93 Meme

2025Forced meme / number trend / hand gesturedeclining

Also known as: 93 number meme · 93 TikTok meme

93 Meme is a 2025 TikTok number trend by @ninetythree93._ that parodies number memes like 6 and 41 through deliberately meaningless content with no song or backstory.

The 93 meme is a TikTok number trend that started in late August 2025 as a deliberate parody of the 6 7 and 41 memes. Created by TikTok user @ninetythree93._, the meme has no song, no backstory, and no real meaning, which is exactly the point. It mocks how number memes blow up for no reason by being the most transparently meaningless one yet.

TL;DR

The 93 meme is a TikTok number trend that started in late August 2025 as a deliberate parody of the 6 7 and 41 memes.

Overview

The 93 meme is a number-based TikTok trend built around the number 93, which carries no inherent meaning or cultural reference1. Unlike its predecessors, the 6 7 meme and the 41 meme, which both had accompanying songs, 93 exists purely as a meta-commentary on number memes themselves. The format involves users posting videos claiming 93 is the next big number, often paired with a specific hand movement where you raise your arms and move them up and down1. The whole thing reads like a stress test for how far a meme can spread on vibes alone, with zero substance behind it.

On August 27, 2025, TikTok user @ninetythree93._ posted a video of Twitch streamer Fanum pointing, with the caption: "When everybody you know stuck on '6 7' and '41' but your already on 93🙏"2. That single post kicked off the entire trend. It wasn't based on a song, didn't reference any event, and had no deeper meaning. The creator's TikTok bio read "Creator of the mainstream 93 meme," leaning fully into the self-aware nature of the whole thing1. Within the first week, the video picked up over 162,600 likes2.

Follow-up posts from the same account included one captioned "when you create the 93 meme, and people genuinely hating🥀🥺" and another labeled "official 93 emote🙏🥀," which introduced the 93 hand movement1. The gesture involves putting your arms out similar to the 6 7 motion but higher, flipping your hands upside down, and moving them up and down1.

Origin & Background

Platform
TikTok
Creator
@ninetythree93._
Date
2025
Year
2025

On August 27, 2025, TikTok user @ninetythree93._ posted a video of Twitch streamer Fanum pointing, with the caption: "When everybody you know stuck on '6 7' and '41' but your already on 93🙏". That single post kicked off the entire trend. It wasn't based on a song, didn't reference any event, and had no deeper meaning. The creator's TikTok bio read "Creator of the mainstream 93 meme," leaning fully into the self-aware nature of the whole thing. Within the first week, the video picked up over 162,600 likes.

Follow-up posts from the same account included one captioned "when you create the 93 meme, and people genuinely hating🥀🥺" and another labeled "official 93 emote🙏🥀," which introduced the 93 hand movement. The gesture involves putting your arms out similar to the 6 7 motion but higher, flipping your hands upside down, and moving them up and down.

How It Spread

The meme spread fast within its first week. On the same day as the original post, August 27, 2025, @ninetythree93._ uploaded two more viral videos, including one showing YouTuber SoLLUMINATI shaking his head with the caption "When you catch bro saying 67 instead of 93," which pulled in over 23,100 likes.

By August 28, TikToker @coopytok posted his own video saying, "New meme just dropped. Instead of saying, 'four, one,' we say, 'nine, three,'" earning over 53,600 likes in six days.

On August 31, 2025, @blizziboitv, the creator of the 41 meme's song, weighed in with a video captioned "New challenger is approaching. 93 meme valid?" alongside text reading "who wins," framing all the number memes as competing for relevance. That same day, H00pify posted on his alternate account @hoopervalley8 with a video stating "We're NOT making 93 a meme," which got around 37,300 likes. Blizzi Boi and H00pify later made a joint video arguing that 93 has no lore since 6 7 and 41 both had songs, calling 93 forced in comparison.

The TikTok community split into three camps. Some thought 93 was funny and could stick like its predecessors. Others saw it as a troll number that works precisely because it mocks how random the trend had become. A third group hated it outright, arguing 93 is the kind of thing that would kill number memes entirely. As @hoopervalley8 pointed out in one widely supported video, if every number becomes a meme, then none of them really are.

How to Use This Meme

The 93 meme typically shows up in two formats:

1

Video posts: Film yourself or use a clip of someone reacting, then add a caption about 93 replacing 6 7 or 41. The tone is usually half-serious, half-trolling. Common setups include "when bro is still on [old number] but you're already on 93" or questioning whether 93 is valid.

2

The 93 hand movement: Put your arms out like the 6 7 motion but raised higher, flip your hands upside down, and move them up and down. This gesture is often performed on camera as a kind of gang-sign parody for the number.

Cultural Impact

The 93 meme's significance is less about the number itself and more about what it says about TikTok trend cycles. It exposed the machinery behind number memes by stripping away every element that made previous ones catch on (songs, dances, backstories) and seeing if pure trend momentum could carry a meme on its own.

The involvement of Blizzi Boi, who created the 41 song, gave 93 a brief legitimacy boost. His "new challenger is approaching" framing treated the number memes as a competitive ecosystem, which only fed the meta-joke. Some users speculated that 93 could eventually appear in Roblox's "Steal a Brainrot" game, since 6 7 had already been added and characters like Tung Tung Tung Sahur were being removed due to copyright claims.

Fun Facts

The 93 meme is one of the few memes whose creator openly acknowledged it was a forced meme from the start, writing "Creator of the mainstream 93 meme" in their TikTok bio.

@coopytok's video about 93 gained over 53,600 likes despite being just six seconds of him explaining the concept.

H00pify's pushback video against 93 got nearly as much engagement as the videos promoting it, with roughly 37,300 likes.

The 93 meme sparked a genuine debate about whether number memes have a shelf life or if any number can become a meme if pushed hard enough.

Derivatives & Variations

93 hand movement:

A specific arm gesture introduced by the original creator, performed by raising arms higher than the 6 7 pose, flipping hands upside down, and moving them vertically[1].

93 vs 41 vs 67 comparison videos:

Content framing all three number memes as rivals competing for dominance, popularized by Blizzi Boi's "who wins" post[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

93 Meme

2025Forced meme / number trend / hand gesturedeclining

Also known as: 93 number meme · 93 TikTok meme

93 Meme is a 2025 TikTok number trend by @ninetythree93._ that parodies number memes like 6 and 41 through deliberately meaningless content with no song or backstory.

The 93 meme is a TikTok number trend that started in late August 2025 as a deliberate parody of the 6 7 and 41 memes. Created by TikTok user @ninetythree93._, the meme has no song, no backstory, and no real meaning, which is exactly the point. It mocks how number memes blow up for no reason by being the most transparently meaningless one yet.

TL;DR

The 93 meme is a TikTok number trend that started in late August 2025 as a deliberate parody of the 6 7 and 41 memes.

Overview

The 93 meme is a number-based TikTok trend built around the number 93, which carries no inherent meaning or cultural reference. Unlike its predecessors, the 6 7 meme and the 41 meme, which both had accompanying songs, 93 exists purely as a meta-commentary on number memes themselves. The format involves users posting videos claiming 93 is the next big number, often paired with a specific hand movement where you raise your arms and move them up and down. The whole thing reads like a stress test for how far a meme can spread on vibes alone, with zero substance behind it.

On August 27, 2025, TikTok user @ninetythree93._ posted a video of Twitch streamer Fanum pointing, with the caption: "When everybody you know stuck on '6 7' and '41' but your already on 93🙏". That single post kicked off the entire trend. It wasn't based on a song, didn't reference any event, and had no deeper meaning. The creator's TikTok bio read "Creator of the mainstream 93 meme," leaning fully into the self-aware nature of the whole thing. Within the first week, the video picked up over 162,600 likes.

Follow-up posts from the same account included one captioned "when you create the 93 meme, and people genuinely hating🥀🥺" and another labeled "official 93 emote🙏🥀," which introduced the 93 hand movement. The gesture involves putting your arms out similar to the 6 7 motion but higher, flipping your hands upside down, and moving them up and down.

Origin & Background

Platform
TikTok
Creator
@ninetythree93._
Date
2025
Year
2025

On August 27, 2025, TikTok user @ninetythree93._ posted a video of Twitch streamer Fanum pointing, with the caption: "When everybody you know stuck on '6 7' and '41' but your already on 93🙏". That single post kicked off the entire trend. It wasn't based on a song, didn't reference any event, and had no deeper meaning. The creator's TikTok bio read "Creator of the mainstream 93 meme," leaning fully into the self-aware nature of the whole thing. Within the first week, the video picked up over 162,600 likes.

Follow-up posts from the same account included one captioned "when you create the 93 meme, and people genuinely hating🥀🥺" and another labeled "official 93 emote🙏🥀," which introduced the 93 hand movement. The gesture involves putting your arms out similar to the 6 7 motion but higher, flipping your hands upside down, and moving them up and down.

How It Spread

The meme spread fast within its first week. On the same day as the original post, August 27, 2025, @ninetythree93._ uploaded two more viral videos, including one showing YouTuber SoLLUMINATI shaking his head with the caption "When you catch bro saying 67 instead of 93," which pulled in over 23,100 likes.

By August 28, TikToker @coopytok posted his own video saying, "New meme just dropped. Instead of saying, 'four, one,' we say, 'nine, three,'" earning over 53,600 likes in six days.

On August 31, 2025, @blizziboitv, the creator of the 41 meme's song, weighed in with a video captioned "New challenger is approaching. 93 meme valid?" alongside text reading "who wins," framing all the number memes as competing for relevance. That same day, H00pify posted on his alternate account @hoopervalley8 with a video stating "We're NOT making 93 a meme," which got around 37,300 likes. Blizzi Boi and H00pify later made a joint video arguing that 93 has no lore since 6 7 and 41 both had songs, calling 93 forced in comparison.

The TikTok community split into three camps. Some thought 93 was funny and could stick like its predecessors. Others saw it as a troll number that works precisely because it mocks how random the trend had become. A third group hated it outright, arguing 93 is the kind of thing that would kill number memes entirely. As @hoopervalley8 pointed out in one widely supported video, if every number becomes a meme, then none of them really are.

How to Use This Meme

The 93 meme typically shows up in two formats:

1

Video posts: Film yourself or use a clip of someone reacting, then add a caption about 93 replacing 6 7 or 41. The tone is usually half-serious, half-trolling. Common setups include "when bro is still on [old number] but you're already on 93" or questioning whether 93 is valid.

2

The 93 hand movement: Put your arms out like the 6 7 motion but raised higher, flip your hands upside down, and move them up and down. This gesture is often performed on camera as a kind of gang-sign parody for the number.

Cultural Impact

The 93 meme's significance is less about the number itself and more about what it says about TikTok trend cycles. It exposed the machinery behind number memes by stripping away every element that made previous ones catch on (songs, dances, backstories) and seeing if pure trend momentum could carry a meme on its own.

The involvement of Blizzi Boi, who created the 41 song, gave 93 a brief legitimacy boost. His "new challenger is approaching" framing treated the number memes as a competitive ecosystem, which only fed the meta-joke. Some users speculated that 93 could eventually appear in Roblox's "Steal a Brainrot" game, since 6 7 had already been added and characters like Tung Tung Tung Sahur were being removed due to copyright claims.

Fun Facts

The 93 meme is one of the few memes whose creator openly acknowledged it was a forced meme from the start, writing "Creator of the mainstream 93 meme" in their TikTok bio.

@coopytok's video about 93 gained over 53,600 likes despite being just six seconds of him explaining the concept.

H00pify's pushback video against 93 got nearly as much engagement as the videos promoting it, with roughly 37,300 likes.

The 93 meme sparked a genuine debate about whether number memes have a shelf life or if any number can become a meme if pushed hard enough.

Derivatives & Variations

93 hand movement:

A specific arm gesture introduced by the original creator, performed by raising arms higher than the 6 7 pose, flipping hands upside down, and moving them vertically[1].

93 vs 41 vs 67 comparison videos:

Content framing all three number memes as rivals competing for dominance, popularized by Blizzi Boi's "who wins" post[2].

Frequently Asked Questions