
Age: 18
Xavier: Renegade Angel is an American adult animated black comedy television series created by Vernon Chatman and John Lee for Cartoon Network's nighttime programming block Adult Swim. It was produced by PFFR Productions, producers of Wonder Showzen, with computer animation provided by Cinematico. It premiered on November 1, 2007, on the Adult Swim website and November 4, 2007, on Adult Swim. Xavier features an elaborate and nonlinear plot following the musings of an itinerant humanoid pseudo-shaman named Xavier. The show is known for its use of ideologically critical dark comedy as well as surrealist and absurdist humor presented through a psychedelic and satirically New Age lens. The program is also normally rated TV MA for intense, graphic, often bloody violence, as well as strong sexual content, use of racially/ethnically offensive language, and grotesque depictions in a comedic manner.

Xavier: Renegade Angel

Suzie P. Reptile
for Suzie P. Reptile in Undertale (The Movie)
Suggested by user_191293

Undertale follows a human child who falls into the Underground, a hidden world beneath the Earth where monsters were sealed away after a war with humans long ago. Trapped far from home, the child must journey through strange regions—like the Ruins, Snowdin, Waterfall, and Hotland—while searching for a way back to the surface. Along the way, the child meets a cast of quirky, heartfelt monsters: Toriel, who tries to protect them; Sans and Papyrus, two skeleton brothers with very different vibes; the shy scientist Alphys; the dramatic robot Mettaton; and Undyne, a fierce monster determined to capture the human. Each encounter can be resolved in multiple ways—through violence or through mercy and understanding. The Underground’s fate hinges on the player’s choices. The barrier trapping the monsters can only be broken with the power of human souls, and the monster king Asgore plans to collect them so his people can finally be free. Depending on how the player treats others—sparring enemies, befriending them, or killing them—the story changes drastically. At its core, Undertale is about choice, empathy, and consequences. The game remembers what you do, challenges traditional RPG mechanics, and asks whether “winning” really means defeating your enemies—or learning to understand them instead. And yes, it will judge you. Kindly. Or not. 😅💔