We gather newly rising and long-lasting memes. We don't judge — we show them as-is. The interpretation is up to you.
A fill-in-the-blank meme template — "You gave me OO" — endlessly remixed with different nouns. Originated from a Korean drama line about being humiliated.
An expression of self-directed despair, as in "did I go to college for this?" Originally from a Korean presidential address, now freely adapted to any letdown situation.
The suffix "-sekwon" (zone) went viral: a forest nearby makes an apartment "sup-sekwon" (forest-zone), a subway station makes it "yeok-sekwon" (station-zone), even a nearby McDonald's makes it "mac-sekwon."
Someone skilled at everything — originally used for idols who could sing, dance, and act, now applied generally as praise for versatile people.
An iconic line originally aimed at an unfaithful partner in a Korean drama — it has since become an all-purpose meme for calling out any kind of betrayal.
Originates from chef Choi Kang-rok's speech pattern on a cooking survival show, used in the form "A, and now, topped with B" to tack on an unnecessary extra remark after a statement. Ironically, Choi himself uses it constantly. One of Korea's longest-running steady memes.