So next time you watch Gumball try to outrun a bad decision or Richard ascend to godlike laziness, remember: you might just be watching the Odyssey for the 21st century, filtered through blue fur and a chaotic blend of animation styles. And that, truly, is The Amazing World of Gumball Greek .

If you’ve ever watched The Amazing World of Gumball , you know the drill: a blue cat, a goldfish in a wet suit, and a rabbit named Darwin navigate the surreal, chaotic, and hyper-digital landscape of Elmore. It’s a show defined by its genre-bending animation (stop-motion, CGI, 8-bit, live-action—all in one frame) and its razor-sharp satire of modern life.