Difference between revisions of "Barrel Boy"

Explain xkcd: It's 'cause you're dumb.
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*The description of Barrel Boy needs to be simplified a bit.
 
*The description of Barrel Boy needs to be simplified a bit.
*Mention that he's one of the few (or the only?) character that's not a stick figure.
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*Mention that he's one of the few (or the only?) character that's not a stick figure.}}'''Barrel Boy''' is a character in [[xkcd]]. He only appears in the [[:Category:The Boy and his Barrel|The Boy and his Barrel series]], an early six-comic story whose parts were randomly published during the first several dozen strips. The last image on the ''[[what if? (blog)|what if?]]'' article {{what if|147|Niagara Straw}} features [[Beret Guy]] riding in a barrel, which may be a reference to Barrel Boy.
*Anyone else think Barrel boy is the boy in [[39: Bowl]]?}}'''Barrel Boy''' is a character in [[xkcd]]. He only appears in the [[:Category:The Boy and his Barrel|The Boy and his Barrel series]], an early six-comic story whose parts were randomly published during the first several dozen strips. The last image on the ''[[what if? (blog)|what if?]]'' article {{what if|147|Niagara Straw}} features [[Beret Guy]] riding in a barrel, which may be a reference to Barrel Boy.
 
  
 
Barrel Boy is very different from what would quickly become the xkcd [[stick figure]] style, since he has a face and a human-like body. He is recognised as his own character, distinct from even the earliest [[Cueball]] stick figure, by both a great gulf of style and by personality. Though the artistic development of style from cartoonish-realism to barebones-stickfigurey might well have included a 'missing link' or two of Barrel Boy 'growing up' into the author-avatar/[[Rob]], the debut to the world (in either its pre-website order, or numbered as per xkcd.com) intermingles the two stages of evolution in a way that at least makes it clear that [[Randall Munroe|Randall]] considers them parallel art styles, not sequential. There are theories that this character is who grows up to be [[Beret Guy]], while one could perhaps also directly link with [[Jack and Jill]], which pops up years later, infrequently as contrast to the contemporary Cueballs/other adults.
 
Barrel Boy is very different from what would quickly become the xkcd [[stick figure]] style, since he has a face and a human-like body. He is recognised as his own character, distinct from even the earliest [[Cueball]] stick figure, by both a great gulf of style and by personality. Though the artistic development of style from cartoonish-realism to barebones-stickfigurey might well have included a 'missing link' or two of Barrel Boy 'growing up' into the author-avatar/[[Rob]], the debut to the world (in either its pre-website order, or numbered as per xkcd.com) intermingles the two stages of evolution in a way that at least makes it clear that [[Randall Munroe|Randall]] considers them parallel art styles, not sequential. There are theories that this character is who grows up to be [[Beret Guy]], while one could perhaps also directly link with [[Jack and Jill]], which pops up years later, infrequently as contrast to the contemporary Cueballs/other adults.

Revision as of 03:57, 29 March 2025

Barrel Boy

First appearance 1: Barrel - Part 1
Appearances 4
For a list of comics, see Comics featuring Barrel Boy.
For the comic series, see The Boy and his Barrel.
Ambox warning blue construction.svg This is one of 54 incomplete explanations:
  • The description of Barrel Boy needs to be simplified a bit.
  • Mention that he's one of the few (or the only?) character that's not a stick figure. If you can fix this issue, edit the page!
Barrel Boy is a character in xkcd. He only appears in the The Boy and his Barrel series, an early six-comic story whose parts were randomly published during the first several dozen strips. The last image on the what if? article Niagara Straw features Beret Guy riding in a barrel, which may be a reference to Barrel Boy.

Barrel Boy is very different from what would quickly become the xkcd stick figure style, since he has a face and a human-like body. He is recognised as his own character, distinct from even the earliest Cueball stick figure, by both a great gulf of style and by personality. Though the artistic development of style from cartoonish-realism to barebones-stickfigurey might well have included a 'missing link' or two of Barrel Boy 'growing up' into the author-avatar/Rob, the debut to the world (in either its pre-website order, or numbered as per xkcd.com) intermingles the two stages of evolution in a way that at least makes it clear that Randall considers them parallel art styles, not sequential. There are theories that this character is who grows up to be Beret Guy, while one could perhaps also directly link with Jack and Jill, which pops up years later, infrequently as contrast to the contemporary Cueballs/other adults.