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May not be an example of this. Pip is an established Jerkass and the artist did draw the telemarketer rather cute. (Though to be fair his art does seem to only have only two settings, "attractive sex bomb" and "complete Gonk".)
Crazy Awesome: Scarlet, even more so once her sisters start helping. For starters, she once made a lawn mower design that incorporated A BLACK HOLE and, more recently, cracked perpetual motion with a Slanky.
Crowning Moment of Heartwarming: When Kat is feeling insecure because her rival Hilary looks good as a pin up, Art points that she doesn’t have the personality to back up her looks, unlike Kat. D’awww.
Growing the Beard: The webcomic is a must-read and appealing to most readers. It has a healthy mix of comedy and action. Twice it sets a good example for making a Cerebus Syndrome work.
The Woobie: Poor Leonard. What he has to go through isn't all that dramatic or horrible, really, but that changes nothing.
It's kind of upsetting that most of his daily grievances involve being denied food, either because Scarlet steals it or because everyone else is too lazy to just open a can for him.
Doesn't help that Kat tends to designate caring for him to Scarlet.
Art. Especially now that the squirrels turned him fat, making his life worse in practically every way, and everyone acts like it's his fault.
A big part of what makes Art the woobie is his normalcy. His housemates include a photographer cat-girl, a comic book geek penguin with loose morals, four deranged squirrel geniuses, and a legion of miniature shadow people. The only thing separating him from the reader is the 4th wall. If any of the readers found themselves in the same situations, they might ball up and cry. Granted, while things routinley hit the pits for Art, his friends are there for him, in a true nakama fashion.