Abraham Estrada Bubble De House De The Animation - Episodio 1 May 2026

But that’s exactly why it matters. For every The Simpsons , there are a thousand Abraham Estradas. These tiny, broken animations are time capsules—ugly, hilarious, and heartbreakingly earnest. The internet wasn’t built only by professionals. It was built by a kid in Guadalajara making a bubble house explode.

Interior of the bubble. The “house” is a pixel-art CRT television with legs. Stick-figure Abraham sits on top of the TV, eating a taco (or a pixelated hot dog). No dialogue, just the sound of chewing. But that’s exactly why it matters

“Abraham Estrada Bubble de House de The Animation” in Comic Sans on a rainbow gradient. A crudely drawn bubble pops in the background. The internet wasn’t built only by professionals

The bubble house explodes in a cloud of stars and squares (poorly coded particle effect). From the smoke, a poorly traced dog sprite (looks like Odie from Garfield recolored brown) says in a deep voice: “I am the house now.” End credits roll over a frozen frame of the dog. Credits list only: “Todo por Abraham Estrada.” Legacy: A Micro-Cult Following Despite—or because of—its low quality, “Bubble de House” has gained a small cult following on TikTok and Twitter, where users ironically quote “I am the house now” and recreate the 43-second episode using modern animation tools. A search for #BubbleDeHouse on TikTok yields about 12 videos, totaling 4,000 views. The “house” is a pixel-art CRT television with legs