Seems that loads of these things have been cropping up over the Internet for the last few weeks. Presented here for your entertainment and a possible giggle.
This one’s sweet and it works:

(Via Wim and done by this guy.)
This one’s sweet enough as well:

(Line art by Nami, finished colour version by Sora)
And this is an oldie, but much loved:

(via)
Whereas this is just wrong. (Don’t worry, safe for work, just disliked it so much I couldn’t bring myself to putting the image up).









October 22nd, 2009 at 12:37 am
I don’t like the idea of Calvin taking Ritalin. To take away a child’s imagination at such an early age is just wrong. Immoral. In the strip where Hobbes reverts back to a toy in the last panel almost seems like Calvin killed him.
November 7th, 2009 at 7:43 pm
or forgotten… i don’t like this strip it hurts….when i look at it…it feels like our happy world is turning into a sad more work world you know? when we grow up we have to work and forget about our imagination… right when i look at this after…i promised my self Im never going to let my imaginations go no matter what…
February 7th, 2010 at 5:23 pm
Calvin and Hobbes is like the light coming through a small hole in a window that we get trapped behind as we get older. How imagination and innocence us replaced by logic and reasoning. That strip it just too cruel. It’s always so relaxing to read them, somehow enchanting. I have read them a faxillipn times but whenever I pick it up again its just so refreshing. It was physically painfull to see it.
May 19th, 2010 at 12:45 am
That second picture is ruining my childhood.
Calvin, NEVER, EVER, would date Susie, not saying its bad, but come on! Its calvin!
May 23rd, 2010 at 6:08 am
Oh come on, their odd love/hate dynamic was such a total foreshadowing of what the future holds for them! They’re so immersed in stereotypical playground flirtation, pulling of pony-tails, hitting with snowballs, beatings, Hate-mail Valentines, dead flowers…the whole series, they always had this odd friendship, you could always tell where it was going when they get older.