Battle Pass Grind

2018Catchphrase / community memeactive

Also known as: BP Grind · The Grind · Pass Grinding

Battle Pass Grind is a 2018 gaming meme about the seasonal grind in free-to-play games, characterized by jokes comparing cosmetic rewards to unpaid labor and humorous complaints about neglected obligations.

Battle Pass Grind is a gaming community meme about the repetitive, time-consuming nature of completing seasonal battle passes in free-to-play games. Players joke about the grind as unpaid labor, posting about neglecting sleep, work, and social lives to unlock cosmetic rewards before a season timer expires. The meme gained traction in the late 2010s as battle pass monetization systems spread across major titles, with each new game launch bringing fresh waves of grind-related humor.

TL;DR

Battle Pass Grind is a gaming community meme about the repetitive, time-consuming nature of completing seasonal battle passes in free-to-play games.

Overview

Battle Pass Grind memes target the psychology behind seasonal progression systems in free-to-play games. A standard battle pass offers dozens of tiered rewards that players unlock through experience points earned by completing matches and challenges. Free tiers give basic cosmetics while premium tiers (purchased with real money) offer exclusive skins, emotes, and effects. The problem: everything resets when the season ends, usually every two to three months, and players start from zero again.

The meme captures that specific desperation of being stuck at a high tier with days left in the season. Posts range from self-deprecating jokes about compulsive play sessions to sarcastic calculations of how little each unlocked item is worth per hour of effort. Some games layer multiple progression systems and currencies on top of the battle pass, making the grind feel endless. MultiVersus, for instance, featured four separate currencies at various points: Perk Currency, Gleamium (premium), Prestige points, and Toasts1.

Battle pass systems existed before 2018 in games like Dota 2, but the model exploded when Fortnite Battle Royale introduced its paid battle pass in early 2018. As dozens of games copied the format, gaming communities on Reddit and Twitter started making jokes about the repetitive grind required to max out each season's pass.

The meme crystallized around a shared experience: the uncomfortable realization that a "free" game was demanding more time than a full-price title, all for cosmetic rewards that would become irrelevant next season. Early posts focused on Fortnite's weekly challenges, but the joke quickly became universal as Apex Legends, Call of Duty: Warzone, and other titles adopted identical systems.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit, Twitter (gaming communities)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2018
Year
2018

Battle pass systems existed before 2018 in games like Dota 2, but the model exploded when Fortnite Battle Royale introduced its paid battle pass in early 2018. As dozens of games copied the format, gaming communities on Reddit and Twitter started making jokes about the repetitive grind required to max out each season's pass.

The meme crystallized around a shared experience: the uncomfortable realization that a "free" game was demanding more time than a full-price title, all for cosmetic rewards that would become irrelevant next season. Early posts focused on Fortnite's weekly challenges, but the joke quickly became universal as Apex Legends, Call of Duty: Warzone, and other titles adopted identical systems.

How It Spread

By 2022, battle pass grind memes were inescapable in gaming circles. Nearly every major free-to-play launch brought a fresh wave of content. MultiVersus drew particular attention during its open beta period from July 2022 to June 2023, with its multi-layered currency system giving meme creators plenty of material. When the game fully launched on May 28, 2024, critics noted that its monetization mechanics were aggressive, especially around time-limited cosmetics.

Common meme variations include screenshots of absurd daily challenges, time-lapse videos of mindless grinding sessions, and the classic "me explaining to my boss why I need to leave early" template paired with a battle pass tier list. The format also thrives in video form on TikTok, where players film themselves robotically completing challenges with dead-eyed expressions.

MultiVersus became a frequent meme target partly because of its "Fighter Road" system introduced in Season 4, which replaced direct character purchases with experience-based unlocking. Players now had to grind XP to access characters on top of grinding the battle pass itself, doubling the treadmill effect. The premium battle pass rewarded just enough Gleamium to buy the next season's pass, locking invested players into a perpetual cycle.

Platforms

TikTokTwitterReddit

Timeline

2023-01-15

First appears

2023-06-01

Goes viral

2024-01-01

Continues in use

2025-01-01

Battle Pass Grind is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Battle Pass Grind memes typically follow a few formats:

1

The Schedule Meme: A daily planner or weekly calendar with battle pass grinding blocking out all other life activities

2

The Math Meme: Breaking down the hourly "wage" earned from battle pass rewards, usually arriving at fractions of a penny

3

The FOMO Post: Expressing panic about an expiring season with tiers still locked, often with escalating text or distorted images

4

The Comparison: Showing expectations (a cool legendary skin) versus reality (a generic spray or loading screen at tier 47)

5

The Excuse: Using "I need to grind the battle pass" as deadpan justification for skipping social events, work, or basic hygiene

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Battle pass fatigue became a genuine industry talking point as players and reviewers pushed back against aggressive seasonal models. When MultiVersus was delisted and its servers permanently closed on May 30, 2025, players who had spent money on premium currency and time grinding battle passes lost access to their purchases entirely, with only offline modes still playable. The shutdown reinforced every joke the meme community had ever made about the impermanence of battle pass rewards.

Game developers started acknowledging the grind problem. Some titles introduced catch-up mechanics, reduced tier counts, or let players earn previous season rewards. "Battle pass grind" became shorthand in game reviews for predatory time-gate monetization, with critics using the term as a recognized negative when evaluating free-to-play launches.

Fun Facts

MultiVersus cycled through multiple currency systems during its lifespan, with Fighter Currency being superseded by the Fighter Road system in Season 4

Completing a MultiVersus premium battle pass gave players exactly enough Gleamium to buy the next season's pass, creating a sunk-cost loop

The entire MultiVersus library of purchased and earned content became inaccessible to online players when servers shut down just one year after full launch

Gleamium could technically be earned for free through the free battle pass track, character leveling, and specific login days, though in amounts far smaller than premium purchases

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1
    MultiVersusencyclopedia

Battle Pass Grind

2018Catchphrase / community memeactive

Also known as: BP Grind · The Grind · Pass Grinding

Battle Pass Grind is a 2018 gaming meme about the seasonal grind in free-to-play games, characterized by jokes comparing cosmetic rewards to unpaid labor and humorous complaints about neglected obligations.

Battle Pass Grind is a gaming community meme about the repetitive, time-consuming nature of completing seasonal battle passes in free-to-play games. Players joke about the grind as unpaid labor, posting about neglecting sleep, work, and social lives to unlock cosmetic rewards before a season timer expires. The meme gained traction in the late 2010s as battle pass monetization systems spread across major titles, with each new game launch bringing fresh waves of grind-related humor.

TL;DR

Battle Pass Grind is a gaming community meme about the repetitive, time-consuming nature of completing seasonal battle passes in free-to-play games.

Overview

Battle Pass Grind memes target the psychology behind seasonal progression systems in free-to-play games. A standard battle pass offers dozens of tiered rewards that players unlock through experience points earned by completing matches and challenges. Free tiers give basic cosmetics while premium tiers (purchased with real money) offer exclusive skins, emotes, and effects. The problem: everything resets when the season ends, usually every two to three months, and players start from zero again.

The meme captures that specific desperation of being stuck at a high tier with days left in the season. Posts range from self-deprecating jokes about compulsive play sessions to sarcastic calculations of how little each unlocked item is worth per hour of effort. Some games layer multiple progression systems and currencies on top of the battle pass, making the grind feel endless. MultiVersus, for instance, featured four separate currencies at various points: Perk Currency, Gleamium (premium), Prestige points, and Toasts.

Battle pass systems existed before 2018 in games like Dota 2, but the model exploded when Fortnite Battle Royale introduced its paid battle pass in early 2018. As dozens of games copied the format, gaming communities on Reddit and Twitter started making jokes about the repetitive grind required to max out each season's pass.

The meme crystallized around a shared experience: the uncomfortable realization that a "free" game was demanding more time than a full-price title, all for cosmetic rewards that would become irrelevant next season. Early posts focused on Fortnite's weekly challenges, but the joke quickly became universal as Apex Legends, Call of Duty: Warzone, and other titles adopted identical systems.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit, Twitter (gaming communities)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2018
Year
2018

Battle pass systems existed before 2018 in games like Dota 2, but the model exploded when Fortnite Battle Royale introduced its paid battle pass in early 2018. As dozens of games copied the format, gaming communities on Reddit and Twitter started making jokes about the repetitive grind required to max out each season's pass.

The meme crystallized around a shared experience: the uncomfortable realization that a "free" game was demanding more time than a full-price title, all for cosmetic rewards that would become irrelevant next season. Early posts focused on Fortnite's weekly challenges, but the joke quickly became universal as Apex Legends, Call of Duty: Warzone, and other titles adopted identical systems.

How It Spread

By 2022, battle pass grind memes were inescapable in gaming circles. Nearly every major free-to-play launch brought a fresh wave of content. MultiVersus drew particular attention during its open beta period from July 2022 to June 2023, with its multi-layered currency system giving meme creators plenty of material. When the game fully launched on May 28, 2024, critics noted that its monetization mechanics were aggressive, especially around time-limited cosmetics.

Common meme variations include screenshots of absurd daily challenges, time-lapse videos of mindless grinding sessions, and the classic "me explaining to my boss why I need to leave early" template paired with a battle pass tier list. The format also thrives in video form on TikTok, where players film themselves robotically completing challenges with dead-eyed expressions.

MultiVersus became a frequent meme target partly because of its "Fighter Road" system introduced in Season 4, which replaced direct character purchases with experience-based unlocking. Players now had to grind XP to access characters on top of grinding the battle pass itself, doubling the treadmill effect. The premium battle pass rewarded just enough Gleamium to buy the next season's pass, locking invested players into a perpetual cycle.

Platforms

TikTokTwitterReddit

Timeline

2023-01-15

First appears

2023-06-01

Goes viral

2024-01-01

Continues in use

2025-01-01

Battle Pass Grind is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Battle Pass Grind memes typically follow a few formats:

1

The Schedule Meme: A daily planner or weekly calendar with battle pass grinding blocking out all other life activities

2

The Math Meme: Breaking down the hourly "wage" earned from battle pass rewards, usually arriving at fractions of a penny

3

The FOMO Post: Expressing panic about an expiring season with tiers still locked, often with escalating text or distorted images

4

The Comparison: Showing expectations (a cool legendary skin) versus reality (a generic spray or loading screen at tier 47)

5

The Excuse: Using "I need to grind the battle pass" as deadpan justification for skipping social events, work, or basic hygiene

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Battle pass fatigue became a genuine industry talking point as players and reviewers pushed back against aggressive seasonal models. When MultiVersus was delisted and its servers permanently closed on May 30, 2025, players who had spent money on premium currency and time grinding battle passes lost access to their purchases entirely, with only offline modes still playable. The shutdown reinforced every joke the meme community had ever made about the impermanence of battle pass rewards.

Game developers started acknowledging the grind problem. Some titles introduced catch-up mechanics, reduced tier counts, or let players earn previous season rewards. "Battle pass grind" became shorthand in game reviews for predatory time-gate monetization, with critics using the term as a recognized negative when evaluating free-to-play launches.

Fun Facts

MultiVersus cycled through multiple currency systems during its lifespan, with Fighter Currency being superseded by the Fighter Road system in Season 4

Completing a MultiVersus premium battle pass gave players exactly enough Gleamium to buy the next season's pass, creating a sunk-cost loop

The entire MultiVersus library of purchased and earned content became inaccessible to online players when servers shut down just one year after full launch

Gleamium could technically be earned for free through the free battle pass track, character leveling, and specific login days, though in amounts far smaller than premium purchases

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1
    MultiVersusencyclopedia