Wham! Episode/Webcomics


 * Drowtales
 * Homestuck
 * Gunnerkrigg Court
 * The Order of the Stick
 * Questionable Content
 * Sluggy Freelance

A to M
"Word of God: I have frequently seen Susan described as having a "bored" look on her face. For a long time now, I have seen it as something else."
 * And Shine Heaven Now just recently got a Wham Episode in when it's revealed that.
 * Then later subverted when it turns out
 * Angels 2200 has a few.
 * Hammer's apparent death while trying to escape the Ellie Arroway, as well as the revelation of an apparently devastating plan by the colonial rebels
 * In the last battle of the first part, Loser being accidentally killed by Whiskey, Corona Squad being all but annihilated in seconds, Hammer being revealed as alive, Bubblegum leaving the ship with Toat, and the Icebreaker squad being disbanded.
 * In Arthur, King of Time and Space, there was a Wham! Episode before the first Time Skip, with . Before the second Time Skip, there was a Wham week.
 * After the second Time Skip, we open with a Wham! Episode, although in this case a positive one.
 * 'Bittersweet Candy Bowl': Chapter 51, where  Possibly WORSE is Chapter 52,
 * Castlevania RPG has had two, one played for comedy, the other for grimness.
 * The comedic one:
 * The dead-serious one;
 * Cheap Thrills - Chapter 3: Jeordie is goes on a Mushroom Samba after taking spiked mushrooms. It looks like a round of "Jeordie's stupidity earns him another hard life lesson" and Jeordie's mom Elizabeth goes on the errand Jeordie was now incapable of, sharing a bonding moment with younger son Faris in the process. but that gets turned on its head when
 * College Roomies from Hell: Mike finally hatefucks gives in to April's advances, then brutally rejects her afterwards. April responds to this Marsha playing "pretend I'm going to slit April's throat" by running Mike through with a large knife, killing him. Arguably marks the point where CRFH hits full-on Cerebus Syndrome territory.
 * You missed the motivation for that event. Satan was taking advantage of the deal Mike made during his short stay in hell. Mike agreed to give Satan 15 minutes in his body to protect Marsha.
 * Not only that, but some of the 2009 strips imply that Mike is actually the Archangel Michael, sent to protect the earth.
 * DMFA:
 * Dead of Summer: The ending of Book 1 and the introduction of The Protomen in Book 2.
 * Digger manages a fair few. The first that the Cold Servants are Hyenas came as no surprise to most as the nature of the dead god had been so heavily foreshadowed if they turned out to be anything else people would have objected. However Ed being Grim-Eye's father although foreshadowed was foreshadowed so subtly it came out of fricking no-where as far as most readers were concerned, but makes so much sense in hindsight and is such a heartbreaking revelation it jumps right off the HSQ metre.
 * Dominic Deegan, towards the end of the War In Hell story arc. Dominic, who had gained a reputation as a master strategist, seen bloody, bleeding, and crying out in vain for help was pretty jarring.
 * And just a little earlier, when he gets a vision of all the disgusting things Sigfried's father did to the Orcs, hesitates in helping Sigfried, and then gets his face smashed in. Observe.
 * Almost the entirety of the Shadow of Siegfried arc, but this one in particular, showing why Siegfried wound up in hell.
 * Four in a goddamned row in Eight Bit Theater. The third one is, arguably, the whammiest because Fighter, for the first time in the comics 1,000+, seven year run, has actually shown anything but admiration and love towards Black Mage; and Black Mage, for the second or third time, has shown genuine affection for White Mage.
 * And all three of them paling beside the revelation that Sarda is actually the Onion Kid, out for revenge against them for Black Mage mind raping him and killing his foster parents. Repeatedly.
 * You have to admit that the fourth one was really whammy because Black Mage actually killed Fighter. Granted, he's been threatening to do that for years, but he actually succeeded in doing it this time.
 * Ya, for all of a minute.
 * Also, the defeat of the Big Bad in Episode 1221; which was lampshaded in Episode 7; a wham with a set-up spanning the entire series.
 * In El Goonish Shive, "Painted Black."
 * May 31, 2010.


 * Erfworld: Depending on how far you took the "world with game-like qualities" thing, when we find out that people literally pop into existence, fully formed in cities, you might be hit as hard as Parson was.
 * Erfworld is liberally sprinkled with these, which makes it incredibly hard to predict where the story is going.
 * Page 124, where Technical Pacifist Sizemore kills Mauve Shirts Webinar and Dora. Particularly jarring because of what Webinar was trying to do when Sizemore performed the coup de grÃ¢ce. And then Parson starts laughing about how he can say "hosed".
 * Back to Back wham's Bogroll kills Ansom, and then dies and Parson has Sizemore and Wanda ''uncroak the extinct volcano that Gobwin Knob is on top of wiping out most of Ansom's forces
 * Fuck... You!! That is all.
 * Everyday Heroes has this literally when Jane Mighty (in her old life as "Iron Jane") discovered the truth about her team leader, Wrecking Paul: he was a serial killer who murdered her best friend right in front of her.
 * Girly: It was all a lie.
 * Some readers of Goblins theorized that Kore was a Fallen Paladin due to his willingness to murder harmless characters in cold blood if he perceived them as evil, and because he never displayed any Paladin powers in his early appearances. So when he finally demonstrated that he is, indeed, a paladin, a lot of fan theories got jossed.
 * This Irregular Webcomic strip.
 * Its Walky (back when it was still Roomies!) had Ruth die saving a drunk Danny from getting smashed by a semi. Prior to this, the strip was pure drama-free Sitcom. The shift in tone may have been 100% intentional, since the storyline immediately following that shifted the strip fully to Its Walky.
 * The "Sever The Hunger" arc in Jack. Where to Start?
 * Every hundredth or so comic of The Last Days of Foxhound is for the purpose of inducing WHAM, ranging from revelations of a Retroactive Conspiracy that controls the entire team, to Liquid unleashing his Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass Made of Iron powers, inflicting several literal whams on an unsuspecting Cyborg Ninja.
 * Perhaps special note goes to strip 394 where Liquid has to murder a likable hacker attached to his team in order to keep a secret. As the author himself posted on the news page when the comic first came out "Shit just got real".
 * Last Res0rt, Episode 3: during the assault on the White Diamond Crisis -- after being lured deep enough into the ship that, it's up to the remaining unaffected players to save the day. Jigsaw and Daisy manage to recover most of the others, but Daisy's 'snapbacks' backfire,  , and then after that problem gets solved,  ! After all of this,  . OUCH.
 * The 2nd to last comic of Chapter 9 in Megatokyo where Ed uses an army of Killballs to Combination Attack Miho, apparently killing her. The entire thing needed the 1st 2-page comic to be shown.
 * And before that, when Erika asks if sleeping with Largo will make him go away, (not noticing that Largo was becoming friendly with her) which lead to him becoming an incoherent, drunken mess for the rest of the chapter.
 * After 1,000 pages of generally good progress on a resolution in Misfile it's finally revealed how long it will take Rumisiel to get back into heaven and fix things in this strip. 72 years.
 * And then - someone left the door unlocked.
 * To say nothing of the revelation that the titular filing accident is literally the only reason Emily is still alive.
 * Mob Ties: Once you reach Issue 7, Revelations, be ready for a Wham! Episode every Issue, because once it's revealed that Mika was the victim of a violent rape so traumatic that it has left her severely traumatized to the point that she cannot remember it and passes out when anyone mentions it to her, the plot kicks into high gear.
 * And the Whams become even bigger when Issue 14 rolls around, and the Big Bad Bengal appears.
 * Issue 15-16: Mika Cries, Kyoko Dies.
 * Moon Over June #125.

N to Z

 * This Niels comic.
 * Paradigm Shift, Act 1, Part III:.
 * The breakup most of a year into Punch an' Pie.
 * PvP, "Upstairs Downstairs": The butler did it!
 * Scary Go Round has a Wham! Episode during the second Super Crisis Quests storyline when we learn that the character previously thought have been to be the Devil was just a character actor named Old Nobby, and the Devil was revealed to actually be crazy old Ralph after Nobby's death.
 * Shades, Chapter 10: the bad guys get parliament suspended and put a puppet in charge of the UK.
 * Something Positive gave us a wham in the "Just Today" story, where Fred and Faye spend a day together, and Fred struggles on how to tell her he has Alzheimer's. He decides to wait until tomorrow, which is where the wham comes in: Faye dies in her sleep overnight.
 * Issue Ten of the infamous Sonichu, in which  The childish aspect of the artwork could make it even more disturbing to some people.
 * The Super Fogeys first is when Dr. Rocket is revealed to be Herman, a shapeshifter the real Dr. Rocket used to try to ruin Captain Spectacular's reputation. Herman had reformed and was forced to become Dr. Rocket (the explanation how isn't so good), but after a blow on the head, this process broke down and more and more of Herman gradually begins to show. The reader's clue is when Dr. Rocket acquires a stutter, which Herman is shown to have in a flashback before the reveal.
 * This pales in comparison to the fact that the mysterious Dr. Klein and the Third Man are actually Jerry, Captain Spectacular's sidekick. The comic archives are FULL of subtle hints and clues -- from the fact that Jerry is never seen in the same panel as Dr. Klein, to Klein's affection for Jerry and Spy Gal (Jerry is in love with the latter), to Jerry not having any powers yet was able to 'survive being thrown into a volcano' (the Third Man can appears to use a dimensional gate or can teleport), to similarities between designs, and the list goes on. Best of all, it is clear that this was planned from the very beginning.
 * Tales of the Questor: Old Secrets story arc: Quentyn's town learns to its horror that an old forgotten debt incurred by Quentyn's predecessor has grown until most of the town will be literally repossessed. Quentyn, up till now struggling as an underappreciated hero most of his town sneers at, volunteers to renew the original quest to cancel the debt and the series becomes an extended adventure of The Quest that makes him a hero of great honor in his community and beyond.
 * Terinu: Leeza confronts her father after discovering that Humanity knew about the Dominion using the Ferin as power sources and committed genocide against them to disable the Dominion. Then her father throws her in jail to keep her quiet.
 * This Is the Worst Idea You've Ever Had has the introduction of Jeremy's room-mate, Miguel...who happens to have the same character design as the villain from Cuanta Vida, Rojo. To some fans, this itself was a WHAM Episode. To others, the Wham episode would be the page after that, where.
 * As seen in the image at the top of the main page, VG Cats references this in a Lost Episode of Tom and Jerry, which is a deconstruction of the slapstick violence and Amusing Injuries the title duo suffer. Jerry is charged with aggravated assault, given a lengthy jail sentence, while Tom suffers irreparable brain damage and spends the rest of his life as an invalid.
 * What Birds Know: Page 431, which abruptly turns the story from a lighthearted fantasy romp through an Alternate Universe with a dark undercurrent into something really, really bad.
 * Yu+ Me: Dream does this in Issue 9, which was kinda unexpected (despite, you know, the title) due to the readers' emotional investment.