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Erma (webtoon)
Webcomic by Brandon J. Santiago From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Erma is a comedy horror webtoon and animated web series created by Mexican artist Brandon J. Santiago. It follows the adventures and misadventures of the titular initially six-year-old Erma Williams' experiences as a half-human, half-yōkai/ghost, tending to use her haunting abilities for everyday antics, whether for better or for worse, focusing on themes such as friendship and acceptance. Santiago initially published the webcomic on DeviantArt and Tumblr in May 2014, but has since released it on various services from January 2016, such as Tapas and WEBTOON. It is available in two languages, English and Spanish.[1] In January 2020, Comics Beat reported that with 64.5 million views and 74.9 thousand subscribers, Erma was the most-viewed webcomic on the Tapas syndicate in 2019.[2]
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In October 2017, Santiago published a prequel graphic novel to the series titled Spirit's Bloom, as well as two anthology collections of Erma comics, in addition releasing a short film pilot of Erma produced by Outcast Studios. A print collection, Tales of Outcast, was released in March 2019. Other works include the stand-alone Night Detective, Siris, and Warrior Unicorn Princess, and Yokai, an in-universe novel. A picture book, Meet Erma, was released in April 2020.[3] An Erma animated series began releasing to YouTube from July 2024 to present.
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Overview
Erma follows the adventures and misadventures of Erma Williams, a child who lives in the suburbs of the fictional town Blairwood and has supernatural abilities. Santiago also focuses on Erma's supernatural life and friendships with her best friends, Amy, Terry and Connor, as well as her babysitter Felicia and fellow Warrior Unicorn Princess fan Sidney. She also deals with her maternal family issues and other people that threaten her and her loved ones.
Spirit's Bloom is a prequel graphic novel that focuses on Erma's parents Sam and Emiko in their younger years and how they met and fall in love as well as Erma's birth.
Tales of the Outcast is an anthology series that focuses on other notable characters from Erma's world in small side stores.
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Characters
- Erma Williams: The titular protagonist of the series. She is a half-human/half-yokai hybrid and daughter of Sam and Emiko.
- Emiko Yureimoto-Williams: Erma's mother, Sam's wife and the fourth child and third daughter of the Yureimoto clan. She is an Onryō.
- Samuel "Sam" Williams: Erma's father, Emiko's husband, Pamela's son and novelist.
- Siris: Erma's undead pet dog who can withstand anything. He is named after Osiris.
- Amy Thorn: Erma's best friend and one of her close friends. She is Alice's older sister, and daughter of Barbara and Henry.
- Felicia: Erma's current babysitter, who took over Nancy's job after Nancy was haunted by Erma's pranks, to look after her when Sam and Emiko left. She also looked after Amy when her parents are away. In the Yokai District story arc, she looks after Siris when Erma and her parents travel to Japan.
- Terry: One of Erma's friends, who does pulling pranks, but only to be backfired.
- Connor: One of Erma's friends, he has a crush on her and the feeling is mutual.
- Sylvia: One of Erma's friends.
- Sidney: A human-rat hybrid girl who becomes Erma's friend and was formerly a hall monitor at Blairwood Elementary School in The Rats in the School Walls.
- Jordan: One of Erma's friends.
- Miko: One of Erma's friends.
- Wittle Wallace: A demonic dummy who is the first major villain in the series.
- The Invisible Man: The main antagonist of Spirit Bloom and a recurring character in the main series.
- Nancy: Connor's older sister and Erma's former babysitter who was haunted by the latter and incarcerated in a mental hospital. She was later released and returned home to plan seeking revenge on Erma for scaring her.
- Ms. Bierly: A homeroom teacher at Blairwood Elementary School who had an immense fear of Erma.
- Principal Phibes: The blind principal of Blairwood Elementary School.
- The Thorn family: Amy's family.
- Barbara Thorn: Amy and Alice's mother and Henry's wife.
- Henry Thorn: Amy and Alice's father and Barbara's husband.
- Alice Thorn: Amy's younger sister and Barbara and Henry's baby daughter.
- Sprinkles: The Thorn family’s pet cat.
- The Williams family: Sam's family and Erma's paternal relative family.
- Pamela Williams: Mother of Sam, Michael and Freddy, and wife of her deceased husband Jim.
- Michael Williams: One of Sam's brothers, Emily's father, Regan's husband and avid hunter.
- Regan Williams: Emily's mother and Michael's wife.
- Freddy Williams: One of Sam's brothers.
- Emily Williams: Erma's younger cousin, and daughter of Michael and Regan.
- The Yureimoto clan: Emiko's family and Erma's maternal family.
- Osamu Yureimoto: The patriarch of the Yureimoto clan, Amayu's husband and the father of Emiko, Fumiko, Yori, Rin, Kentaro, Ena, and Mayumi.
- Amayu Yureimoto: The matriarch of the Yureimoto clan, Osamu's wife and the mother of Emiko, Fumiko, Yori, Rin, Kentaro, Ena, and Mayumi.
- Kentaro: The first child and the only son of the Yureimoto clan. He is an oni.
- Fumiko: The second child and the first and eldest daughter of the Yureimoto clan. She is a harionago.
- Yori: The third child and the second daughter of the Yureimoto clan, and mother of Mitsu and Momo. She is a rokurokubi.
- Rin: The fifth child and fourth daughter of the Yureimoto clan. She is a nurei-onna.
- Ena: The sixth child and the fifth daughter of the Yureimoto clan. She is a nukekubi.
- Mayumi: The seventh child and the sixth and youngest daughter of the Yureimoto clan. She is a noppera-bo.
- Mitsu & Momo: The daughters of Yori, granddaughters of Osamu and Amayu, and Erma's mischievous cousins. They are zashiki-warashis.
- Haru Kappa: A loyal servant to the Yureimoto clan, who is personally assigned to Fumiko. He is a kappa.
- Kenji Cyclops: A loyal servant to the Yureimoto clan, who is personally assigned to Ena. He is a Hitotsume-kozō.
- Yuyu: A yokai woman and family servant to the Yureimoto clan, who makes really good tea. She is a Yūrei.
- Toru, Kiko and Mei: A thug trio of yokai and main antagonists of the Yokai District arc. Toru is a strong oni with a kanabō in hand and the only male member of the gang, Kiko is a yuki-onna with cryokinesis and Mei is a taka onna with an elastic body and sharp nails, who is the leader of the gang. In the end, the trio were overpowered and defeated by Erma in her enraged demonic form and turned into small figurines.
- Yokai Kids: A group of bullied yokai children lived in Japan who wanted revenge against the Yureimoto clan after being terrorized by Mitsu and Momo, but ended up completely backfired and enveloped by Erma in her rampage. The yokai kids were left severely affected and mentally scarred after Erma's powers enveloped them. They are the secondary antagonists of the Yokai District arc.
- Akari: A yokai woman, who had some connections with the Yureimoto Clan. She is a Jorōgumo.
- The Night Detective: An elderly man and enigmatic detective who specializes in paranormal activity. He is the protagonist of the Tales of Outcast webcomics series.
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Development
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Santiago started creating and uploading Erma on DeviantArt and Tumblr in 2014.[4] He was studying at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign at the time, from which he graduated in 2018 to work on the webcomic full-time. The concept of the series originated from a short parody one-shot of Ju-On and The Ring published on May 28, 2014. Following the one-shot's positive reception on DeviantArt and it subsequently going viral across various social media platforms, Santiago decided to develop a series based on the original Erma one-shot, debuting on Tapas on January 3, 2016, and on WEBTOON on April 14, 2018.[5] The series has received universal acclaim for its originality, creativity, and humor. The name of the series was taken from the minor Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles character Irma Langinstein, and that the surname of Erma title character Erma Williams was taken from the minor The Grudge character Emma Williams.
In October 2017, Santiago developed and released an animated short film based on the comic in conjunction with the company Outcast Studios, run by Donovan Tracy Gaiter and Julia Santiago. Santiago has stated regarding the initial decision to exclusively release the strip on Tapas that "Erma should at least be on one main website where it would be easy for anyone, fan or newcomer, to come together, and be able to read all of the comics in chronological order, with a more organized list"; despite this, the comic was later released on WEBTOON.[3]
Bibliography
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Collections
Several print collections and a graphic novel have been published. Erma #1 covered various strips from 2014-2015 alongside original strips, while Erma #2 featured solely original strips. Spirit's Bloom, a graphic novel set before the events of Erma, detailing how Erma's parents met as well as expanding the series' mythology, was released in 2017. A third collection, Tales of Outcast, featuring the writing of Donovan Tracy and art of Erik Lervold and Kirsten Celander, was released in 2019.
Graphic novel
Novel
Picture book
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Other media
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Pilot (2017)
An animation based on Erma was in development since 2015 after the release of Erma #2 via Brandon's Tumblr page.[7] Santiago revealed that he had a "secret" project in development in addition to Erma #3 in October 2017, which he cited as the reason "there [wouldn't] be as many Halloween strips this month as last year".[8] Erma – Animated Short Film was uploaded to YouTube that month by Santiago, with a notification on Tapas describing the film as "a surprise for all of you", referring to fans of the Erma series.[9] The film was produced by Outcast Studios, and has received a positive reception.[3] The film is set prior to the first Erma strip, detailing how Erma's teacher Ms. Bierly met Erma. The short partially adapts "Coming Soon", a stand-alone comic released to Santiago's DeviantArt and Tumblr pages to announce the development of an ongoing Erma series prior to the series' original launch.[10]
Web series (2024–present)
Video game (2025)
In August 2016, Santiago designed and released a videogame based on the Erma as a series of levels through Super Mario Maker, a game creation system developed and published by Nintendo for the Wii U and Nintendo 3DS. The game, titled Erma's Well of Horror, contains several images of Erma composed of darkness and clouds, and has a completion rate of 4.94%.[11] Promotional art for the game features Mario encountering Erma as he's about to enter a Warp Pipe, shocked by her appearance. Santiago has stated that the game was specifically designed for readers of the Erma webcomic, as compensation for a temporary delay in the release of the following strip that existed at the time.[12] An updated version of Erma's Well of Horror was later released to Super Mario Maker 2 upon its release in 2019. A point-and-click adventure game, Erma: The Game, intended for release on iOS and Mac devices, had begun development by March 2019, and is still in development as of January 2025. The game follows Erma as she searches her neighborhood of Blairwood and her science project goes awry.[13]
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Reception
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Brad Miska of Bloody Disgusting has described the quality of the series as being on par with, if not superior to, Calvin and Hobbes. Miska also cited Santiago as having been "working diligently" with Erma; Miska additionally mistook the character of Emiko Williams (née Yūreimoto) for Samara Morgan in his review, the character from whom the design for Erma was gotten (alongside Kayako Saeki).[14] In a follow-up review to that of Miska's for Bloody Disgusting, Jonathan Barkan described Erma as "adorable" and "innocent", expressing fondness the series' "squeal-inducing" moments and citing "Movie Night"[15] as his favourite strip.[16]
Giallo Julian of Dread Central praised Erma as "just wholesome, feel-good content dipped in a nice coating of horror imagery… and you can bet your bloody guts that [one would] love every single bit of it. It's a celebration of the horror culture in the style of an old Peanuts comic strip", in particular praising its evolution from "one-shot stories establishing Erma [to] longer narratives, and [how] it begins to flesh out a creative world that [is] just a joy to see".[17]
Harry Situation of The Prose described Erma as an "[a]bsolutely fun read", calling the series "by far one of the best comic strips I've ever read", citing his love for Santiago's method of characterization of the main characters, finding "the rest of the characters [to be] just as likable too", describing the characters of Sam and Emiko Williams as "the most lovable couple ever". Regarding the series' artwork, Situation described it as "incredible", saying "[t]here's so much attention to detail that it's mind-blowing. I love the expressions people give in the comic whenever Erma does something freaky. Their drawn faces and reactions are just priceless. Even Erma's expressions are entertaining. While she doesn't talk throughout the series, Brandon found a way to let her mood and thoughts let the readers know what she's saying, and this method is brilliant. Also, it's nice to spot some cameos and easter eggs of classic horror movies in each comic strip".[18]
Chase Magnett of BuzzFeed described the series overall as "[to] be read by people of all ages", describing its humour and artwork as "adorable". Regarding the series' content, Magnett referred to Erma as "contain[ing] practical information for everyday life", "teach[ing] kids that actions have consequences", and "laugh[ing] at the day-to-day concerns of parenthood", overall stating the series to have "something that everyone can relate to".[19] Deanna Destito of Comics Beat praised Santiago's depiction of the titular Erma Williams as a "ghoulish creeper [who] just wants to be like any other kid", complementing the series' contrast with such horror franchises as The Grudge, and describing the series overall as "quirky, cute, and even a little heartwarming".[20]
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See also
References
External links
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