We gather newly rising and long-lasting memes. We don't judge — we show them as-is. The interpretation is up to you.
A phrase started by comedian Park Myeong-su on "Infinite Challenge," from crying "deliciously." Now used to call something "delicious" even when it has nothing to do with food.
A caption from Infinite Challenge used when a shocking moment leaves someone speechless. A classic stunned-reaction caption meme.
A confident shout from Infinite Challenge, used when declaring something is certain to be a huge success.
Short for "be happy" (haengbok-hasipsyo), popularized in Infinite Challenge's G-Dragon episode. Used as a greeting or a sign-off.
From Infinite Challenge -- a team named "Team Hongchul" ended up without Noh Hong-chul in it. Became an idiom for "a team missing its own key member."
A phrase from Infinite Challenge by Park Myung-soo, swapping syllables between two words. It kicked off the syllable-swap wordplay trend in Korea.
A line from Infinite Challenge's Arctic special. It became a meme because the terrifying content was delivered in a completely flat, deadpan tone.
A reality-check line from Infinite Challenge; used to snap someone out of naive daydreaming with a cold dose of truth.
From Infinite Challenge -- used when someone unexpectedly turns up somewhere. It inspired singer Youngtak's song "Why Are You Here."
A Busan-dialect line from Infinite Challenge, used to throw a random, out-of-nowhere question at someone.
A child's blunt answer on the show Infinite Challenge when asked about their dreams. It has survived over 20 years as the ultimate expression of how office workers really feel.
A closing line from the variety show "Infinite Challenge," used to abruptly shut down a topic before it gets too awkward or complicated to dig further into.