50 Dkp Minus Onyxia Wipe More Dots
Also known as: Onyxia Wipe · More Dots · Minus 50 DKP
50 DKP Minus, also known as the Onyxia Wipe or More Dots, is a viral audio recording from a disastrous *World of Warcraft* raid in early 2006, where guild leader Dives of Wipe Club unleashed a profanity-laced tirade as his team failed to defeat the dragon Onyxia4. A Flash animation set to the audio, created by player Deluthor in March 2006, turned the meltdown into one of the most iconic pieces of early WoW culture1. Blizzard later paid tribute to the recording by adding in-game achievements referencing Dives' most famous lines23.
TL;DR
50 DKP Minus, also known as the Onyxia Wipe or More Dots**, is a viral audio recording from a disastrous *World of Warcraft* raid in early 2006, where guild leader Dives of Wipe Club unleashed a profanity-laced tirade as his team failed to defeat the dragon Onyxia.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme's catchphrases are typically dropped into gaming contexts when someone messes up a team effort:
- "50 DKP minus!" is used to mock someone's failure or threaten a humorous penalty, especially in MMOs or any cooperative game - "More dots! More dots!" works as an exaggerated demand for more effort, damage output, or urgency - "Many whelps! Handle it!" fits situations where unexpected problems pile up all at once - "That's a fucking 50 DKP minus!" is the full quote, used for dramatic effect when channeling Dives' fury
The phrases work best in voice chat during multiplayer games, but they also show up in comment sections, forum posts, and office Slack channels whenever a group project goes sideways. The humor comes from applying the intensity of a raid leader's breakdown to mundane situations.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Dives' name comes from Latin for "rich," drawn from his background as an altar boy in the Romanian Orthodox Church. "I choose 'Dives' because I am rich," he told Kotaku. "Not in wealth but in spirit and mind. It's a multi-dimensional name".
At the time of his internet fame, Dives had already been the boss of two companies with ten to fifteen employees, making his intense management style slightly more understandable.
The Flash animation's visual style, with images representing homophones of words (scales for "weigh/way"), was inspired by early Group X videos, a popular Newgrounds comedy act.
Dives claimed his downed half a liter of vodka the night before the Kotaku interview because he "got pissed off at work".