Gary Larson's The Far Side has a lot of recurring themes and subjects, from cows to cowboys to life on other planets. However, perhaps Larson's favorite setting of all time for his gags was the humble classroom, taking his characters back to school in various bizarre ways.

Here are 13 hilarious comics set in schools from The Far Side's 1980-1994 run, including what many fans consider Larson's best comic of all time (which we're of course saving until #1.) There were so many classroom gags, not all of them made the cut for the best of the best.

FAR SIDE COMICS ABOUT SCHOOL

Be sure to vote in our end-of-article poll for which of Larson's schoolyard comics you think is funniest... but #1 is so overwhelmingly popular, we think we already know the winner.

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13 Metal Shop

This Far Side Comic Stars a Secret Recurring Character

the far side comic where a kid makes a robot
Custom Image by Robert Wood (from Gary Larson)

In The Prehistory of The Far Side, Larson reveals that some of his gags come from short stories he writes to explore ideas. Larson's story sees shop teacher Mr. Rockford getting a little too lazy while teaching his shop class, leaving the kids to their own devices. A robot meant to help mankind quickly becomes deadly when one of the kids suggests adding a death ray, with the class receiving an F for the resultant chaos. The comic version simplifies the narrative, turning the deadly robot into a deliberate invention by a kid who wants revenge on his shop teacher.

That kid likely looks familiar to fans of Larson's comic, as the 'Nerdy Little Kid' is a character archetype that the creator uses again and again across The Far Side's run. The Nerdy Kid has been attacked by animal crackers, chased by wolves, and tormented by the elves who send people nightmares, so it's only fair he gets a little revenge in the strip above.

In a metahumor nod to his habit of reusing certain characters, Larson published one strip which introduced "The Far Side cast." This comic 'reveals' that the Nerdy Little Kid is played by Jerry Miller, who almost got the role of Sluggo in Ernie Bushmiller's Nancy comic.

12 Attention-Getting Device

Every Class Has That One Kid...

far side comic about school

Students acting out for attention is an everyday issue that most teachers deal with at some point or another. Of course, in the world of Far Side, that involves a complex machine that's about to blow the socks off everyone in the room. Larson perfectly sets his joke in the moments before the device is activated, creating a hilarious situation where Russell somehow smuggled this gigantic doodad into the classroom without anyone noticing.

11 Dog School

Larson's Take on a Classic Cliché

far side comic where dogs are in school

It's a famous cliché that kids who haven't done their homework will try and claim that while they did complete the assignment, the family dog ate it, making it impossible to hand in. Larson takes that concept to the next level when every student is the family dog, with the added gag of blackboard arithmetic using bones instead of numerals.

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10 Young Neanderthals

Larson's Cavemen Comics Made a Genuine Contribution to Science

far side comic about caveman school

In this strip, a group of young Neanderthals prank their teacher by draping a stegosaurus' tail over her chair, ready to spike her when she sits down. The gag is a great example of how Larson's comic creates a single perfect 'moment' that wouldn't make sense in any other medium. After all, the spikes are so huge the teacher can't fail to notice them - and that's if she doesn't spot the conveniently placed stegosaurus standing just off-.

In The Prehistory of The Far Side, Larson its to a slight amount of guilt for drawing so many comics where dinosaurs and cavepeople live side-by-side, given the two occupied Earth around 65 million years apart. However, he made it up to the world of science by inventing a brand-new term that's still in use today.

far side comic thagomizer

In this other 'caveman classroom and stegosaurus' strip, Larson humorously names the spiked end of a stegosaurus' tail after the cavemen presumably killed by it. However, it turned out that this body part didn't actually have an official name, and with so many scientists being fans of The Far Side, archaeologists welcomed the word 'thagomizer' into their official vocabulary. A pretty major achievement for a strip that Larson feels guilty for drawing!

9 Wrong Room

Larson Loves Pushing Turns of Phrase to Ridiculous Extremes

far side comic where alien barges in on room of students

In another everyday occurrence, a visitor accidentally steps into the wrong classroom before realizing their mistake. Of course, in Larson's world, that visitor isn't just in the wrong room - they're on the wrong planet. Far Side smartly never settled on a single alien design, allowing Larson to invent whatever extraterrestrial life was funniest for each strip.

8 Four Apples

Larson Breaks The Far Side's Format for this Gag

far side comic about horse school

The Far Side breaks its usual single- format for this gag, which plays on the 'counting horse' trick. The most famous example was a horse named 'Clever Hans' whose owner (ironically for this list, a math teacher) toured it around showcasing its ability to solve simple arithmetic. Later studies suggested that, of course, the horse couldn't actually do math, but was instead responding to cues from its handler. Indeed, the habit of trained animals taking accidental cues from their handlers has been known as the 'Clever Hans effect' ever since.

7 Karate School

One of Larson's Most Feel-Good Comics

far side comic where a class of karate students look out the window to see an alien invasion by creatures made of bricks and boards 2

Not every school teaches kids - in this case, The Far Side's Karate School trains adult students to break boards and bricks. As mentioned earlier, Larson's decision never to design a definitive 'Far Side alien' pays off here, as the city comes under attack by aliens that the class are weirdly well-equipped to fight off. It's rare that humans get a win in a Larson comic, making this a rarity.

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6 Anderson's Sky Diving School

Larson Turns Withholding the Punchline into an Art Form

the far side comic showing a skydiving school next to a crocodile farm

In another unusual school, students learning to sky dive are given just a couple of feet between landing safely and plunging into the middle of a crocodile farm. Any other comic creator would show the students actually landing in this sticky situation, but Larson's genius is setting up such a funny situation and allowing the reader to imagine the outcome.

5 Beginning Duck

Far Side Finally Unites Its Avian Obsessions

far side comic where chickens learn duck language

Ducks and chickens appear a lot in The Far Side, and in this strip they finally bridge the gap, as a class of poultry attempt to learn to speak a new language. Despite their commonalities, ducks and chickens are very different in the world of The Far Side. Chickens tend to be unlucky losers who know their life ends on the chopping block, while Larson treats ducks more like supervillains.

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4 Sandwich Mafia

Larson Combines School and Organized Crime

far side comic about the sandwich mafia

Larson loves looking at everyday situations from a different perspective, here turning a school cafeteria into a death trap for the latest victim of the sandwich mafia. A play on sending a mob victim to 'sleep with the fishes,' Larson often chooses to turn mobsters into figures of fun, but never as surreally as depicting them as deadly sandwiches who feed their victims to fourth-graders.