unspeakable
Explanation
This comic explores the paradox of having everything you supposedly need for happiness and still feeling unfulfilled.
A person is talking to a robot and says: "Robot, I should be happy." They list all the reasons: "It does everything. I don't have to work. No chores. No deadlines. No scheduling. Nothing." In other words, the robot has automated every aspect of their life, removing all friction and obligation.
"And yet," they continue, "yet something is missing. Something I cannot say." This sets up what sounds like it could be a profound existential revelation about the human need for purpose, struggle, or meaning.
The robot then says: "Another blossom, master, sir?" The person responds: "How did you know?!"
The punchline undercuts the existential setup entirely. The "unspeakable" thing the person was missing wasn't purpose or meaning -- it was just another drink (a blossom, presumably a cocktail). The robot, being a good servant, already knew this because the person's "deep existential crisis" is really just wanting another round.
The comic satirizes the modern fantasy of total automation and leisure. It plays on the philosophical idea that humans need struggle and purpose to be happy, but then deflates it by suggesting that maybe we'd actually be fine with meaningless luxury -- we'd just be too embarrassed to admit it. The title "Unspeakable" takes on a double meaning: the person can't articulate what's missing not because it's profoundly ineffable, but because it's embarrassingly trivial.