Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Meet the Artist Behind the Vitamin-Packed Fruit Comics
- Why Humor Really Is the Best Source of Vitamins
- Inside the Fruit Bowl: Themes That Make These Comics So Relatable
- How Fruit Comics Travel Across the Internet
- How to Get Your Own Daily Dose of Fruit-Comic Vitamins
- Personal Experiences: When Fruit Comics Make Real Life a Little Lighter
- Conclusion: A Fruit Bowl Full of Feelings (And Laughter)
If you’ve ever opened your phone “for just one minute” and suddenly found yourself 20 minutes deep into fruit comics, you’re in good company.
One of the most beloved stars of Bored Panda’s comics category is an anxious little apple and its fruit squad, splashed across bright,
four-panel strips that somehow manage to be silly, wholesome, and painfully relatable at the same time. These fun-filled fruit comics don’t
just make you laughthey deliver a mini dose of emotional vitamins with every swipe.
The latest Bored Panda feature, “This Artist Creates Fun-Filled Fruit Comics That Prove Humor Is The Best Source Of Vitamins (30 New Pics),”
highlights just how powerful a goofy drawing of an apple can be. Behind the candy-colored panels is a very real message: in a world that feels
chronically stressed and overripe with bad news, humor is one of the easiest ways to nourish your mood, your relationships, and even your health.
Meet the Artist Behind the Vitamin-Packed Fruit Comics
The mind behind the FruitBombComics universe is an illustrator known as Simon (online, often tagged as SayHeySimon). His comics usually
star a simple, round apple with stick legs and a very complicated inner life. Around this apple orbit a whole produce aisle of characters:
oranges that overshare, cherries with big feelings, bananas that are way too chill, and the occasional non-fruit guest who crashes the party.
FruitBombComics began as bite-sized doodles posted on social media, but the combination of clean lines, bold colors, and sharp punchlines
quickly attracted a loyal following. Bored Panda has featured the series multiple times, including collections of 30 or more new comics that
fans love to binge like a bowl of candy. Each update gives readers another batch of tiny stories about everything from social anxiety to
office politicsall reframed through the very unserious lens of talking fruit.
From Random Sketches to a Full Fruit Universe
At first glance, the drawings look incredibly simple: rounded shapes, thick outlines, and a handful of colors. But that simplicity is what
makes the jokes land so cleanly. With no visual clutter, the facial expressions and speech bubbles take center stage. A single raised brow on a
tomato or a nervous sweat drop on an apple tells you exactly what’s going on before you even read the text.
Over time, the artist has built a consistent “fruit universe” with recurring characters and running themes. One day, the apple is trying to be
brave on a skateboard; another, it’s dealing with awkward small talk at work or checking its phone for likes a little too often. The settings are
familiarparks, offices, bedrooms, coffee shopsbut the cast is pure produce. That tension between ordinary problems and absurd characters is
exactly what makes the comics so binge-worthy.
Why Humor Really Is the Best Source of Vitamins
The title’s jokethat humor is the best source of vitaminsisn’t just cute wordplay. There’s a genuine health angle to these fruit comics.
Laughter has long been linked with lower stress, better mood, and improved overall well-being, and lighthearted art can help people get a quick
emotional reset during a hectic day.
The Science of Laughing at Fruit
You don’t need to read a research paper to know that laughing feels good, but science backs up what your nervous system already knows. A good
laugh can help your body relax, ease tension, and shift your mind out of “fight or flight” mode. Many health experts describe laughter as a
natural stress relieverone that doesn’t require a prescription, an appointment, or a waitlist.
Fruit comics in particular have a few built-in advantages. They’re short, so you can finish one in seconds. They’re visual, which means they hit
your brain faster than a long paragraph. And they’re playful, which helps you let your guard down. Even when the strip touches on heavier themes
like burnout, anxiety, or loneliness, the presence of silly, wide-eyed fruit softens the message and makes it easier to digest.
Comics as Tiny Mood-Boosting Artworks
Comics occupy a sweet spot between writing and illustration. Your brain has to process both images and words at the same time, which can pull you
out of spiraling thoughts and into the present moment. Many readers describe finding comfort, recognition, or even emotional “aha” moments while
scrolling through their favorite webcomics.
In the case of FruitBombComics, the artwork is intentionally accessible. You don’t need to “understand art” to get the joke. The simplicity makes
it easy for your mind to follow along, while the punchline gives you a quick emotional payoff. Think of each panel as a mini mental stretch for
your imagination and your empathy.
Inside the Fruit Bowl: Themes That Make These Comics So Relatable
What’s most surprising about the 30 new comics featured by Bored Panda is how often you’ll see yourself in them. Yes, the characters are fruit.
But their problems are pure human.
1. Everyday Anxiety in a Bright, Bite-Sized Package
One recurring theme in FruitBombComics is anxietythe mild, modern kind that shows up in social situations, work deadlines, and late-night
overthinking. Instead of showing a stressed-out person, the artist gives us an apple spiraling over a tiny problem, or a cherry catastrophizing
after reading one vague text message.
When you see a peach panicking about sending an email, it’s strangely reassuring. You know it’s ridiculous, but it also feels very true. The
comic reminds you that your worries are shared, common, and maybe a little exaggerated. That gentle self-awareness can make your own anxiety feel
less isolating.
2. Social Media, Reimagined with Fruit
Another frequent target is social media culture. In some strips, the apple checks notifications like it’s a vital organ. In others, fruit
characters compare themselves to each other, feeling “less ripe” or “not juicy enough,” which lands as a playful jab at comparison culture.
By swapping humans for fruit, the comics expose how silly some online behaviors really are. It’s much easier to laugh at an apple obsessing over
likes than to admit you just refreshed your own feed 12 times. That laugh, however, plants a tiny seed: maybe it’s okay to take social media a
little less seriously.
3. Work, Burnout, and the Art of Doing Your Best
Office life sneaks into the panels too. You’ll see an apple dragging itself to a desk, a lemon quietly overachieving, or a strawberry trying to
decode corporate jargon. These are not epic career sagasthey’re small moments that capture exactly how it feels to be “just trying to get
through the day.”
In a way, fruit comics turn burnout into something you can point at and say, “Yes, that.” They transform big, heavy feelings into four panels and
a punchline, giving you a bit of distance from your own stress.
4. Friendship, Support, and Being Soft on Yourself
Of course, not every comic is about struggle. Many show simple acts of kindness between charactersan orange hyping up an anxious apple, a grape
reminding a friend to rest, or a banana listening without judgment. These quick scenes highlight how much comfort can come from being seen and
accepted, even in cartoon form.
When you watch fruit characters encourage each other, it subtly models what supportive friendships look like in real life. It also nudges you to
treat yourself with that same gentle humor and compassion.
How Fruit Comics Travel Across the Internet
One reason these fun-filled fruit comics have taken off is that they’re made for sharing. The square format drops perfectly into Instagram feeds,
messaging apps, and story slides. People grab their favorite panels to send to friends who “need this today,” turning each comic into a tiny care
package.
Bored Panda’s features amplify that effect. Articles compiling 30 or more FruitBombComics strips bundle those micro-moments into a scrollable
gallery of mood boosters. By the time you reach the last panel, you’ve absorbed dozens of small reminders that it’s okay to laugh at lifeand at
yourself.
How to Get Your Own Daily Dose of Fruit-Comic Vitamins
Want to turn fruit comics into part of your self-care routine? Here are a few simple ways to do it:
- Schedule a “comic break.” Instead of doomscrolling the news, set a timer for five minutes and read funny comics only.
- Share, don’t just scroll. If a strip makes you laugh, send it to someone. That shared laugh doubles the “vitamin dose.”
- Use comics as an emotional check-in. When a panel hits a little too close to home, ask yourself why. It might reveal what’s
really on your mind. - Try drawing your own. You don’t need digital toolsjust a pen, paper, and a lumpy circle that you declare an apple.
You’re not trying to create a masterpiece; you’re just giving your feelings a funny costume and letting them speak.
Personal Experiences: When Fruit Comics Make Real Life a Little Lighter
It’s one thing to say “these comics help,” and another to see how that plays out in real life. While everyone’s experience is different, there are
some common patterns in how people use humorous fruit comics like FruitBombComics to get through hard days.
Picture someone working from home, juggling video calls, messages, and a growing to-do list. During a short break, they open Bored Panda and land
on the latest batch of 30 new fruit comics. In one strip, an apple is dramatically overwhelmed by a task as tiny as replying to an email. In
another, it gets called out by a friendly berry for being way too hard on itself. Those panels might take less than a minute to read, but they
deliver something powerful: a sense of “oh, it’s not just me.”
Another reader might stumble onto the comics late at night. Maybe they’re scrolling through social media because anxiety won’t let them sleep.
The bright colors and goofy expressions pull them in. One comic shows a fruit character trying to “turn off its brain” while intrusive thoughts
keep popping up in extra speech bubbles. It’s funny. It’s also honest. That mix can feel strangely comforting, like someone turned your inner
monologue into a cartoon and then gently poked fun at it.
Teachers and parents sometimes share these comics too. It’s not unusual to see a FruitBombComics panel pop up in a classroom slideshow or a
wellness newsletter. The characters might be talking about taking breaks, supporting friends, or remembering that “doing your best” doesn’t mean
being perfect every second. Because the tone is light, the message gets across without sounding preachy.
For some people, fruit comics even become visual reminders taped next to a desk or stuck on a fridge. A printed panel of a tired apple declaring
it needs rest can be a surprisingly effective nudge to close your laptop and call it a night. Another favorite might show the characters laughing
together, reminding you to reach out to someone instead of bottling everything up.
There’s also the creative ripple effect. After seeing how simple the drawings are, quite a few readers decide to try making their own comics.
They may never post them online, but the act of turning daily annoyances into funny panels can be its own form of journaling. You’re still
dealing with your feelingsyou’re just dressing them up as a stressed-out orange or a coffee-obsessed pear.
Ultimately, the experience of reading “This Artist Creates Fun-Filled Fruit Comics That Prove Humor Is The Best Source Of Vitamins (30 New Pics)”
isn’t just about entertainment. It’s about noticing how a small, silly thing can shift your perspective. For a few minutes, your worries shrink
down to the size of a comic panel. You breathe a little easier, maybe send a strip to a friend, and move on with your day feeling just a bit more
humanand, yes, a bit more “vitamin-fortified.”
Conclusion: A Fruit Bowl Full of Feelings (And Laughter)
FruitBombComics and similar fun-filled fruit comics have earned their place on Bored Panda not just because they’re adorable, but because they
capture how it feels to be a person in a complicated world. By turning everyday stress, self-doubt, and awkwardness into bright, funny panels,
the artist gives readers a low-pressure way to reflect, relate, and reset.
You may come for the fruit puns, but you stay for the feeling of being understood. And if laughter really is one of the best medicines, then this
artist is quietly running a tiny, colorful clinic in your feedno appointment required, no insurance needed, and refills always available with a
quick scroll.
sapo:
An anxious apple, a bowl of talking fruit, and thirty new Bored Panda–featured comics might be exactly the vitamin boost your mood has been
missing. In this deep dive into FruitBombComics, we explore how one artist turns everyday stress into colorful, four-panel stories that are as
relatable as they are ridiculous. From social media burnout to tiny acts of friendship, these fun-filled fruit comics prove that humor can be one
of the easiestand sweetestways to care for your mental health.