19 Dollar Fortnite Card
Also known as: $19 Fortnite Card · 19 Dollar Fortnite Card Giveaway · Who Wants It
The 19 Dollar Fortnite Card is a viral meme originating from a TikTok video posted by @mrblocku (formerly @imsofate) in early January 2021, in which a man frantically waves a $19 Fortnite V-Bucks gift card while announcing a giveaway1. The clip's erratic camera work, sped-up voice, and the instantly quotable line "who wants it?" made it a prime target for remixes, edits, and TikTok sound trends2. The meme became one of early 2021's defining internet moments but also carried a dark side, as the creator faced sustained online harassment that contributed to serious personal hardship3.
TL;DR
The 19 Dollar Fortnite Card is a viral meme originating from a TikTok video posted by @mrblocku (formerly @imsofate) in early January 2021, in which a man frantically waves a $19 Fortnite V-Bucks gift card while announcing a giveaway.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The standard 19 Dollar Fortnite Card format works as a TikTok audio meme:
Play a setup scenario, typically something mundane, dramatic, or ironic
Lip-sync or react to the audio: "Okay, 19 dollar Fortnite card, who wants it? And yes, I'm giving it away. Remember: share, share, share. And trolls, don't get blocked!"
The PlayStation startup sound plays, followed by the pitch-shifted "no more Fortnite!"
The punchline usually lands during or after the sound effects
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
MrBlockU's original TikTok username was @imsofate before he rebranded to @mrblocku.
The $19 price on the card doesn't match any standard Fortnite V-Bucks denomination sold by Epic Games.
MrBlockU eventually got a part-time job paying exactly $19 an hour, an unintentional callback to the meme that made him famous.
The meme's "don't get blocked" warning to trolls had the opposite effect, with viewers deliberately trying to get blocked by MrBlockU as a game.
Urban Dictionary entries for the meme describe the $19 Fortnite card as a "legendary item" that can "summon god".
Derivatives & Variations
Morshu Edits
8-BitAnt recreated the video using Morshu from the Zelda CD-i games, including both standard and "RTX ON" versions[3].
Breaking Bad Mashup
cowbelly's memes channel spliced Breaking Bad footage with the original audio[3].
PlayStation Sound Remix
@ethanelc's version adding PlayStation startup sounds and a high-pitched "no more Fortnite!" became the dominant audio version on TikTok[1].
Trap Remixes and Deep-Fried Edits
The audio was remixed into trap beats and processed through deep-frying filters for shitpost communities[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1
- 219 Dollar Fortnite Card - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 3VoiceoverPeteencyclopedia
- 4
- 5