I've read all of xkcd and Cyanide and Happiness. What's another recommended web-comic?
http://oglaf.com/ (NSFW - weird, irreverent, and funny medieval swords/sorcery porn comic) http://broodhollow.chainsawsuit.com/page/2012/10/06/book-1-curious-little-thing/ (I linked to the first comic, not today's so nobody gets spoiled - Lovecraftian horror with gee-whiz plucky protagonists).
Gunnerkrigg Court: http://www.gunnerkrigg.com/ Paranatural: http://www.paranatural.net/ Scary-Go-Round: http://www.scarygoround.com/
I've stopped reading webcomics a few years ago, but Sam and Fuzzy was always very well done. Edit: Subnormality is something I think a lot of Hubskiers would appreciate.
All of these have no overarching storyline, are a bit weird (or maybe more than a bit) and update on a regular/semi-regular basis with comics. http://oglaf.com/ NSFW
You should check out The Perry Bible Fellowship. It could fit into your list perfectly.
I would've listed it but it hasn't updated in about 6 months.
Get Your War On : http://www.mnftiu.cc/category/gywo/war81/
Red Meat : http://www.redmeat.com/
I would definitely recommend Owlturd comix. The artist, Shen, draws inspiration from some of the other popular comics in this thread and also has his own creativity and flair as well. I found them to be so enjoyable that I even interviewed him at one point for a website that I write for
Yep, that is my bad. You are correct. I've edited it to fix it now. Good catch!
Lackadaisy is one of my absolute favorites. Sometimes slow irregular releases. But the comic is gorgeous work.
I found the author's bio if you're curious. Tracy Butler was born in 1980 in Springfield, Massachusetts. In high school she would doodle and create characters while sitting in class.[10][11] She studied biology for a year at Our Lady of the Elms College in Massachusetts, before returning to her art. She created a website with some of her work, which led to a job offer from Simutronics, a Missouri game development company. Butler performed illustration and graphic design work before moving into 3D character design and animation. After living in St. Louis for some time, she purchased a 100-year-old house, and began researching its history, as well as that of the local neighborhood, and ultimately the history of St. Louis itself. Combined with her interest in jazz music, and the characters she had designed in school, this led to her starting Lackadaisy in July 2006. An Italian print version was released in 2008, and an English version in 2009.
I have heard good things about Bouletcorp I Iike Zenpencils but it's illustrated quotes and not original comics. Edit: Ok, now that I've read more, Boulet's comics are really really great. I'm going to work my way all the way back to the beginning. The stylistic variety is quite impressive.
I can't believe I forgot Boulet! My favourite is Our Toyota Was Fantastic and I use that to introduce people to his work.
Wow, I've really stopped reading them in the last few years. It's good to see some of my old favorites are still going strong. A really delightful comic that caught my attention recently is Eth's Skin. It takes place in an alternate reality with magic and mermaids. Two of my old favorites that haven't been mentioned yet are Perry Bible Fellowship and Sinfest.
Ava's Demon is also pretty good if not a little slow on the updates. If you ignore the fact that it's pretty heavily furry, there's Twokinds and Carribean Blue that aren't half-bad.
Dinosaur Comics is a great gag-a-day comic with a sense of humor that strikes me as xkcd-like.
I always liked The Doghouse Diaries. I haven't checked it out for a while though so I don't know if there's still a regular upload schedule... But there's plenty of stuff to trawl through if you have time to kill :D
Hyperbole and a Half It's less of a webcomic and more of a blog with illustrations. Still a decent read from time to time. Or at least it was. I haven't followed that for a few years either.
She has released a book and is working on a second one. The first book is really good, a lot of chapters are straight from the blog.
Try mine! Unicorn Soup Kinda all over the place-- mostly gag comics about family and games, but a few longer running stories as well.
I just read through all of http://www.lunarbaboon.com/ this weekend. It was absolutely worth it.
They won't be making comics for much longer, but basic instructions has some of the best, http://basicinstructions.net
Darths and Droids which re-tells the Star Wars saga as a role-playing game. Dr McNinja which has been going for 10 years and is now in the final pages AFAIK. It's really good and I've bought all the printed versions so far! Whomp! follows the life of Ronnie. It's pretty hilarious and full of self-deprecating humour, which appeals to me. Camp Weedonwantcha which won the Penny Arcade Strip Search competition, it's pretty great.
There was once a great little comic called Ozy & Millie that I read for a while. The author has stopped it, but all the archives are still available. I think it starts here. There's also a new one that's a bit of a hit on deviantArt called "Oh, Ted!". Utterly absurd and a lot of the strips will have you scratching your head asking yourself "why am I reading this?", but I can't stop reading anyway. New strip every day, I think, but just began, so not much to binge on.