We gather newly rising and long-lasting memes. We don't judge — we show them as-is. The interpretation is up to you.
"Bufo" is a set of toad/frog emoji widely used on Discord and forums to express a huge range of emotions and reactions.
"Big Chungus" is an edited image of a plump, swollen Bugs Bunny that became an icon of absurdist internet humor. 2018.
Meme Man, a crude 3D-rendered suited figure, serves as the recurring protagonist of the "Stonks" meme family representing dubious financial confidence.
Brainlet is a Wojak with a shrunken head, used as a strawman character making foolish arguments.
Tradwife Wojak is a female Wojak character representing a traditional homemaker ideal, used to satirize certain value systems.
Consoomer is a Wojak variant depicted hoarding merchandise and mindlessly consuming, mocking rampant consumerism.
Bloomer is an upbeat Wojak variant who is optimistic about the future — the opposite of the Doomer.
Gloomer is a Wojak variant even more depressed than the classic "Doomer," representing deep gloom and despair.
Coomer is a Wojak variant depicting someone addicted to something, mocking a lack of self-control or excessive indulgence.
A scene of multiple Wojaks excitedly pointing at something, used to depict overreacting to a topic or target.
Apu Apustaja, a clumsy but good-natured frog character derived from Pepe, used to express innocent, awkward, or well-meaning feelings.
Duo, the Duolingo app's owl mascot, became a meme for aggressively threatening users who skip their language lessons.
Contrasts a crying soyjak with a "mewing" jawline diagram, framing self-improvement (mewing) as the superior side. From 2024.
An angry wojak variant called "chud," used to mock outgroups.
A confident, idealized male character who appears as the superior side in the "Virgin vs Chad" comparison format.
A hoodie-wearing wojak smoking a cigarette, representing a nihilistic, pessimistic young man who has given up on the future.
A chiseled blond wojak who responds "yes" to any accusation without flinching. Represents unbothered confidence in one's own views regardless of pushback.
A wojak variant with mouth agape in excitement, used to mock overly enthusiastic or naive reactions.
Thomas the Tank Engine characters get photoshopped/composited into all kinds of games and videos as a staple of absurdist memes.
Shrek scenes and lines (like "ogres are like onions, they have layers") became icons of absurdist meme culture.
Meme archetype for an entitled, demanding middle-aged woman who insists on "speaking to the manager." Became a generic term for anyone making unreasonable demands. Late 2010s.
A character from the YouTube comedy team Chimtoobu's content -- someone who shows up on the subway decked out in loud, cheap clothes bought from Temu, acting flashy and full of swagger.
A character from SNL Korea's "MZ Office" sketch, played by Kim A-young, portraying a Gen-Z office worker. Means someone whose eyes look innocent but whose behavior is unhinged — now used in everyday life too.
A meme referencing Popeye getting super strong after eating spinach; used to say someone has powered up, as in "뽀빠이 모드 ON" ("Popeye mode ON").