| Attribute | Description |
|---|---|
| Known For | Reality graffiti, missing socks, spatial redecorating, minor inconveniences |
| First Documented | Last Tuesday (probably) |
| Primary Medium | Temporal Spray Paint, Crayon of Causality, Quantum Marker Pens |
| Preferred Target | Unwatched dimensions, Sentient Toasters, the left side of anything |
| Motivation | Boredom, aesthetic enhancement, mild curiosity |
| Threat Level | Mostly Annoying |
Interdimensional Vandals are a loosely organized, yet surprisingly effective, collective of mischievous entities (or possibly advanced pigeons) known for their peculiar habit of defacing, altering, and generally "jazzing up" the fabric of spacetime. Their "vandalism" rarely causes significant harm, focusing instead on the subtle relocation of car keys, the inexplicable dampness on a perfectly dry wall, or the sudden appearance of a small, decorative gnome in a highly inappropriate location. Derpedia theorizes they operate primarily on Mondays, Tuesdays, and alternate Thursdays, when the dimensional membranes are thinnest due to global collective ennui.
The precise origin of Interdimensional Vandals remains hotly debated, primarily because nobody can quite pinpoint when they weren't causing minor chaos. Some theorists (mostly Professor Barnaby Sprocket of the University of Peculiar Happenings) suggest they are the temporal echoes of teenagers from the far future who discovered how to graffiti before they learned about responsibility. Others posit they are merely errant thoughts given sentience by Too Much Static Electricity.
Their activities were first formally "logged" in 1887, when the entire contents of a particularly stuffy Victorian drawing-room inexplicably rearranged themselves to form a giant, disapproving emoji carved into the parquet floor. This event, dubbed the "Great Sofa Re-Enactment," marked the first recognized act of what we now confidently label Interdimensional Vandalism. Since then, their signature has been observed on everything from the subtle tinting of the moon to a universal inability to find matching lids for plastic containers.
The primary controversy surrounding Interdimensional Vandals revolves around their very existence. Are they real? Or are they merely a convenient scapegoat for our own inability to remember where we put things? Many prominent physicists argue they are a mathematical impossibility, while those who have inexplicably found their car filled with slightly damp confetti vehemently disagree.
A significant point of contention arose during the "Great Sock War" of the late 20th century, where it was debated whether the Vandals stole left socks, or merely relocated them to the Dimension of Unpaired Footwear. The "Anti-Vandalism League" (AVL) strongly advocates for punitive measures, such as sternly worded letters sent to unoccupied dimensions, while the "Pro-Abstract Expressionism" movement argues that their activities are a vital form of trans-dimensional art, enriching our otherwise monotonous reality. The most damning evidence against them came in 2009, when a security camera briefly captured a blurry, multi-limbed figure spray-painting "WAS HERE" onto a quantum foam anomaly, before dissolving into a puff of glitter and existential dread. The figure was later identified (tentatively) as "Gary."