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AI Cartoons
AI now sits quietly inside everyday work — drafting emails, screening resumes, writing code, analysing performance, automating decisions, and confidently producing answers that sound right even when they aren’t.
These AI cartoons capture the contradictions of artificial intelligence at work: tools that promise efficiency but create new confusion, systems that automate judgment without accountability, and organisations that trust algorithms more than people.
If you’ve ever been impressed, confused, or quietly alarmed by how AI shows up at work, these cartoons will feel uncomfortably familiar.
Featured AI Cartoon

AI can't replace us - it can't gossip, fake work, or bluff with confidence.
AI Cartoons: When the Algorithm Meets the Office
AI systems are designed to optimise decisions, but they quickly collide with habits, assumptions, and workplace realities.
These AI cartoons reflect how automation reshapes everyday work — and how people adapt, misuse, trust, or quietly work around it inside organisations.
Frequently Asked Questions about AI Cartoons
How are AI cartoons different from "Future of Work" cartoons?
While they overlap, AI cartoons focus on the immediate, often awkward integration of LLMs and automation into our current daily tasks—think ChatGPT hallucinations or prompt-engineering fails.
Future of Work cartoons are more speculative, looking at broader shifts like 2055 office culture, full-scale robotic workforces, and the evolution of the "9-to-5" itself.
Do you use AI to write the captions for your AI cartoons?
Ironically, no. To poke fun at the "robotic" nature of corporate communication, a human touch is required. Every caption at Kaapi with Ravi is conceived by a human who has actually sat through a redundant Zoom call—something an algorithm hasn't experienced (yet).
Why focus on AI humor in a professional setting?
Technology moves fast, but human anxiety moves faster. These cartoons serve as a "stress relief valve" for professionals navigating the pressure of staying relevant in an automated world. If we can laugh at the bot, it’s a little less intimidating to work with it.



















