Ctrl+Alt+Del



Ctrl+Alt+Del is a Two Gamers on a Couch Web Comic, following the adventures of two guys, a girl, and a robot who alternate between sitting around playing video games and getting up to wacky hijinks.

The comic tends to alternate its updates between story-based strips and video game-specific ones.

Not to be confused with the three-finger-salute/Vulcan Nerve Pinch.

There is also an animated adaption, Ctrl+Alt+Del: The Animated Series. Its site is here.

This webcomic contains examples of:
"Ryan Sohmer: We produced Ctrl+Alt+Del season one. Never again. Lost HUGE amounts of money."
 * Achey Scars: On Ethan's shoulder and caused by Rory -- which has only been mentioned once and never again.
 * Acid Reflux Nightmare: This strip. "Blame the microwave burrito you ate before bed!"
 * Affably Evil: Rory. Maybe too affable.
 * The Alcoholic: Ethan, when he's depressed.
 * Aloof Older Brother / Jerk Jock: Rory.
 * Alt Text / Footnote Fever: The Annotated Series.
 * Animated Adaptation: Uses different storylines than those of the comic itself. Wasn't well recieved, Blind Ferret Entertainment, who produced season one had this to say:

"We are the CAD fans!"
 * Art Evolution: An incredibly slow one, but it's happening nonetheless, at least with regards to using some different angles and new expressions.
 * Atomic F-Bomb: Ethan lets one loose in the cartoon.
 * Author Avatar: The main character, Ethan, has an outstanding physical resemblance to Buckley, and Buckley admitted he based the character on himself just how most of the cast are based on real life friends of his.
 * Axe Crazy: The Four Players, but mostly Two and Four.
 * Becoming the Mask: Meta example, but the current Something Awful mock thread has moved on to drawing fan art (ban art) of Buckley's characters, often in an attempt to fix the flaws in his writing/art/characterisation. This has led to the horrible realisation:


 * Big Damn Heroes: Rory saves Ethan with a fire extinguisher attacking the Hawaiian Mafia.
 * Bound and Gagged: Happens to Lilah in one strip when she's kidnapped.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: Done quite literally in this strip.
 * Broken Aesop: The comic makes it clear it's wrong to be a "console fanboy," in one strip even having God personally squash one. Fine. We'll buy that; a bit Anvilicious, but an adequate Aesop of its own. However, there are issues with this, since the the fanboys are always gamecube fans, the evil Gamer King in an early strip used a staff with a golden Gamecube controller on top (versus Ethan's Xbox one), Ethan playing a Gamecube is referred to as a "sin against the gaming gods," he mentions that turning the Gamecube into a robot would result into a girl robot, and doing the same to a Playstation would produce a gay one while the Xbox appears to be perfect and sinless.
 * And of course, Buckley himself is an extremely transparent and over-the-top XBox devotee. After Microsoft's notoriously bad E3 debut of the XBox One, he made a comic mocking... the PS4.
 * Brother Chuck: Scott may as well be, seeing as he was never officially Put on a Bus. For that matter, when was the last time we saw Chef Brian?
 * Butt Monkey:
 * Rob. Very seldom will anyone say anything remotely nice to or about him. Ethan once pushed a vending machine on him purely For the Evulz and then jumped on top of it with Rob still laying under it. Rob's hideous crime? He's a "frat boy" who only likes a handful of super-popular games like World of Warcraft and Halo.
 * Faildruid, a hapless World of Warcraft player/character who happens to be a bear (and later an owl-bear). His crime is basically being a very naive newbie.
 * Cerebus Syndrome: Since the miscarriage, there have been more purely dramatic strips and less gags.
 * Chainsaw Good: This strip:
 * Character Development / Character Derailment:
 * Cheaters Never Prosper: Ethan trying out an RPG-themed rewards system (one of his rare, not-actually-that-bad ideas) at his game shop when he encounters a Gamer Chick who's trying to manipulate the system by buying ten games at once to get an eleventh one at a discount and then returning the first ten games. Ethan seems to get the upper hand after he sorts out the rules, but then she moves on rigging the tabletop games by, um, paying the entrance fees for a band of hobos for a prize that's only a percentage of the money she paid.
 * Chekhov's Gun: "Once you put this on, you get one James Bond quote. One."
 * Choose Your Own Adventure: Once or twice a year, the author will come out with a storyline where he decides what the character's actions will be or what plot branch to take in the next update based on the number of emailed votes he receives.
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience: The Four Players.
 * Comedic Sociopathy: Ethan displayed it a lot in the past, which is biting the comic in the arse now Cerebus Syndrome has kicked in and he's meant to be a little more sympathetic and at least trying to mature. The Four Players, especially Two and Four.
 * Comic Role Play: In one strip, Ethan freaks Lucas out by wearing fake breasts when playing his girlfriend.
 * Complaining About Rescues They Don't Like: Ethan reacts to being saved from the mafia by Rory by being outright furious. Somewhat justified since Rory caused the mafia to show up in the first place, but that he reacts this way just a couple of seconds after Rory had saved him from bodily harm, and maybe even death, by knocking out the mobsters, makes Ethan seem angry about being saved.
 * Continuity Creep: Starts out as your standard issue gamer comic, eventually descends into lengthy storylines.
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Ethan borders between this and The Ditz.
 * Convenient Miscarriage: Lilah's miscarriage that spawned a thousand flame wars.
 * Creator Cameo: In the animated series. Hilarious in Hindsight; City of Heroes eventually did put out a Mac Edition with special goodies and much fanfare.
 * Cut and Paste Comic: To a fairly large degree, especially during a con demonstration of how he works his comics, it's shown that he keeps a file full of different eyes and mouths to copy and paste from, along with differently shaded body parts. Seems to be appearing less and less recently. Although in the earlier strips you could tell that Lucas and Barry; Ethan's former boss at the game store had the exact same hair, or that he drew women like Lilah and Emma that looks virtually the same, bar hair and clothes.
 * Don't Explain the Joke: Often criticized of violating this rule. Occasionally goes the opposite way and has comics with no punchline, other then violence, profanity, and/or lol boobs/lol penis.
 * Dull Surprise: Common enough to spawn the B^U Memetic Mutation
 * Drama Bomb: See Jumping the Shark below.
 * Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette: Lucas, concentration camp Lucas Barry (Ethan's old boss), Scott, Lucas' murderous girlfriend, Christian's agent Shannon, and Abby the Gamer Chick who's gaming Ethan (does the author have some kind of thing against brunette women?).
 * Even Nerds Have Standards: Seen here.
 * Everything's Better with Penguins: Ted, if he existed.
 * Everything's Worse with Bears: Poor Faildruid.
 * Evil Redhead: Two of Four, possibly Christian and Kate, who's more of a misguided redhead.
 * Faceless Masses: Averted during the wedding.
 * False Cause: Rogues take less damage from falls. Rogues wear light clothing. Therefore, no clothing would be even better.
 * Fan-Speak: "Life dropped an Epic Husband..."
 * Fast Roping: The sheer amount of places that you can do in the Rainbow Six: Vegas games is jokingly explained here.
 * Filler Strip: Ironically the only time when the comic is about video games (Word of God says the actual strip is about gamers, i.e. the main characters).
 * Four Is Death: The Four Players to each other, usually Player 2 to Player 1.
 * Gamer Chick: Lilah, played completely straight and one of the earliest examples of it.
 * Genius Ditz: Despite being a total idiot, Ethan has constructed a fully sapient (albeit rather misanthropic) robot (out of an Xbox no less), a set of super-strong robot hands, and a hermetically sealed chamber with a chair capable of sensing biorhythms to discourage sleep or inattentiveness. He states that for seven seconds a day, his mind can focus granting him virtually unlimited insight into how the world works, allowing him to build his technological wonders and dispense incredibly good insight into other people's relationships. He then puts pineapple rings over his eyes, saying "heh...Pineapple Goggles."
 * GIS Syndrome: One of the more prominent users.
 * Golden Moment: Lilah and Ethan finally talk to each other.
 * Grim Reaper: An extra in the Sillies; has his own T-Shirt!
 * Hypocritical Humor
 * Idiot Houdini: The other main complaint of detractors aside from the miscarriage arc.
 * Ironic Echo: The Animated series has
 * It Came From the Fridge: this strip
 * Jerkass:
 * Ethan when it comes to customers and Rob due to their limited experience or ignorance of videogames.
 * Rory to his little brother Maowio, at least when they were kids.
 * Karma Houdini: Ethan, Rory, and to a minor extent Lucas.
 * Kick the Dog: Christian. His whole post-miscarriage store plot was to set up Ethan so he could get Lilah back. Putting so much effort to frame a moron so you can get back a girl who left you is both petty and evil, especially when all the money he spent on that asinine plot could have gone into getting whores or dating sites.
 * Life Embellished: Tim Buckley describes Ethan as a "stylized version" of himself (his avatar looks more or less like Ethan with shorter hair), and Lucas likewise of his best friend. Ethan has gradually evolved away from this (or so we hope considering how stupid he is). It's visually apparent in this comic.
 * Limited Wardrobe: Nobody in this strip changes their clothes except for plot reasons.
 * Long Bus Trip: Scott the Linux guy and owner of the penguin, who became Ensemble Dark Horses. Buckley insists they were meant to be one-off characters. Bringing him up on the forums is grounds for instant banning. Strangely they're both featured in the opening of the animated series and occasionally have walk-on roles.
 * Long Runner
 * The Mafia:
 * Man Child: Ethan. With hints of Psychopathic Manchild.
 * Manipulative Bastard: Christian and Rory.
 * The Merch: Mostly character and Wintereenmass T-Shirts, although those "Starbuck's Fresh Roasted Cylon" mugs might be a bit iffy.
 * Moral Dissonance: Lucas tells Kate they can see other people, then is hurt and offended when she actually does. Then has the balls to make her apologize to him when it was his idea to move to casual in the first place.
 * My Own Private I Do: of the Elope First, Plan Later variety. Zeke eventually finds out and uses it as blackmail fodder.
 * Nerd Nanny: Lilah.
 * Nice Hat: This hat is Nice. He's got a whole closet of them, apparently.
 * Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot: "This is how the world ends". No, THIS is.
 * Noodle Incident: We never do find out just what Zeke said to make Ethan so mad at him in these-three strips.
 * Only Six Faces: One face and/or expression commonly called "B^U" or "Buckleyface".
 * Orwellian Editor: Several characters have been removed from the series, some with explanations (Zeke, Embla), some without (Scott, Ted, Chef Brian). Regardless, no matter what, if you mention any of those characters on the CAD forums, you're banned for life.
 * Parental Favoritism: Rory > Ethan -- even when Ethan's getting married.
 * Peek-a-Bangs: Kate; her Fan Nickname is "One-Eye".
 * Product Placement: In addition to videogames, movies, and TV,
 * Proud to Be a Geek: Ethan
 * Put on a Bus:
 * Real Life Writes the Plot: (Rapidly-approaching deadline - any planned script) + Alcohol = Chef Brian
 * Reckless Gun Usage: Ethan demonstrates why Gun Safety rules exist.
 * Rich Bitch: Christian. He's rich, and he's a bitch. He's also one of the most liked characters in the comic.
 * Salt and Pepper: Embla and Zeke
 * Schedule Slip: Notably averted. One thing you have to give Ctrl+Alt+Del is that it's good about sticking to schedule.
 * Screw the Rules, I Have Money: Christian.
 * Secret Test of Character: Kate does this to Lucas, and it appears that he passes
 * Shout-Out: Many, many times over. A rare subtle example is a small vocal tic for Embla, which according to seasoned gamers is a match for SHODAN.
 * Sexy Santa Dress: This strip.
 * Smug Snake: Similar to the above example, Christian is smug, and a snake.
 * Snarky Non-Human Sidekick: Zeke, who was made out of an Xbox. Also something of a Robotic Psychopath when he debuted. Now, he's just downgraded to a snarky Robot Buddy with Embla as the new Psycho.
 * Status Quo Is God: Recently Averted. Things were looking bad for Ethan for a while but now that the marriage has happened and Ethan apparently owns the game store, status quo isn't the word.
 * Stepford Smiler: Lilah is starting to look and act like one. It's -- unsettling.
 * Sudden Videogame Moment: The fourth panel in this strip.
 * Tertiary Sexual Characteristics: Embla. Strangely, Buckley said she's not necessarily female.
 * The Unfavorite: Ethan.
 * Too Dumb to Live: Ethan. Best summed up by Zeke, here.
 * Two Gamers on a Couch: Lampshaded in the very first comic, even. They eventually get armchairs, but whatever.
 * Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist: Ethan, through and through.
 * Walls of Text: A particularly extreme example. At least one strip used this to deliberate comedic effect.
 * We Wait: Lilah and Lucas' plan for dealing with Ethan's big brother-induced alcoholism.
 * Webcomic Time: One day in Buckley's world equals at least four months in real life. Buckley says he draws the plot out so people doing Archive Binges can spend more time with the story. The oddest manifestation of this is
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Lucas' girlfriend Kate, last seen in the background of Ethan and Lilah's wedding.
 * Word Salad Humor: Anything involving the strangely surreal Chef Brian.
 * Xanatos Gambit: Christian buying the video game store, which was all part of a scheme to.
 * You Mean "Xmas": Wintereenmas... sort of.