The Comic-Con floors are full of fans dressed up as unholy characters, from zombies to werewolves to the occasional White Walker. But should an actual demonic possession break out near Hall H, we know just who to turn to for help: Patrick Fugit and Philip Glenister, the stars of Cinemax's West Virginia-set exorcism series Outcast. At the Wired Cafe on Thursday afternoon, we asked Fugit, 33, and Glenister, 53, what steps they'd take if one of their fellow con-attendees suddenly became bedeviled.

"I think they're already possessed out there," Glenister joked, eying some of the nearby revelers. "But I'd ply 'em all with some holy wine and get 'em all loosened up."

"Then we'd have to take them into a room somewhere," Fugit added, "basically, we'd run your classic abduction, and exorcise them in the bathroom."

Such a gruesome turn of events wouldn't be out of place on Outcast, which is based on the comic-book series by The Walking Dead creator Robert Kirkman, and which has included no shortage of what-the-yuck moments (the series opened, lest we forget, with that grody bug-eating scene). In one especially gnarly sequence, Glenister's character had a pentagram carved into his chest. "I sent a photograph back home to my wife, saying, 'I've finally found a tattooist, but I'm not sure how good he is,'" the actor says.

The show's darker moments has irked some residents in South Carolina, where Outcast shoots (Fugit says protestors have shown up during filming with signs that read, "Outcast is going to bring the devil to South Carolina"). But should the cast ever need to retreat indoors, they can kill the time by indulging in Fugit's newfound Dungeons & Dragons hobby.

"I had never played as a kid, but three or four years ago, one of my best friends was having their game while I was over," Fugit said. "I tried it out, and it's fucking fun! It's really interesting as an actor, because it's like an improv exercise." Fugit's go-to character? "I play a halfling assassin named Bandy Swiftpet." ("That sounds like your porn name!" Glenister notes.)

As for the future of Outcast, Fugit promises an especially unsavory gross-out during an upcoming flashback sequence. But what about the inevitable Outcast/Outkast cross-over, in which the Southern hip-hop stars team up with the rural exorcists to pull of a musical-filled caper? Spoiler alert, but according to Fugit: "You just described the season finale."