The protagonist is 0–24 months old. At this stage, a baby is a sensory scientist and a slapstick comedian rolled into one. They do not understand abstract humor (puns, irony), but they deeply understand incongruity —when something happens that breaks their expectation.

When these three elements align, the baby isn't just playing. They are "working" on social cues, emotional regulation, and narrative prediction. Why is comic work so vital to baby play? Because laughter is a social bonding mechanism.

Today, when your baby throws the pacifier for the 15th time, do not sigh. Frame it. Panel 1: Baby holds pacifier. Panel 2: Baby looks you in the eye. Panel 3: Pacifier flies, you gasp, baby grins.

For babies, play is not a break from learning; it is the work of childhood . When a baby stacks blocks only to knock them down, they are learning physics (gravity), fine motor skills, and cause-and-effect. When you add comedy to that play, you activate the prefrontal cortex.