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TOThe Art of Subtraction
Ever heard of the "CAD Rule"? It’s an old-school internet tradition where you take a four-panel Ctrl+Alt+Del comic by Tim Buckley, delete the middle two panels, and scrub the dialogue from the final one. The result? A masterclass in comedic timing.
As shown in the image, this "minimalist" edit transforms a wordy, often over-explained gag into a sharp, surrealist punchline. The first panel sets a scene of intense focus—Ethan meticulously painting a miniature—and the final panel delivers a silent, baffling payoff: a bowling ball sitting on the table while a roommate looks on in judged silence.
Critics of the original series often argued that Buckley’s writing was too "vocal," burying the humor under walls of text. By applying this rule, the internet proved that sometimes, saying nothing at all is the funniest thing you can do. It turns a standard gaming comic into an absurdist work of art.
Viral Hashtags:
#CtrlAltDel #Webcomics #MemeHistory #Minimalism #ComicEdits
Would you like me to find the original four-panel version of this specific comic so you can compare the two?
@tomnjerryverse






