Very optimistic, the truth is there is only one that is good, and you don(t know where it is.
Generally you eat it at first and afterwards you hope with each worse one to have an other one good again…
Buni’s having a good day. Normally there’s only one good one, and it, along with all the rest of the ones that were already nasty the day they were put in the box, went bad six months ago.
Seriously, though, I never knew whether the designations on the box top refer to the chocolates as they are on top of them (with the lid closed), or as they are with the lid open, upside-down.
For example, Buni reads “GOOD” in the upper-right-hand corner of the lid. Does that mean that the upper-right chocolate of the box is a good one, or does that mean that the lower-right chocolate is the good one?
(You might think that it’s the upper-right chocolate that is the good one, but when the lid is closed onto the box, the “GOOD” label is over the lower-left chocolate. So which is the good one?)
@J-L: Lacking a key to which way around the lid is with respect to the candies, the implications are obvious: the center two candies can be trusted to be good. The corner candies each have a 50-50 chance of being good, though if you sample one and like it, you can safely assume the one in the opposite corner is also good, and the ones all along the same column and row, other than the known-good corners, are gross. Thus, we know that the best choice for Buni to minimize the number of gross candies he has to taste is to start off in the corner. If the candy is good, he can avoid the bad ones completely. If it’s bad, he can infer the locations of all the good ones, and give the others to Buni-Girl’s boyfriend, Buffni. If he eats them himself, Buni gets a little bit of vengence, (though that’s not his style,) and if he, in turn, gives them to Buni-Girl, she might sour on Buffni and maybe break up with him, thus possibly ending up with Buni. But he’s not clever or evil enough for that, and though his father, Dadi is more than clever and evil enough, he likely thinks Buni needs to work that out for himself if he wants to get the grli. Thus, he’s likely to die Loneli. Or he maybe, if this turns into an 80s movie, the one other female character in this comic gets a makeover and suddenly becomes hot, and Buni goes for her.
Buni’s having a good day. Normally there’s only one good one, and it, along with all the rest of the ones that were already nasty the day they were put in the box, went bad six months ago.
Has Buni gone the way of commercialization, with suggesting Valentines candy so soon after Christmas? I guess we’ll know if we see St Patrick’s day comics next…
Very optimistic, the truth is there is only one that is good, and you don(t know where it is.
Generally you eat it at first and afterwards you hope with each worse one to have an other one good again…
What, he doesn’t like Crunchy Frog? (https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2odo4b)
Buni’s having a good day. Normally there’s only one good one, and it, along with all the rest of the ones that were already nasty the day they were put in the box, went bad six months ago.
Would have been great for a prank
Ha! This cartoon made me laugh out loud.
Seriously, though, I never knew whether the designations on the box top refer to the chocolates as they are on top of them (with the lid closed), or as they are with the lid open, upside-down.
For example, Buni reads “GOOD” in the upper-right-hand corner of the lid. Does that mean that the upper-right chocolate of the box is a good one, or does that mean that the lower-right chocolate is the good one?
(You might think that it’s the upper-right chocolate that is the good one, but when the lid is closed onto the box, the “GOOD” label is over the lower-left chocolate. So which is the good one?)
@J-L: Lacking a key to which way around the lid is with respect to the candies, the implications are obvious: the center two candies can be trusted to be good. The corner candies each have a 50-50 chance of being good, though if you sample one and like it, you can safely assume the one in the opposite corner is also good, and the ones all along the same column and row, other than the known-good corners, are gross. Thus, we know that the best choice for Buni to minimize the number of gross candies he has to taste is to start off in the corner. If the candy is good, he can avoid the bad ones completely. If it’s bad, he can infer the locations of all the good ones, and give the others to Buni-Girl’s boyfriend, Buffni. If he eats them himself, Buni gets a little bit of vengence, (though that’s not his style,) and if he, in turn, gives them to Buni-Girl, she might sour on Buffni and maybe break up with him, thus possibly ending up with Buni. But he’s not clever or evil enough for that, and though his father, Dadi is more than clever and evil enough, he likely thinks Buni needs to work that out for himself if he wants to get the grli. Thus, he’s likely to die Loneli. Or he maybe, if this turns into an 80s movie, the one other female character in this comic gets a makeover and suddenly becomes hot, and Buni goes for her.
Buni’s having a good day. Normally there’s only one good one, and it, along with all the rest of the ones that were already nasty the day they were put in the box, went bad six months ago.
Has Buni gone the way of commercialization, with suggesting Valentines candy so soon after Christmas? I guess we’ll know if we see St Patrick’s day comics next…