the definition, maybe the village optometrist [[spoiler:who gets the koala new glasses at the end]]. The fact that the main cast consists of FunnyAnimals and most of the panels contain some kind of animal blurs the line somewhat, but the vast, overwhelming majority of these animals are just kind of ''there'' not doing anything in particular, and are treated as nothing more than part of the scenery.
60* MultipurposeTongue: The frog in the protagonist's party is seen using their tongue as an appendage- first to grab the rabbit spirit, and second to tip a mug full of drink into their mouth. It's a good thing they can do this, since [[{{Cephalothorax}} they have no other appendages]].
61* NoMouth: The koalas and the rabbit spirit are never drawn with mouths. The rabbit spirit emotes using its eyes instead, but the koalas' eyes are always obscured by their glasses, so they emote only by pose or gesture, or occasionally when tears are streaming out from under their glasses.
62* NonStandardCharacterDesign: The fortune teller stands out for being based on a BlobMonster rather than any real-world animals/animal groups (even stylized ones), being colored with a grainy violet-blue-green gradient instead of a single flat color, and having a star pattern apparently right on their body. And that's assuming that that's actually their body and not, say, a cloak, which would make them the only one wearing a full set of clothing other than possibly the bunny [[spoiler:and their parent]]. Again, assuming the bunny's actually wearing a garment and doesn't actually have red fur.
63* NotQuiteDead: The [[spoiler:rabbit spirit]]... possibly? After it [[spoiler:releases the last of its power and]] crumbles away, all that's left is a single tiny diamond-shaped piece. The bunny leaves the piece at the top of a special pedestal. Once [[spoiler:everyone else has gone home]], in the very last panel, [[spoiler:there is a small bush in the shape of the rabbit spirit]] growing on the pedestal, and the diamond-piece has begun to glow again.
64* OpaqueLenses: The koalas all wear glasses with solid white lenses that completely obscure their eyes from all angles and in all lighting conditions. In the koalas' first appearance, the glasses even shine in the dark like ScaryShinyGlasses, adding to their apparently AmbiguouslyEvil nature, but once [[spoiler:the bunny and dino make friends with a koala]], the koalas' glasses end up coming across as OpaqueNerdGlasses instead.
65* PowerGlows: The rabbit spirit is constantly glowing even when dormant, and it has several magical abilities that are seen nowhere else.
66* RedIsHeroic: The bunny has mostly red fur, or is wearing some kind of floor-length red garment with specially shaped sleeves in the hood covering their ears and a hole for their tail. The red is also a bright shade that doesn't really appear anywhere else in the comic.
67* SealedGoodInACan: [[spoiler:The rabbit spirit]] was sealed inside a crystal deep in a temple guarded by bat creatures. And even when the seal is broken, it remains asleep until it's needed.
68* SingleSpecimenSpecies: The dino is the only one of their kind depicted in the comic. In fact, they're also the only non-avian dinosaur in the entire story, adding to their vaguely 'other' feel.
69* TakenForGranite: At the start of the climax, [[spoiler:the bunny]] returns to their home and finds that all of the other villagers were turned to stone attempting to fight some enormous snake-demons. But when [[spoiler:the bunny finds their parent]] frozen and touches them, they, too turn to stone.
70* TertiarySexualCharacteristics: Apparently averted for all of the animals depicted. Almost nobody in the entire story has any really obvious indicators of gender. One can certainly assume that the florist villager wearing a pink apron is statistically likely to be female and that [[spoiler:the bunny's parent]] might actually be their mother from the sky-blue fur/clothing, but the lack of words in the comic leaves it up in the air regardless.
71* VagueAge: By the end, it's implied that the bunny protagonist is actually a youth, given the size difference between them and the other rabbits, especially [[spoiler:their parent]], who is implied to be middle aged from the wrinkles around their eyes. Before this, in the absence of other rabbits to compare them to, the bunny was basically ageless. This trope, however, is in effect for virtually all of the characters as it is, since they're stylized animals.
72* VisualTitleDrop: A nonverbal one near the end of the story- when the moonlight-colored [[spoiler:rabbit spirit releases the last of its power]], dark blue flowers bloom [[spoiler:where it crumbles away]].
73* WhamShot: Two, both near the end.
74** Page 19, especially the second panel- [[spoiler:the bunny's]] kind have all been turned to stone. It's pretty startling for a comic that had mostly been an excuse to look at pretty scenery.
75** Page 30. [[spoiler:The dino]] turns out to have not been what it appeared to be, and likely [[spoiler:had actual stake in this adventure]] from the start.
76* WorldOfFunnyAnimals: The entire cast of the story consists of cartoony minimalist animals with what appear to be human levels of intelligence and reasoning.
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:''Legend of Legendary Mighty Knight'']]
80* AmbiguouslyHuman: Are the two knights on the first page humanoid monsters like the rest of the citizenry, or are they more like the gray-beige humanoids seen at the bottom of the first page? The knights never remove their helmets (never mind that the first one has only appeared in the first panel as a DecoyProtagonist), and the art style is simple enough that it's hard to tell what's skin pigmentation and what's gloves or shoes.
81* BalloonBelly: After the knight eats the entire banquet [[spoiler:that was meant for the fisher]] in Chapter 1, their stomach distends so much they have to remove their belt.
82* BigEater: After only two adventures, it is evident that the knight is primarily motivated by food. The knight crushes some brigands so that they can eat an entire banquet themself (that was meant for someone else, no less).
83* BrownBagMask: In Chapter 3, the knight recruits an unpopular stage magician who wears a paper bag over their head, and [[ExpressiveMask expresses emotions through crude facial expressions drawn on the bag with marker]].
84* ClearMyName: The knight suggests that the dragon become a hero to the town that drove them out by defending it from monsters, and it works! The townspeople come to love the dragon and hail them as a hero.
85* DecoyProtagonist: For only the first panel, to be exact- a finely-clothed knight is shown parading before an adoring crowd on a horse-like mount, with the heads of several monsters skewered on their sword. Given the title, one is led to believe that this is the eponymous mighty knight. But below the bridge that the knight is riding on is another knight, a smaller individual wearing only a helmet atop their giant slug-cat mount, the cat balanced in the gorge beneath the bridge so the knight can reach some berries. It is this smaller knight who appears alongside the title card.
86* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: The title. It's a pretty quick indicator that this story's going to be more comedic and tongue-in-cheek than its predecessor, ''Blue Moon Blossom''.
87* GISSyndrome: Used as part of an ArtShift for one panel- the soup the knight feeds to the dragon tastes so good the next panel shows the dragon's shocked expression superimposed over a GIF of rapidly changing photographs of galaxies.
88* HoistByHisOwnPetard: After the king attempts to drive the red dragon out after being hailed as a hero, a black dragon comes to eat the king. The red dragon, with the knight's help, saves the king from the black dragon, and the king comes to see the error of their ways.
89* HorseOfADifferentColor: The protagonist's preferred mount is a MixAndMatchCritter that looks like a slug the size of a car, but with the head of a cat.
90* IJustWantToHaveFriends: The magician in Chapter 3 saves people in their town from a monster, but nobody even cares about them and just go back to admiring a different magician. The knight assures them that they did the right thing and recruits them for their crew.
91* ImpossiblyDeliciousFood: The soup [[ThroughHisStomach the knight feeds to the dragon in order to enlist its help]]- it's so good the dragon reacts as though it just had a religious experience and immediately joins them.
92* MagiciansAreWizards: The magician recruited in Chapter 3 can conjure birds from under their robe, and seems to be largely limited to stage magician-type magic.
93* MegaNeko: The knight's cat-mount is roughly the size of a car, large enough to carry the knight three or four times over. It also looks kind of like a cat's head on a slug's body, and wears a tiny little pair of glasses. Combined with its pale gray coloring, it evokes the appearance of a ghost, despite being able to drool.
94* MilesGloriosus: Subverted- the knight is primarily motivated by the promise of food and the title suggests that the knight is not actually mighty, but their adventures have shown that they can actually slay monsters and are reasonably crafty.
95* MotionComic: Combines with ArtShift; the soup the knight feeds to the dragon tastes so good the panel suddenly changes to a GIF of the shocked dragon superimposed over rapidly changing [[GISSyndrome photographs of galaxies]].
96* NestedMouths: The serpent-like... ''thing'' on page 4 has what appears to be an entire face on its tongue, which itself has its own tongue. Given the serpent's lack of eyes, it's possible that the tongue-creature inside its mouth is the actual animal.
97* OurMonstersAreWeird: ''Legend'' ostensibly takes place in a world populated with humanoid ''WesternAnimation/MonstersInc''-esque monsters as the citizenry. There are also what appear to be "actual" monsters as well that eat people and need to be slain by knights. On only the first page, we can see various {{Blob Monster}}s, a monster with an extra mini-head on top of their cranium, a few different kinds of (dead) dragons, and an actual monster with a branching eyestalk that's big enough to eat people.
98* PerpetualFrowner: The fisher in Chapter 1 appears to constantly be annoyed, even when [[spoiler:the forest folk start holding a celebration in their honor for inadvertently killing the leader of a gang of brigands]]. At first, it appears that the fisher might just look that way because of their hat cutting off the tops of their eyes, but later pages show their eyes widening in shock, firmly showing they really are this trope.
99* ReptilesAreAbhorrent: Subverted. Chapter 5 opens with the newly-befriended dragon relaying to the others of how it was driven from its home by a cruel king who wanted its head. When the dragon gets to the part where it had to flee in terror, it breaks down into tears. The dragon didn't initially try to drive the knight and their companions away because it wanted to hurt them- it was just hurting and lonely itself.
100* StomachOfHolding: As early as Chapter 2, the knight has used their slug-cat to store not only a random fishing rod, but also a sword. The slug-cat had also been traveling extensively before the knight pulled their sword out of the slug-cat's mouth. How it managed to not get hurt eating a sword is not shown.
101* SwallowedWhole: In Chapter 2, the knight journeys into a dangerous swamp-forest in search of a large, strange spore-like object with a face on it that's atop a large mushroom. A sunflower-person comes to defend the spore, but before they can do anything else, a giant slug-cat creature not unlike the knight's mount devours the two whole, as well as several trees. The knight and sunflower-person get an idea to cook the spore in a pot to generate smoke, which causes the cat to vomit them back up.
102* ThroughHisStomach: The knight and their crew befriend both a sunflower-person and a dragon using the power of ImpossiblyDeliciousFood. The sunflower-person goes from defending the spore from the knight to stewing the spore and sharing the soup, and the dragon reacts to the soup's flavor as though it had a religious experience before gladly becoming friends.
103[[/folder]]
104
105[[folder:''Gemini'']]
106* AmazingTechnicolorWildlife: The protagonist is a bipedal rabbit-alien with magenta-colored fur and seafoam-green eyes and mucous membranes, suggesting interesting things about their blood chemistry. The child has pale gray fur and light blue eyes.
107* ApocalypseHow: ApocalypseHow/ClassX; the comic opens with the protagonist escaping as their planet [[EarthShatteringKaboom explodes]].
108* GooGooGodlike: The child is half the magenta rabbit's height and for all intents and purposes is regarded as a small child, but when faced with a monster larger than either of them, they have no trouble lifting it into the air and throwing it off, much to the magenta rabbit's shock. A page later, they start ''levitating'', snatch a bird out of the air, and try to eat it.
109* HatesBeingTouched: The child, apparently- whenever the magenta rabbit picks them up, the child hits them very hard in the face, and pointing at the child led to the magenta rabbit getting bitten. The child even kicked their new guardian in the face when the magenta rabbit started sobbing for their lost homeworld and tried to hug the child. Eventually, over time, the child warms up to the magenta rabbit, and the child even hugs them at one point.
110* IntelligentGerbil: The rabbit-aliens have the appearance of bipedal cartoon rabbits, not unlike the ones depicted in ''Blue Moon Blossom'', only with some modifications, like technicolor pigmentation, longer hair on their craniums, some odd protuberances on the ears, and long tails (also with protuberances). Narratively, they're more like {{Funny Animal}}s in that they seem to stand in for humans.
111* TheQuietOne: Why does this matter in a comic that depicts no dialogue at all? The magenta rabbit is ''implied'' to be speaking when they berate the child, showing that speech does occur in this setting. The child is never implied to speak, in contrast to the magenta rabbit.
112* SourOutsideSadInside: The magenta rabbit has little patience for the child and snaps at them a lot, but it's because they just lost their planet, and someone they care for.
113* TheStoic: The child has the same blank expression at all times, and unlike the magenta rabbit, is never depicted speaking.
114* TechnicolorEyes: The protagonist has either seafoam-green sclerae or seafoam-green irises that fill their entire visible eye, or [[MonochromaticEyes both]], like many nonhuman animals.

Top