I think I saw some of that. Did they do a bunch of "I need an adult" gags?
They do repeating gags, occasionally - that is one of them that showed up maybe four or five times, especially in the Namek arc.
I think what draws me about Abridged is simple: It restores the humor that was surgically removed from Dragonball to make Dragonball Z.
The original Dragonball was just as funny as it was action-oriented - yes, there were rare serious arcs, but it had as many gags as it did action sequences. DBZ, on the other hand, was almost gag-free - it was 90% action, maybe 5% comedy, no different from any other shonen martial arts manga.
DBZ:A, on the other hand...
VEGETA: Did... you just talk out your ass?
IMPERFECT CELL: Well, yes, but to be fair, I am at least 10% you.
And it does that comedy restoration
while still telling the story of Dragonball Z. It's amazing how much
filler you realize the story has - even the MANGA - after watching DBZ:A turn what was an overblown uninteresting tensionless 8 page fight into a quick conversation where you find out Dedoria was the most beautiful - and fertile - woman on her planet, just before Vegeta vaporizes her to erase that image from his memory.
Their other projects... ehhh, they're funny, but they don't have quite the same impact in my mind because that was always how I felt about Dragonball versus Dragonball Z: there's a definite line somewhere the jokes STOP and the punching doesn't. DBZ:A fixes that.
Although I almost did walk away because the first joke in the first episode is a pot joke, and I was afraid the whole thing would be lowbrow drug humor - which is rarely funny to me. I think there's about one drug joke every two or three hours, though, which works out okay.