Wapsi Square



"One thing I must remember about my demons... If I don't do exactly as they say, as they wish... They become totally... completely... harmless."

- Monica

Wapsi Square is a "slice of supernatural life" webcomic by Paul Taylor, who describes it as "An attempt to combine the cute and tha macabre." It follows the life of Monica Villareal, a busty anthropologist from Minneapolis, as she discovers that it isn't her that's crazy, but rather the world around her.

The comic started out as a simple slice of life comedy, but eventually grew into a much more complicated story with the introduction of an Aztec deity, three indestructible golems, and a massive, time-spanning plot to save the world. Despite the shift, it still finds time to explore the personal lives of the characters, but with a bit of a supernatural twist.

Has a character sheet. -- Wapsi Square proves examples of the following:
 * A Date with Rosie Palms: Graphically overheard by Dietzel in this strip.
 * Adventure Archaeologist: Monica's grandfather was one of these. Monica herself, on the other hand would claim to be an archaeologist of the far more mundane variety. She spends most of her time either in a library, or analyzing things for the museum, and she doesn't do field work. However, that being said, she still did manage to help bring down a smuggling ring in the process of acquiring an artifact.
 * A Good Name for a Rock Band: Fermented Banana is named after an unfortunate mishap by Monica.
 * All Bikers Are Hells Angels: subverted, when Monica finds a biker bar filled with mostly middle-aged white-collar workers.
 * All Myths Are True: At least the Aztec, Greek and Egyptian myths have made a fair showing so far, and Bud may actually be ancient Greek based on how her accent sounds to modern ears.
 * Alternate History: Jin has lived through numerous of these because of the Groundhog Day Loop, the most recent of which apparently ended in a blind panic at the Calendar Machine site and a gruesome death for Monica, and may have something to do with Jin's refusal to let herself be too friendly with the rest of the crew, particularly Shelly.
 * Ambulance Chaser: Bud has an amusing run-in with one starting here.
 * Anthropomorphic Personification: The personal demons
 * Apocalypse How: A class 2 occurred in the distant past caused by
 * Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: I snore loud but I don't mean to.
 * Art Evolution: Compare this early strip to this one. Yes, that's the same girl.
 * Ash Face: Bud once found herself caught in a massive fiery explosion, and came out with one of these.
 * A Simple Plan: The tendency for simple plans to go horrible wrong is lampshaded in this strip. Said simple plan results in being shot at and bringing down a group of smugglers in Cairo.
 * Atlantis
 * Author Appeal: Paul Taylor seems to have a thing for big and/or strong, sexually aggressive women. All male/female relationships shown have the female as the more powerful or aggressive partner. This sounds like the Paul talking...
 * Back From the Dead, the Golem Girls
 * Bad Dreams
 * Batter Up: Shelly seems to take a baseball bat with her to answer the door late at night.
 * Beach Episode: If you could teleport, wouldn't you meet up on a sandbar somewhere in the Bermuda Triangle sometimes?
 * Because Destiny Says So
 * Bedmate Reveal: Bud and Kevin wake up in the same bed after a night of drinking.
 * Benevolent Boss: Monica's boss set her up with Kevin, and Heather's once ordered her to go out and have fun.
 * Big No: Monica's takes two (albeit short) lines when on this page
 * Biological Mashup: The Chimera, Phix
 * Blue and Orange Morality: The demons
 * Brain Bleach: "Remind me to wash my brain with bleach later would you!"
 * Bring My Brown Pants: See Mugging the Monster below.
 * Call Back: A strip from December 2009 featured a reference to the dialogue in the very first strip back in 2001.
 * Came Back Wrong: The destruction of the Calendar Machine seems to have utterly broken Jin's mind; although she seemed reasonably sane up to that point, she's explicitly referred to as schizophrenic at least once after.
 * Celestial Deadline
 * Cerebus Syndrome: Changing from a slice-of-life comedy, to a save-the-world drama; dropping over half its supporting cast in the process, and leaving multiple unresolved subplots.
 * Changing Clothes Is a Free Action: Jin is able to do this to both herself and Monica through some creative use of teleportation.
 * Chekhov's Gun: Monica's grandfather, Tepoz (surprisingly), the glyph language
 * Chiaroscuro: Used in a particularly dramatic moment in the library.
 * Chirping Crickets: It even used the sound effect cricket cricket.
 * Clarke's Third Law
 * Clothing Switch: Tina and Monica once switched outfits due to a slight teleporting mishap.
 * Cold-Blooded Torture
 * Comfort Food: Pizza is the universal comfort food, even to the point where your demons won't bug you when you are eating it.
 * Coolest Club Ever: Cerberus Club
 * Cool Gate: The portal cloth is interesting on its own, but it really becomes a cool gate when it is attached to Shelly. If you enter it, you come out the other cloth, but you have to be able to teleport on your own to use it. It still does have its uses though.
 * Cool Pet: Bud and Brandi tamed a creature that could have inspired the Kraken. They named him Stinky.
 * Cosmic Retcon: An in-universe Reset Button that resets time back to the same point. The next reset is due in 2012.
 * Cowboys and Indians: Shelly often found herself playing this as a kid. She took the suction cups off of her toy arrows.
 * Creepy Doll: Tina's muñeca para el Dia de los Muertos looks somewhat unsettling.
 * Creepy Child: Shelly's conscience looks like one and she knows it.
 * Cute Kitten: Selenium, except for this instance any real-life cat owner would relate to. He does double duty as Amanda's shredder.
 * Dagwood Sandwich: Monica has been known to eat these.
 * Demoted to Extra: Notice the fairly small overlap between the site's current cast page and the one above? In the slice-of-life years, Tina was a moving prop, Katherine was just a weird Drop-In Character, and Tep was such a joke that he wasn't added to the cast page at the time until after the Heather arc, when she'd been there for months already; essentially, Monica and Shelly are the only two left of the original cast. Even Shelly hadn't been very prominent among Monica's friends until the Heather arc and her Important Haircut boosted her popularity.
 * Description Cut: They are a staple of the humor. This strip is a good example.
 * Did You Just Have Sex?
 * Distracted by the Sexy: Monica + Little Black Dress = ...well yeah
 * Doing in the Wizard: "Magic" is eventually Handwaved as an unknown form of quantum manipulation
 * Dreaming of Things to Come
 * Embarrassing Old Photo: There's a scene early on where Monica is embarrassed by a bunch of her teenage photos where she's wearing nerdy glasses and hair. Later on she shows one to her friends and they think it's cute.
 * Epic Fail: Tina describes a previous time she had to run the coffee shop with an arm in a cast. Somehow she managed to back over her wrist while trying to parallel park.
 * Even Evil Has Standards We may be demons, but we have rules!
 * Expressive Hair: This happened a lot in the early strips, especially with Shelly.
 * Face Palm: Dietzel does this from time to time.
 * Falling Into His Arms: Happens to Monica after a biking accident here. However, in this case, it is purely comedy, and it is not played for romance in any way.
 * Flat Earth Atheist: explicitly averted by Monica, who considers all the weird things and people around her to be phenomena that science just hasn't studied yet.
 * Fluffy the Terrible: Stinky the sea monster
 * Force Feeding: Bud demonstrates the incredibly complicated technique of force feeding through teleportation.
 * Tepoz also did this to Monica using a large chicken. And what goes in...
 * A Friend in Need
 * Funbag Airbag: It happens to Shelly in this strip.
 * Gay Conservative: Heather is a conservative lesbian folk singer.
 * Genre Busting: It is difficult to describe what genre the comic is currently in. It describes itself as a "Slice of supernatural life."
 * Genre Shift: Started as a slice-of-life comic, then took a supernatural turn that now dominates.
 * Gentle Giant: Lakshmi
 * Glowing Eyes of Doom: Jin
 * Golem: Bud, Jin and Brandy,
 * Grilling Pyrotechnics: Invoked by Shelly as part of a plan to meet with and get revenge on a certain attractive police officer here.
 * Groundhog Day Loop: Everyone but has been unknowingly trapped in one of these, due to
 * More recently, Shelly has been shown to be stuck in a much stranger version of this trope.
 * Ground-Shattering Landing: Bud once tried to roller skate down the stairs. She is indestructible. You can imagine the rest.
 * Gut Feeling: "I find that when a body part starts making decisions, one must proceed with caution."
 * Hands-On Approach: The first meeting between Shelly and Justin occurred off-screen when he invoked this trope on the receiving instruction end in her kickboxing class. Eventually, she figured out that he wasn't as inept as he acted.
 * Hard Head
 * Heroic BSOD: Shelly went through one of these after
 * Hot Amazon: Shelly, Lakshmi
 * Hot Librarian: Phix
 * Humanity Ensues: The golem girls,
 * Hurl It Into the Sun: Bud's method of disposing of
 * I'm a Doctor, Not a Placeholder: Monica is an Anthropologist, not a Psychiatrist. She even throws in a "Dammit Jin" for good measure.
 * Imagine Spot: Katherine imagines seasonally inept Vikings.
 * I'm Not Afraid of You
 * Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: A group of smugglers with automatic weapons can't hit Monica at all, even at rather close range.
 * Innocent Innuendo: Used in this strip. The next strip reveals that they were actually talking about
 * It's Not You, It's Me: This is inverted when Monica uses this phrase to start a relationship. The inversion is then promptly lampshaded.
 * I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Jin to, with the added twist that if she . Made substantially worse by the fact that
 * Kneecapping: In a March 2011 comic there's a distant flashback that shows Jin, before she became part of the Chimera, being shot through the back of the knee with an arrow. Squick.
 * Kraken and Leviathan: Bud and Brandi have a pet named Stinky who seems to be the Kraken.
 * Laser Hallway: A one shot gag shows that apparently there are a few lasers involved in the museum's security system.
 * Layman's Terms: Shelly gets an impromptu vocabulary lesson here.
 * Les Yay: And the pixie with the rack puts up with you how?
 * The Library of Babel: The Bibliothiki.
 * Literal Cliff Hanger: One sequence has Shelly hanging from the edge of a billboard.
 * Little Black Dress: Putting one on Monica results in Distracted by the Sexy.
 * Loads and Loads of Characters: See the character sheet for more info.
 * Lost Technology: Golems
 * Made a Slave
 * Magical Realism: Most of the time, especially in the early strips it seems like just a slice of life strip. And then the Mexican deities started showing up.
 * Magic From Technology: The Calendar Machine
 * Magnetic Girlfriend: Kevin makes this observation here.
 * Mathematician's Answer: Shelly gives one when asked where she got her tattoo.
 * Mayincatec: Aztec and Mayan mythology. Possibly subverted by Jin,
 * Mayfly-December Romance: Can definitely apply to any relationship between an immortal or extremely long-lived being with a regular human, such as Jin and Alan or Phix and Monica's boss.
 * Meaningful Name
 * Meaningful Rename
 * Metal Detector Checkpoint: Monica has a bit of a problem with the metal detector at the airport. She made sure she had nothing metal on her person only to set off the detector with the underwire in her bra.
 * Monster Clown: There are few things scarier than a dog in a clown mask.
 * Ms. Fanservice: Monica and the Golem Girls (especially in their first appearance). Nearly every female character gets a turn at least once. Done very tastefully, especially for webcomics, and not too often.
 * Mugging the Monster: Mugger pulls knife. Heather pulls gun Mugger wets himself.
 * Mundane Fantastic
 * Mundane Utility: Shelly was given some clay dolls by her mother and told that they would be important in the future. They crack walnuts really good. On top of that, Bud has an interesting way of making popcorn.
 * Tepoz can create any alcoholic drink you can imagine.
 * Actually it's much simpler and open ended than that, he can create 'anything' with alcohol 'in it' or in some cases summon, which was his explanation originally of how he bamfed Bud, Jin and Brandi into Monica's kitchen originally as well as how he was able to poit into existence an entire turkey's worth of mexican mole into existence for Monica, the stipulation being that her grandma used alcohol in the sauce.
 * My Death Is Just the Beginning
 * Name's the Same: Heather Mills
 * Never Bring a Knife to a Gun Fight: A mugger finds himself on the wrong end of this trope in this strip.
 * New Powers as the Plot Demands: Monica's first "poit" comes out of friggin' nowhere.
 * No Antagonist: Despite, the save the world plot and complex, overlapping plans, there is no clear antagonistic figure.
 * No Name Given: Jin's Mother is only known so far as "Jin's Mother"
 * Recently revealed to be.
 * Noodle Implements: Alan once mentioned a rather creative use of a toilet seat and a rubber chicken.
 * Noodle Incident: We never do find out how Tina managed to run over her own wrist while parallel parking...
 * Nothing but Skulls
 * Not What It Looks Like: Kevin walks into the room and sees this.
 * Only Smart People May Pass: Subverted with the question Phix, the keeper of the Bibliothiki, asks Monica and Shelly.
 * Ontological Mystery: Tina, who has only news clippings to remember her life with.
 * Our Demons Are Different: although they can be pretty nasty, they are frequently not actually evil.
 * Out of Focus: Everyone. The original cast was Monica, Amanda, Shelly, Jacquelyn, Owen, Darin, and Dietl, and this was the core cast for years, with even the relatively early additions Tina and Tepoz not making the cast page until long after their introduction. Only the first three are even on the current cast page, and Amanda mostly because of her role as the original Foil.
 * Painting the Fourth Wall
 * Pettanko: Shelly. Makes up for it by an obsessive interest in lingerie despite her tomboyness.
 * Ping-Pong Naivete, Justified as a coping mechanism
 * Playboy Bunny: Bud and Brandi once wore this sort of outfit during their perpetually drunk phase.
 * Playing Sick: This comic has Dietzel recommending that Monica do this.
 * Priceless Paperweight: The trope is discussed in this strip when Brandi mentions that the portal cloth they just acquired wouldn't make a very good table cloth.
 * Room Full of Crazy: Used as a partial flashback to Monica's rubber room days.
 * Rump Roast: Monica's rejection of her inner demon Doubt sets Doubt's ass on fire. Doubt eventually finds a way to get her own back on Monica.
 * Secret Test of Character: Never used straight, but the golem girls once mistook something for one. Another time, Bud pretended to mistake Monica's actions for a secret test of character.
 * Phix's riddle.
 * Self-Mutilation Demonstration: Jin uses a variation to show that she is indestructible here.
 * Sequential Symptom Syndrome: Two consecutive strips involve a doctor telling Heather about a specific symptom of a concussion, and Shelly experiencing that symptom off screen.
 * Shoot the Shaggy Dog:
 * Sneeze of Doom: Of the bra-removing kind.
 * So What Do We Do Now?: Monica seems to have this problem. Tepoz lampshades it. And, it turns out that she's not the only one.
 * Spit Take: Monica here
 * Symbol Swearing: The strip managed to find a way to subvert this trope. What looks like just slightly unusual symbol swearing here is actually a language known by very few people that becomes a plot point later on.
 * Take My Hand: Monica and Amanda try to haul Shelly back up onto a platform in this strip. They drop her.
 * Talk About the Weather
 * Tears of Remorse
 * Teleporter Accident: Monica is capable of teleporting, but isn't particularly good at it. As a result, she tends to suffer comical but harmless mishaps such as poor arrival placement, upside down on arrival, and switching clothing with the person traveling with her.
 * Teleporters and Transporters: "Poit"ing
 * Temporal Paradox
 * Tempting Fate: Taunting mother nature is a bad idea.
 * Tender Tears: Why can't he just tell her he loves her?
 * That Came Out Wrong: Rare double example.
 * There Is Only One Bed: Used here with Shelly and Owen who have known each other since grade school.
 * Think Nothing of It
 * Undead Tax Exemption: Bud and Brandi are able to acquire modern birth certificates and social security numbers despite being immortal clay golems who predate most known civilizations. However, it is made believable in that it was done by Jin, who has been playing political manipulator in multiple countries for over a thousand years, and probably has more than enough contacts to make someone exist (or cease to exist).
 * Underboobs: Shelly doesn't exactly wear much when playing basketball with the guys.
 * Unsound Effect: It once used the sound effect cricket cricket.
 * Unstoppable Mailman: The mail will still arrive, even in a nasty snowstorm.
 * V-Formation Team Shot: Used in this strip.
 * Vicious Cycle: The calendar machine puts the world through cycle after cycle, resetting time every time it hits 2012. retains her knowledge through all cycles, and has seen over 80,000 years worth of this cycle.
 * Visible Silence
 * Wait Here: Discussed and promptly played straight in this strip.
 * The Watcher: Mayahuel to Monica, disguised as her dead Mexican grandmother.
 * We Are Not Going Through That Again
 * Weirdness Magnet: Justin mentions to Shelly that he is this and invokes I Just Want to Be Normal,
 * Webcomics Long Runners: Over 2000 strips as of January 2011
 * Wham! Episode:
 * When the Planets Align
 * World of Cardboard Speech: Bud, being the most destructive of the three golem girls, has worried about this on a regular basis.
 * You Can't Go Home Again: Jin, to Tina.
 * You Have to Believe Me:
 * You Can't Go Home Again: Jin, to Tina.
 * You Have to Believe Me: