Octocat Adventure

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
"I will find my parents! I will find my pareeeeeents! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA..."


"NO! I DO HAVE PARENTS! I DO I DO I DO I DOOOOO!!!!!."
—Octocat in Octocat Adventure 3.

A red octopus-cat seeks out his missing parents, venturing to strange places and meeting strange creatures. While having a nice cup of tea and relaxing.

Octocat Adventure is a 5-part animated series purportedly created by 9-year old Randy Peters and uploaded to Youtube between March and September 2008. So Bad It's Good in nearly all regards, the shorts were crudely illustrated using MS Paint, poorly orchestrated, and seemingly voiced ad-lib by a high-pitched Peters.

Until the middle of the climatic final episode, that is.

After the release of the final part of Octocat Adventure, the shorts were revealed to be created by professional animator David O'Reilly under the guise of Randy Peters as a measure of how well an animation's storyline is received regardless of how poorly executed the rest of the animation is. If the responses to the shorts are any indication, O'Reilly may very well have proven his point.

Tropes used in Octocat Adventure include:
  • Animation Bump: Used in part 5 to break away from its Stylistic Suck. After Octocat enters the "Door of Truth", the episode is suddenly animated in sleek 3D, with richer colors, improved choreography, improved sound, and music. Nevertheless, the scenes are still stylized as if they were drawn in MS Paint.
  • Chekhov's Gun: Octocat's drawn out "roar" from part 1 turns out to be an effective weapon in part 5 capable of shattering the sky and defeating Big Bad.
    • Also, the "Door of Truth" from part 2 which Octocat reenters in part 5 triggers the Animation Bump.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: Intentionally invoked in the beginning of parts 1 and 2 when an unseen third party asks what Octocat is up to. Octocat will also turn to the viewers on his own accord and seemingly addresses them.
  • Crossing the Desert: The premise of nearly the whole of part 4.
  • Crowning Moment of Awesome: When part 5 receives an Animation Bump, you know shit has gone real.
  • Dark Is Evil: The "blac ballon" Octocat.
  • Deranged Animation: Given the bizarre situations Octocat finds himself in every episode.
    • One noteworthy example. In part 3, Octocat stumbles across a giant worm-eel thing that flat out tells Octocat that he has no parents. In denial, Octocat responds by literally bashing the poor thing's head into a pulp with a planet he conveniently plucks out of the sky.
  • Downer Ending: Despite defeating Big Bad in part 5, Octocat is not reunited with his parents. Instead, we are treated with scenes of Octocat wandering alone while images of his parents look down from the sky.
  • Parental Abandonment: Octocat's motivation to find his parents.
  • Random Events Plot: Plot events in parts 1 to 4 have little to no connection to each other whatsoever. One moment Octocat flees in panic from a tree-in-a-box, and in the next scene he casually has himself a cup of tea.
  • Stealth Parody: With interesting results. Rather than lambasting the shorts, viewers would sarcastically praise them for their "artistic" value and conjure up deep interpretations of its plot, only to realize they have been trolled all along when part 5 rolled out.
  • Stylistic Suck: Oh boy.
  • Thinking Out Loud: Until the halfway point of part 5, this happens a lot.