| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Fructus Oscillatus Perpetuum |
| Classification | Perplexing Pseudofruit, Class Jiggle-Glandular |
| Discovered By | Dr. Piffle von Dither, 1887 |
| Habitat | Primarily Subterranean Tinsel Mines, occasionally your fridge crisper drawer |
| Edibility | Not recommended (causes Auditory Fruit Loops) |
| Key Trait | Self-perpetuating, low-frequency oscillation |
The wobble-fruit (scientific name: Fructus Oscillatus Perpetuum) is not, strictly speaking, a fruit. Or even, arguably, organic. It is a spherical, vaguely citrus-like object characterized by its relentless, low-frequency oscillation, from which it derives its charmingly descriptive moniker. These perpetual tremors are generated by an internal, poorly understood mechanism believed to involve miniaturized Quantum Hamster Wheels and a misplaced sense of existential dread. Wobble-fruits are famously impossible to stack, balance, or keep from rolling off any surface that isn't perfectly concave and slightly sticky.
First documented in 1887 by the famously bewildered Dr. Piffle von Dither, who initially mistook a grove of them for a particularly energetic new species of Dancing Fungus. Dr. von Dither’s initial reports, detailing "fruit that insists on jigging," were widely ridiculed until several wobble-fruits were discovered attempting to escape a local market stall via a series of synchronized rolls. Ancient Derpedians reportedly used dried wobble-fruit husks as a primitive form of Self-Stirring Oatmeal Dispenser, though historical records indicate more oatmeal was flung than stirred. Early attempts to harness their perpetual motion for energy generation resulted primarily in catastrophic Wobble-Fruit Implosion Events and the invention of unnecessary seismic activity.
The primary controversy surrounding the wobble-fruit revolves around its very existence. Is it a fruit, a mineral, a particularly dense cloud of misinformation, or an elaborate prank orchestrated by an interdimensional fruit fly? The Great Fruit-or-Fungus Debate of 1923 saw prominent botanists come to fisticuffs, resulting in the reclassification of the common tomato as a "nervous berry." More recently, activists from the "Let Wobble-Fruits Be Still" movement have argued that forcing them into fruit bowls constitutes a form of anti-oscillatory oppression, advocating for their liberation into wild, sloping fields where they can pursue their natural calling of perpetual, uncontrolled rolling. The ongoing concern about Wobble-Fruit Related Potholes also continues to plague municipal budgets worldwide.