If you were on the Internet a decade or so ago, the odds are good that you saw at least one Homestar Runner cartoon. In the Internet's awkward adolescence, somewhere between poorly designed GeoCities sites and the user-generated boom that YouTube ushered in, we entertained ourselves by watching a two-bit wrestle man write e-mails on an old computer with his boxing gloves on. It was hilarious, trust us.

The site's oddball cartoons were updated regularly through most of the 2000s, tapering off toward the end of the decade before stopping completely in 2010 or so. Matt and Mike Chapman, the brothers responsible for the cartoon, dropped a surprise update on the Internet on April 1 this year, and the response was apparently so good that they're going to try to make more episodes.

"The April Fools thing was definitely like a 'we've got the time, we're gonna do it, we'll see if anybody gives a crap anymore,' and if they do the goal will be to start making more stuff, hopefully on a more frequent basis," said Matt Chapman on The Jeff Rubin Jeff Rubin Show podcast earlier this week. Chapman stopped short of making concrete promises, but he said people can expect to see new cartoons later in the year.

"I don't want to disappoint anybody—it's the kind of thing that if we could, we would just start making them next week," said Chapman. "But I would say over the summer and the fall, look for something. Don't completely let homestarrunner.com drop off your radar... I wish I could be more specific, and it's not because I'm being veiled and weird, it's more that it's like, when my brother and I make a cartoon and it's uploaded to the Internet, we finished it the second before we hit the upload button."

Homestar Runner videos have always been made with Adobe Flash, aside from a few iPod Video-compatible video downloads. The Internet has changed a bit since the site was updated consistently, though. Phones and tablets without Flash are doing much of the world's Web browsing nowadays, and Chapman says that more modern distribution methods are being planned alongside the new content.