Walkyverse



The Verse which is the setting of five Web Comic series by David Willis: Roomies!, It's Walky!, Shortpacked! (which now has its own page), Joyce And Walky! and Dumbing of Age (which also has its own page).

Roomies! began in 1997 as a Slice of Life webcomic concerning the adventures of Danny Wilcox, Ordinary College Student, and his Kavorka Man roommate Joe Rosenthal. Other important characters included Danny's love interest Jennifer "Billie" Billingsworth, his mixed-race Broken Bird ex-girlfriend Sal Walters, and the sheltered, semi-well-adjusted Joyce Brown. The strip gradually developed both Cerebus Syndrome and a love for theatrics, culminating in Joe and Joyce being kidnapped by aliens.

At this point it re-branded itself It's Walky! and began to focus on the adventures of a Government Conspiracy called SEMME, dedicated to dealing with extra-terrestrial threats to Earth. The titular David "Walky" Walkerton, a hyperactive member of Squad 128, found himself fighting alongside Sal, Joe and Joyce, all of whom were inducted to SEMME and placed in his squad, with Stuffy Brit Jason Chesterfield, Jerk with a Heart of Jerk Mike Warner and even-more-hyperactive Robin DeSanto rounding out the central cast.

After a random collection of Where Are They Now Epilogues, DW launched Shortpacked in 2005, which revolves around the adventures of Invisible to Gaydar Straight Man Ethan Siegel and Meganekko Amber O'Malley as they work at the titular toy store. By the third strip, it has linked itself back to the Walkyverse when Robin DeSanto, still just as hyperactive as before, seeks employment there; not too much later, Mike Warner also joined the cast. In the same year Joyce And Walky! a Dom Com centering around the Official Couple of the verse, debuted, playing out the affairs of characters after the retirement of It's Walky!. Only strips published on Saturdays were available to the public; Tuesday and Thursday material were for subscribers only.

This strip was put on hiatus in 2010, and later that year got a soft reboot into Dumbing of Age, which transplants characters from all of Willis's other comics into Indiana University and strips off the sci-fi elements, thus going back to the original premise of Roomies! ...and so the circle is complete.

Joyce & Walky! got taken out of mothballs on May 13, 2012, with three updates since then. Willis says he's unsure how long updates will keep up.

The cast of these series is vast, but the main players in each can be boiled down to:

Roomies

 * Danny Wilcox, an ordinary college student with a tendency for unbridled panic.
 * Joe Rosenthal, Danny's womanizing best friend and dorm roommate.
 * Joyce Brown, a quirky innocent girl who is intent on making Danny her boyfriend.
 * Sarah Clinton, Joyce's jaded pre-law roommate and Friends with Benefits with Joe.
 * Jennifer 'Billie' Billingsworth, a Troubled but Cute student with a reputation as a party girl.
 * Mary (Mary Paul in Walky!), Sal's hypocritical 'best friend' whose moralizing towards Billie is proven hollow.
 * Ruth Lesse, a cynical grad student who had been Billie and Walky's babysitter as a teen.
 * Sal Walters, Danny's moody, mysterious ex-girlfriend, who shows up just long enough to tell Danny goodbye because she's moving on to...

It's Walky!

 * David 'Walky' Walkerton, a hyperactive, bubble-headed medical lab attendant turned alien hunter who was once Billie's best childhood friend.
 * Steven 'Beef' Walkerton, Walky's fraternal twin brother.
 * Jason Chesterfield, the uptight British squad leader, and.
 * Mike Warner, violent-minded Jerkass who delights in torturing those around him.
 * Allen Rees, alien expert.
 * Professor Doc, Mad Scientist in charge of studying alien technology.
 * Dina Sarazu, unfortunate, mild-mannered paleontologist who ends up as Professor Doc's assistant.
 * Robin DeSanto, hyperactive speedster.

Their main opponents are the Purple Aliens ('Alien' being the actual name of their homeworld), lead by Head Alien; the British Ninjas from a secret organization led by ; and the Martian Empire.

Joyce and Walky

 * Becky, Joyce's new best friend. She is generally more sane and easy-going than Joyce.
 * Dorothy, Walky's over-achieving ex-girlfriend who dumped him for not being studious enough. She's moved into Walky's neighborhood and is having second thoughts about her decision all those years ago.
 * D.J., Danny and 's hypothetical kid from the future. Other universes sending help for other versions of him, only to end up in the mainline continuity, is the impetus for most of the plot.

Shortpacked!
See here for info.

Dumbing of Age
See here for info.

These series provide examples of:

Roomies!
"Joe: What are we doing tonight? Danny: Joyce wants to see a movie. Joe: Joyce? You mean that studious, churchy girl? The Joyce who followed you home and claimed you as her own? Even though you're dating Sal, who's currently still in high school? Both Aside Glance Danny: That was...informative. But yes. Joyce."
 * Aliens Steal Cable: And are pop-culture junkies...
 * Anything That Moves: Billie before Ruth's death.
 * Arc Words: "Act with integrity... No regrets."
 * Art Evolution: This is what the first strip of the entire canon looked like. This is the latest strip of Dumbing of Age. Same artist.
 * Ascended Extra: Billie—started as a background character living with Ruth and was revealed to be both her childhood friend and the Roomies! cast's One Degree of Separation to Walky a year or so later.
 * Belligerent Sexual Tension: Danny and Billie. I'm enjoying this way too much.
 * Book Ends: The comic begins and ends with Danny on the phone with his girlfriend and scolding Joe for climbing up out the window to the girls' dorms, trying to get him to think of the consequences. The first time, Joe's response shows his obliviousness to the concept of dealing with your actions; the second time, Joe has actually considered the potential ramifications (if only the favorable ones) and decided to do it anyway.
 * Can't Get Away with Nuthin'': Drink one beer, and.
 * Also lampshaded and averted much, much later
 * Cerebus Syndrome: Ruth's brought the strip's consequence-free hijinks to a screeching halt.
 * Clingy Jealous Girl: Joyce. Worth noting that she's jealous over someone that's not actually hers.
 * Creator Cameo: "If I don't get a girlfriend in the next five seconds I'm gonna jump out the window."
 * The first of many. Willis make multiple background appearances throughout his comics, and later on becomes Ethan's Sitcom Arch Nemesis in Shortpacked.
 * Disneyfication: Parodied with Roomies! issue two, which has Danny, Joe and Joyce watching "Disney's Hansel and Gretel".
 * Fallen Princess: Billie, a former Libby-esque Cheerleader, has a hard time adjusting to her loss of status upon entering college where no one cares how "cool" you supposedly were in high school.
 * Famous Last Words:
 * Heroic Sacrifice: Ruth
 * How Unscientific: See below.
 * I Have Brothers: Joyce has five, all older, she used early on to explain her uncharacteristic fighting skills
 * She Is Not My Girlfriend: Danny, word-for-word several times with Joyce.
 * Irony: Ruth learned her "act with integrity" motto from her adulterous father.
 * Info Dump: From this scene in Roomies! issue two, for those unfamiliar with the comic:


 * Kavorka Man: Joe - to the point that later Fanon would speculate that part of his Abductee powers was enhanced pheromones
 * Killed Off for Real:
 * Meganekko: Billie
 * No Fourth Wall: Crossed with Non Sequitur Episode. It lasted about a week before the closing of the strip's first year.
 * Pietà Plagiarism: Ruth carrying a ten year old Walky, who has just been returned by the Aliens, as she walks in on her father and Billie's mother, who are having an affair.
 * Poorly-Disguised Pilot: Anything involving Joyce/Sal and SEMME.
 * Punny Name: Whitney Howard Lesse, Ruth Lesse, Dick Lesse.
 * Shout-Out: The title of the first book collection. Roomies! Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Beer.
 * The second book has two: the title is Roomies! Giant-Sized Cerebus Syndrome. The cover is a take-off on the Giant-Sized X-Men cover.
 * Too Kinky to Torture: Both played straight and subverted : Joyce seems to be the only human who can stand The Sound of Music, but once the aliens realize this they show her porn instead, which screws her up for the long term
 * Tsundere: Billie, toward Danny.
 * Yandere: Joyce, toward Danny.

It's Walky!
""Hey, kid, don't take it personally. It's just a bunch of science.""
 * Abnormal Ammo: Monkey Master has Arm Cannons that shoot monkeys. This is about as effective as it sounds.
 * Action Girl: Sal, primarily, though Joyce, Daisy, Lith, and Linda would count too
 * Action Mom: Linda Walkerton,
 * A God Am I: The Wanderer, better known in-universe and out as "The Cheese"
 * Aliens in Cardiff: Lampshaded in the anomaly arc.
 * Alpha Bitch: Billie's High School persona. She comes to feel guilty about it.
 * Anyone Can Die: By the end of the strip, about a third of the major characters are dead.
 * Anything That Moves: This time an entire squad of them, all female.
 * As You Know / Info Dump: Lampshaded. "Hey, boss, we know all this."
 * Attention Deficit Ooh Shiny: Walky.
 * Back from the Dead:.
 * Badass Normal: Jason,.
 * Battle Trophy: After killing Dargon and taking over his paramilitary organisation, Penny takes to wearing his eyepatch as a personal affect.
 * Berserk Button: Well, a lot of them, but honourable mention to Dina, who had been steadily falling into despairing over her own uselessness when one of the Britjas pressed it when he was setting up a bomb to destroy S.E.M.M.E.'s intelligence and research files.


 * BFG: Joyce's cannon.
 * Blond Guys Are Evil: Mike. It's a funny kind of evil, though.
 * Break the Cutie: Walky, Joyce, Linda...
 * Joyce in particular could be the poster girl for this trope.
 * Can't Hold His Liquor: It takes a mere sip to get Sal and Walky passed out.
 * Cat Fight: So many, most involving Sal.
 * Call Back: To Roomies!, multiple times. For example, the incident Billie's describing in panel one can be seen here.
 * Cerebus Retcon: Pretty much everything.
 * Using The Sound of Music as torture goes from being just plain Suckiness Is Painful to having a subliminally-painful, Scanners-like effect on abductees imprinted on them in youth, and Joyce's immunity becomes a plot point.
 * Cerebus Syndrome: The Darker and Edgier trend of the series worked much better than in Roomies, but still drove away several fans.
 * Chekhov's Gunman: The Cheese is
 * Cloning Blues: Anti-Joyce, whose murder by the original would lead to severe repercussions.
 * Cool and Unusual Punishment: Four words:The Sound of Music
 * Conspicuous CG: 3D models were used for some of the robots and spaceships. They looked really out of place..
 * Contractual Genre Blindness: Head Alien just enjoys playing the Villain too much for his own good.
 * Creator Cameo: At it's subtlest. Look in front on Monkey Master's left arm, the one that's not holding Aliens. (Warning, comic contains spoilers!)
 * Crossover: With Melonpool, twice, and both times it had a lasting effect on Walky's storylines.
 * And another with Fans, which seemed more concern with advancing both character sets' emotional arcs.
 * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Both Joyce and Walky.
 * Dark Action Girl: Sal, through much of the series.
 * Death Is Cheap: Averted, despite the heroes having access to a Martian Resurrection Chamber by the end of the comic. Only one person can use it at a time, the process takes nine months, and you need a sample of DNA from the subject..
 * Destructo-Nookie: When Walky and Joyce finally resolve their UST, motel room furniture pays the price
 * Disproportionate Retribution: Before coming to the main universe Dargon Chesterfield

"Walky: No mind wipe for you. Ever. (tosses mind-wiper to the ground, it bounces) Well, if that broke it would've been really cool."
 * Ditto Aliens: Justified - we never see the Purple Aliens or Martians outside of their protective suits.
 * Double Entendre: Especially in the storyline appropriately named 'Innuendo'.
 * Dramatic Shattering: Subverted and promptly lampshaded:


 * Dude Looks Like a Lady: Walky, especially in the gender-bending reality-warping storyline.
 * Everythings Better With Monkeys: Monkey Master, who hates being called a monkey - he's a giant robot ape, after all; also, Walky's obsession with monkeys, and especially his favorite childhood toy, Mister Monkey.
 * Eyepatch of Power: Dargon Chesterfield milks this trope for all it's worth. After, Penny even takes it to wear herself.
 * Expressive Mask: The Purple Alien's helmets
 * Expy: Sal is amazingly similar to Rogue of the X-Men. She speaks with a Southern accent, discovers her long-lost brother is her teammate, is one of the strongest members of SEMME, is emotionally conflicted and constantly switching sides, and even wears gloves.
 * Beef is very obviously supposed to be a pastiche of Duke Nukem.
 * Word of God says he's based on Arnie.
 * Who happened to be a big part of the inspiration for Duke Nukem.
 * Famous Last Words:
 * Fantastic Racism: Toward and the law-abiding Martians; in the epilogue, toward now-assimilated aliens.
 * Flight: Part of what makes Joyce special is that she can use the flying pack effectively.
 * Foreshadowing: Over my fossilized remains!
 * In this "vision," how many arms did you have?
 * Fragile Speedster: Robin, though it's mostly emotional fragility rather than physical - she's about as strong as the others.
 * Freudian Excuse: Sal.
 * Funetik Aksent: Sal.
 * Averted with Jason: though he apparently does have an accent, it's not phonetic.
 * Gambit Roulette: Britjas, just...Britjas.
 * Genki Girl: Robin.
 * Gender Bender: During an Unpredictable Results episode.
 * Genre Savvy: Danny. While talking with Sal, he mentions that he's planning to ask Billie to marry him. Sal asks if she can see the ring. His response? "Hell no. I know how this works. I show you the ring, and Billie walks around the corner."
 * "Get Out of Jail Free" Card: Averted: when Sal was incarcerated, she could easily have broken out if she'd wanted to, but remained because she knows she deserved it, and eventually had to escape when swept up by circumstances.
 * Gigantic Gulp: The "X-TREEEM MUG!" storyline.
 * Becomes a fine Brick Joke. In the last panel of the last strip.
 * Godly Sidestep: The Big Cheese claims to know which religion is the correct one, but refuses to tell anyone, claiming that if you don't figure it out for yourself, you won't understand the answer.
 * Government Conspiracy: SEMME.
 * Glurge Addict
 * Great Way to Go: Dying in a fire is bad, but also sort of cool. If it's while in the middle of an orgy in which one is the only male ...
 * Half-Identical Twins: Sal and Walky
 * Hannibal Lecture: One of Head Alien's favorite tactics.
 * Heroic BSOD: Many, most notably Linda during the final fight with the Britjas.
 * Heroic Sacrifice: Dina.
 * Possibly Mike as well, as he . Whether or not he actually intended to do so is debatable.
 * Heroic Sociopath: Mike.
 * Sued for Superheroics: Done completely straight and deadly serious.
 * I Want Grandkids: Joyce's mother, to an astoundingly embarrassing degree.
 * If You Kill Him You Will Be Just Like Him: But it doesn't work the last time Head Alien tries it.
 * In Vino Veritas: When he gets drunk, Mike turns nice!
 * Indecisive Parody: It doesn't really know if it's a comedic series or a dramatic one. It's a mix of both.
 * Is That What He Told You?: Another tactic Head Alien often used.
 * Killed Mid-Sentence: Also doubles as both a Heroic Sacrifice and a Crowning Moment of Awesome.

""I do intend to finish [Joyce and Walky!], and not, like, end everything with a text story where everyone becomes lesbians.""
 * Klingon Promotion:
 * Knight of Cerebus: The Wanderer, in his first full appearance. He even provides the page quote.
 * Ladykiller in Love: Joe, first with his crush on and then with him starting to fall for a nerdy girl in a chatroom. It sets off his character development arc, and he eventually becomes a more well-rounded person because of both instances.
 * Laser-Guided Amnesia: The mindwiper.
 * Let's Wait a While: Though in Joyce and Walky, it's not so much "Wait until the time is right to have sex" as much as "Wait until Joyce can think about sex without going catatonic or psychotic."
 * Loads and Loads of Characters: At least 90% of the characters on that page up there were introduced for or major players in this one. The unofficial stats page lists 247 named or otherwise identifiable characters.
 * Locking MacGyver in the Store Cupboard: We found Phil, the Destiny's janitor, trapped in a closet, and he helped us escape using a variety of common household tools.
 * Loud of War: The aliens use The Sound Of Music as a form of mental torture.
 * Love Martyr: Dina.
 * Luke, I Am Your Father
 * McNinja: The 'Britjas'
 * Mistaken for Gay: "Innuendo"
 * Mood Whiplash: Yikes.
 * More Than Mind Control: Beef, the long-lost Walkerton sibling, was part of the squad that supposedly got brainwashed when they went to England to investigate the JFO.
 * Murder the Hypotenuse: Billie against Sal.
 * Mysterious Parent
 * Never Bareheaded: Dina is never seen without her trademark safari hat, even when sleeping or suspended upside down. In the entire series, she takes it off exactly once:
 * "Not Making This Up" Disclaimer: "Yes. Yes! He put me in his 'tummy prison.' I'm not making this up."
 * Not-So-Harmless Villain: The Head Alien is a pretty funny guy... who also happens to singlehandedly ruin several characters' lives.
 * Obfuscating Stupidity Dizzy and hyperactive as he is, Walky is not nearly as dumb as he acts, (he was a straight-A student) but he prefers to play the fool to avoid responsibility. (And he has trouble breaking the habit of a lifetime when responsibility is ultimately forced upon him.)
 * Oedipus Rex
 * Only Known by Their Nickname: Walky is called "David" a small handful of times in the strip's entire history (mostly by his mother.) Doubly ironic as everyone calls him "Walky", which is a nickname he doesn't even like (he insists people call him "Walkerton") due to its association with repressed memories.
 * Billie also qualifies.
 * Pet the Dog:
 * Peek-a-Bangs: Sal, for a while.
 * Perverse Sexual Lust: Trope Namer.
 * Punny Name: Dina Sarazu, Peter Paul (husband of Mary).
 * Also, Alan,
 * Redemption in the Rain: Walky's "it's the rain" speech
 * Separated at Birth:
 * Shoot the Dog: Sal shooting Tony, in a Story Arc appropriately entitled "Kill Your Friends".
 * Shout-Out: Walky seeks inspiration for how to effectively lead his team, and it comes crashing through a window. Turns out Willis was making references to Batman even before he started parodying him explicitly.
 * Shrinking Violet: Dina, although.
 * Small Girl, Big Gun: Joyce, to the point where it becomes a Running Gag.
 * Smite Me Oh Mighty Smiter: Joyce has doubts of God's existence, so she uses the Power Booster Rod to contact The Wanderer, who is utterly baffled as to why she would think he would be able to answer.
 * Sibling Rivalry: The ultimate source of Beef's tragic Face Heel Turn.
 * Spy Catsuit: Lampshaded.
 * Summon Bigger Fish: When Joyce uses the Power Booster Rod to attract the attention of The Wanderer after SEMME is attacked by the Britjas.
 * Super Speed: Robin - she once ate over 1800 doughnuts in under an hour, in fifteen Tim Horton shops around a certain town in Canada
 * Super Soldier: The Abductees.
 * Super Window Jump: Sal. Frequently lampshaded.
 * Switched At Birth: Sal and Beef
 * Take That: A story takes place in a time-frozen small town in Canada, taking place in large part in a high school, where a fish can be seen floating in midair. c.f. Avalon.
 * Another take that to Avalon in the announcement of Dumbing of Age:

"Sal: "Folks're always tellin' me to use the door.""
 * The Artifact: The Sound of Music, early sexual Aesops.
 * The Atoner: Sal. Somewhat subverted, since this is usually defined as wanting to go out and do something to atone. Sal sits in prison when it is implied she could break out, and is forced to escape by circumstances.
 * There Are No Therapists: Lampshaded at least once. After the series ended, Willis even did a storyline about it.
 * There Was a Door: Sal. It became a Running Gag with her. She even Lampshades it while using a door as a blunt instrument on Billie.

"Excellent. They wish also do battle. This is satisfy."
 * Throwaway Country: Invoked by the Head Alien, who figures no one would notice if he just froze Canada. "Goddamn was I right!"
 * Time Stands Still: The Head Alien creates a device that can do this and tests it on Canada.
 * Title Drop: It's Walky.
 * Took a Level in Badass: Billie actually dares to challenge Sal over Danny and manages to give a surprisingly good account of herself due to martial arts training and a childhood spent fighting with Walky.
 * Totem Pole Trench: In this '' strip, Joyce and Dina use a more specific version to pretend to be Jason.
 * Translation Train Wreck: Translations of speech come out this way.

"Man of steel. Woman of steel. Bed of Kleenex."
 * Tsundere: Sal, towards both Tony and Jason.
 * Two Words: Obvious Trope: "Four words...."
 * Unexpected Successor: Walky's mother becoming head of SEMME.
 * The Unmasqued World: The Aliens come out of hiding and attack Denver about halfway through the series.
 * Unpredictable Results: The Head Alien's time-freezing ray, which at first seems to just cause Gender Bender but makes reality gradually more wibbly the longer it lasts. The fact that the ray was used to freeze the Cheese, who is functionally if not literally God in the Walkyverse, may have had something to do with this.
 * Unresolved Sexual Tension: Willis had way too much fun with Joyce and Walky's. By the time it was released it had the force of a small thermonuclear device.

"Howard: Nerd! Nerd! One of Us! One of Us! Joe: Now I want it to be a suicide mission."
 * Unbroken Vigil: Seen here. (The Sound of Music lyrics he's singing are what brought her out of it last time she was comatose.)
 * Unrobotic Reveal: Alan.
 * Unstoppable Rage: Often - usually after Head Alien has pushed one of them a little too far.
 * Upper Class Twit: Subverted: Jason is British and upper class, wears a bowtie almost all the time, and had a rich and powerful father, but is in fact more serious and competent than most of his squad.
 * The Voiceless: Marcie. She may actually be mute, and definitely is in another universe.
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: Sal, much of the time, verging on Knight Templar in places &#91;1&#93;
 * We Named the Dog Indiana: Joyce's dogs, Walkies and Daniel. Both times, she had been mindwiped of the respective boy's existence, and it was unintentional. When introducing Walky to her parents, they believe Walky was named after the dog. He retorts with an Indiana Jones reference.
 * What Measure Is a Non-Human?: The Purple Aliens, whom the SEMME agents happily slaughter by the saucerful.
 * Wrench Wench: Lith.
 * You Say Tomato: Walky cracks up because of how a British character pronounces his name.
 * Your Approval Fills Me with Shame: After Danny asks if he, Joe, Rachel and uber-nerd Howard are on a suicide mission, Joe outlines why it's not and explains intangibility by bringing up Kitty Pryde.

Joyce & Walky!
"Joe: Am I the only one who refuses to dignify this retarded development?"
 * After the End: The comic's tagline describes J&W! as "post-apocalyptic." Given that said apocalypse was averted, it's debatable how well the description fits.
 * Alternate Universe: Hoo boy. The villain's entire plot revolves around building an army out of the future kids of potential pairings, and that's just for starters...
 * April Fools' Day: 2008 had Ultra-Car getting hit with a missile, Joyce and Walky inside declaring their hatred for each other, and Head Alien and Monkey Master having a Dance Party Ending.
 * Arbitrary Skepticism: Monkey Master disbelieves Head Alien II's existance and exploits. Head Alien II assumes this is the reason until Monkey Master tells him it's because "that would mean you actually succeeded at something."
 * Played straight later: even after all he's seen and done, Joe still denies the existance of Danny's alt-future kid DJ.

"Sal: These antennae can be used as stranglin' instruments. Walky: Than we shall remain silent."
 * Back to School: Played Straight. Joyce was abducted by SEMME before she could finish college and Walky never started, so both start taking courses once the war's over. The plot never focuses on it, granted...
 * Bad Job, Worse Uniform: Sal and her job at Pluto 9571.

"Danny: I'm off the hook? Walky: You're off the hook."
 * Benevolent Boss: Joe, as head of Rosenthal Industries. Danny works for him.
 * Best Woman: Danny implied he would've ended up Joyce's maid of honor if Becky hadn't popped up.

"Longtime It's Walky! readers may find this scene familiar. Sort of. Hint: Things are different."
 * Back from the Dead / Back for the Finale:
 * Brainwashed and Crazy: How the
 * Burger Fool: Sal ends up as one when forced into the working world.
 * Call Back: Sal calls Joyce's use of her jetpack cheating when recounting one of their It's Walky!-era fights to Becky. Later, whilst fighting the, Joyce gleefully refers to the use of her jetpack as cheating as she and Walky fly into battle.
 * The Cameo: Joyce logs onto a pony chatroom in the hopes of finding a new friend to be her maid of honor, only to become discouraged and give up. Amber is on the same forum.
 * Cerebus Retcon: We get an explanation for the duct tape restraints. Apparently it worked on the abductees when they were kids and they just never felt the need to upgrade. (Hey, no one said it was a good explanation.)
 * Crossover: With Shortpacked for the wedding. Robin is authenticating, and Mike is invited. They bring Leslie and Amber as their plus-ones and they all show up in Ultra-Car.
 * Clue From Ed: The Rubber Band History version of The Unmasqued World arc comes with the following note from Willis.

"Head Alien II: Hey, you stupid monkey! Those were the guys on our side! C'mon! Monkey Master: All these humans look alike! Head Alien II: ...That's sort of a cliche, don't you think? Monkey Master: I'm serious. They're all wearing the same damn outfit. Head Alien II: Oh. Well. Point taken."
 * Crack Pairing: Invoked with the alternate-reality kids for the future. Some of them have really bizarre parentage--the kid of Doc and Doc's clone and Harold and a tube sock are some of the less bizarre examples.
 * Dead Guy on Display: The final fate of Head Alien I--in the Smithsonian, no less.
 * Fainting: Happens to Danny and Billie when faced with the reality of D.J.'s existence for the first time.
 * Fantastic Racism: Lampshaded and subverted.

"Joyce: Were you drawing lips again?"
 * Flash Back: An extended one happens early on, which introduces us to Dorothy and tells the story of how Walky became an honor student in high school.
 * First Episode Spoiler: Jason and Sal don't last, which is why Sal now lives with Joyce and Walky.
 * Friends with Benefits: Jason and Sal try this for a while after their relationship falls apart. It doesn't work out.
 * Fourth Wall Portrait: Walky takes a life-drawing class and is critisized by his professor for "making up anatomy."

"HAII: I see the hope on your faces, and I know the reason for it. Hell, I put it there. You know, to taunt you, if only for a few minutes. That's right--I let D.J. Wilcox escape. cue Oh Crap look on the fleeing D.J.'s face HAII: It should be fun."
 * The Fundamentalist: Becky's dad. He's used to show how far Joyce has come.
 * Grand Theft Me:
 * Goggles Do Nothing: The alt-future kids all wear goggles, but mostly on their foreheads. What purpose they serve is never explained, but given that the kids bitch at each other for stealing each other's looks they're probably just there for esthetic reasons.
 * Got Me Doing It: Joyce now also uses "wiigii" instead of "woo-hoo", and probably picked it up from Walky.
 * Friendless Background: Jason's employers are very happy that he comes from one of these.
 * Halloween Cosplay: On occasion, with the most memorable instance of Joyce being just a word a way from implying Walky was dressed as David Willis. Walky quickly clarifies that his costume is actually Harry Potter.
 * Happily Engaged and Living Together: The titular duo. While Joyce does become a tad paranoid when Walky starts hanging around Dorothy, their relationship is remarkably drama-free and all of their arguments are petty and short-lived.
 * Henpecked Husband: Danny. He doesn't seem to mind.
 * Hope Spot: The multitude of alternate-future kids have been chained up by Head Alien II, but one (D.J. Wilcox) escaped. The others think he'll be of some help, until...

"Jason: You may be superhuman, but I remember you have a soft neck."
 * Hypocrite: Joyce edges into this territory when she has a mini-freakout over Walky and Dorothy hanging out. Walky points out that she pined after both Danny and Joe and he doesn't take issue with them being around.
 * If You Ever Do Anything to Hurt Her...: Walky threatens Jason with this when he finds out he and Sal have been sneaking around. Jason is unimpressed.

"DJ: I shouldn't be interacting with you to begin with. I only initiated it for my own selfish reasons. So I deserve any ire thrown my way. This was stupid, plain and simple. But hey, principals mean diddly squat without the experiences to back them up, right?"
 * I'm Not Here to Make Friends: Jason's excuse for his lack of social life.
 * Insistent Terminology: Pluto 9571 isn't a theme restaurant, it's a dining experience.
 * Intangible Man/Voluntary Shapeshifting: Electric Man, and later
 * Left for Dead: Head Alien II does this for Sal and D.J., in spite of Monkey Master's insistence that D.J. still has vital signs and he should finish the job.
 * Married to the Job: Jason, kind of. While he does love his job, his issues are mostly unrelated to that and he considers his career choice is a convenient scapegoat for said issues.
 * Meaningful Echo: Back to this Roomies! strip. D.J. uses Danny's Anvilicious moralizing as his last words to his alt-universe father, and in doing so lends them a small bit of dignity.

"Becky: What's that noise I sometimes hear in here? Stampeding cattle? Joyce: Scrabble. We play very loud Scrabble."
 * Milestone Redo: Hey, Sal! Yeah, college is fine...
 * No Dialogue Episode: Joyce and Walky's wedding ceremony.
 * No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: Sal gives Head Alien II a damn good thrashing
 * No Mere Windmill:
 * Non-Indicative Name: Machete, who doesn't carry any sort of blade.
 * Obnoxious In-Laws: Sal, to Joyce.
 * Overly Long Name: "I bet you never expected  kids-of-your-friends from the future! ... Doesn't roll of the tongue very easily, but not everything good is marketable."
 * Revenge: Joyce and Walky are ready to flee HAII's army when Machete mentions he killed at which point they charge back into battle. Jason is a little less rash but follows them when Machete says HAII recorded the killing and watches it over and over.
 * Right Through the Wall: Joyce and Walky. It gets Becky's dad on their case and, well, Becky...

"Joe: Everything's going to be completely different, isn't it? Danny: Yep. And I'm completely ready. ... Nothing can possibly go wrong! Joe ducks under the table, than cautiously pokes his head up Joe: Nothing happened. Danny: Told you everything is different."
 * Rubber Band History: The Alternate Universe arc starts with a replay of the The Unmasqued World arc of It's Walky, except Joe and Joyce are together now and Walky is nowhere in sight...and that's just the tip of the iceberg.
 * Schedule Slip: Multiple, which resulted in the finale only being half-finished.
 * Self-Serving Memory: Joyce has got a bit of a case of this with regards to her relationship with Danny in Roomies!.
 * Tempting Fate: Lampshaded.

"Sorry, took "wedding crasher" a wee bit too literally.''"
 * And Played Straight a moment later—after Danny's big speech about how he feels ready for any challenge life lobs at him, D.J. shows up and claims to be his son.
 * Under the Mistletoe: Joyce and Sal freak out when they find themselves under it in the Dec. 2005 wallpaper.
 * Wedding Day: Danny and Billie's wedding, though the duo are out of focus in favor of highlighting Sal and Joyce's hostility towards each other regarding how their relationships with Danny ended up. The comic also ends on one--or is about to, anyway—between Joyce and Walky themselves.
 * Wedding Smashers: Lampshaded.

"Sal and Joyce: Drama queen."
 * With This Ring: Joe fumbles it at Danny and Billie's wedding, sending Sal and Joyce scrambling to beat each other to get it, much to the irritation of the bride and groom. Sarah beats both of them to it.