Challenge Accepted

2006Catchphrase / Rage Comicclassic

Also known as: CA · CHALLENGE ACCEPTED · Challenge Accepted Meme · Challenge Accepted

Challenge Accepted is a late-2010 rage comic meme originating from BodyBuilding Forums, pairing a smug stick figure with a catchphrase popularized by How I Met Your Mother's Barney Stinson.

"Challenge Accepted" is a catchphrase and rage comic format used to declare willingness to tackle a difficult or absurd task. The phrase was popularized by the character Barney Stinson on *How I Met Your Mother* starting in 20062, then entered meme culture in late 2010 when a BodyBuilding Forums user paired it with a smug stick figure illustration3. It became one of the signature rage comic formats of the early 2010s, spawning dedicated pages across Tumblr, Facebook, and Meme Generator3.

TL;DR

"Challenge Accepted" is a catchphrase and rage comic format used to declare willingness to tackle a difficult or absurd task.

Overview

"Challenge Accepted" works as both a standalone catchphrase and a rage comic panel. The rage comic version depicts a stick figure with crossed arms and a distinctly smug facial expression, conveying total confidence in the face of an obviously difficult situation3. The format typically appears as the final panel in a rage comic strip, following a setup where someone states that a task is impossible or inadvisable4. The speaker responds with "Challenge Accepted," implying they will attempt the task regardless of warnings, common sense, or physical limitations4.

The phrase itself carries a tone of cocky determination. It's used both sincerely (actually planning to try something hard) and ironically (acknowledging the absurdity of attempting something clearly ill-advised)4.

The phrase entered pop culture through the CBS sitcom *How I Met Your Mother*. The character Barney Stinson, played by Neil Patrick Harris, first used it in Season 2, Episode 6, "Aldrin Justice," which aired on October 23, 20063. In the scene, Stinson announces his intention to seduce an older woman, declaring "I accept your challenge" despite never actually being challenged3. The catchphrase became a recurring part of the character's personality throughout the show's run. The phrase proved popular enough that the Season 6 finale (Episode 24) was titled "Challenge Accepted" when it aired on May 16, 20112.

The meme version arrived four years after the TV debut. On November 12, 2010, BodyBuilding Forums member MK posted a thread containing two examples pairing the phrase with a new rage comic character, a stick figure standing with crossed arms and a smug look on its face3. This visual format gave the catchphrase a distinct identity separate from its television origins, making it easily shareable and remixable in the rage comic ecosystem.

Origin & Background

Platform
*How I Met Your Mother* (catchphrase), BodyBuilding Forums (rage comic format)
Key People
MK
Date
2006 (catchphrase), 2010 (rage comic)
Year
2006

The phrase entered pop culture through the CBS sitcom *How I Met Your Mother*. The character Barney Stinson, played by Neil Patrick Harris, first used it in Season 2, Episode 6, "Aldrin Justice," which aired on October 23, 2006. In the scene, Stinson announces his intention to seduce an older woman, declaring "I accept your challenge" despite never actually being challenged. The catchphrase became a recurring part of the character's personality throughout the show's run. The phrase proved popular enough that the Season 6 finale (Episode 24) was titled "Challenge Accepted" when it aired on May 16, 2011.

The meme version arrived four years after the TV debut. On November 12, 2010, BodyBuilding Forums member MK posted a thread containing two examples pairing the phrase with a new rage comic character, a stick figure standing with crossed arms and a smug look on its face. This visual format gave the catchphrase a distinct identity separate from its television origins, making it easily shareable and remixable in the rage comic ecosystem.

How It Spread

The rage comic character took off quickly once it escaped the BodyBuilding Forums. On November 26, 2010, just two weeks after the original post, a dedicated Tumblr blog called "Fuck Yeah Challenge Accepted Guy" launched. By December 13, 2010, a Facebook page for "Challenge Accepted" was live, and it racked up over 145,000 likes within its first two years.

The meme's infrastructure kept expanding into 2011. On April 14, a Meme Generator page went live, giving users an easy tool to create their own image macros with the rage comic face. The format was flexible enough to work in both multi-panel rage comics and standalone image macros. On October 27, 2011, FunnyJunk user JanFebMar uploaded photos of a pumpkin carved to look like the Challenge Accepted face, showing the meme had crossed over into physical media.

By mid-2012, the meme had reached peak saturation. On June 21, 2012, the humor blog Smosh published a roundup titled "Best of the 'Challenge Accepted' Meme," collecting notable examples from across the internet. The Cheezburger network's Memebase site also became a regular home for Challenge Accepted rage comics.

Platforms

4chanRedditTumblrTwitter

Timeline

2010-01

Challenge Accepted meme emerges

2010-06

Spreads across major platforms

2011-2013

Peak of usage

2012-01-01

Challenge Accepted reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

2013-01-01

Brands and companies started using Challenge Accepted in marketing

2014-present

Declines as newer memes emerge

2015-01-01

Challenge Accepted entered the broader pop culture conversation

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a simple pattern:

1

Present a situation where someone says something is impossible, forbidden, or extremely difficult ("This exam is impossible to pass" or "No one can eat 50 hot dogs").

2

The final panel shows the Challenge Accepted rage face or just the phrase "Challenge Accepted."

3

The humor comes from the gap between the obvious difficulty and the speaker's unflinching confidence.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Challenge Accepted contributed to the vocabulary of reaction memes and influenced how subsequent determination-expressing memes would be formatted.

Fun Facts

The BodyBuilding Forums, not Reddit or 4chan, were the birthplace of the rage comic version. The forums have been a surprisingly prolific source of meme culture.

The phrase appeared on television for over four years before anyone turned it into a rage comic format.

The Facebook page hit 145,000 likes in roughly two years, solid numbers for an early 2010s meme page.

The meme crossed from digital to physical when a user carved a Challenge Accepted pumpkin for Halloween 2011.

Derivatives & Variations

Challenge Considered:

A variant rage comic character used to indicate that a task is being thought over rather than immediately accepted[3].

Challenge Denied:

A companion character that flatly rejects the proposed task, serving as the opposite reaction to Challenge Accepted[3].

Frequently Asked Questions

Challenge Accepted

2006Catchphrase / Rage Comicclassic

Also known as: CA · CHALLENGE ACCEPTED · Challenge Accepted Meme · Challenge Accepted

Challenge Accepted is a late-2010 rage comic meme originating from BodyBuilding Forums, pairing a smug stick figure with a catchphrase popularized by How I Met Your Mother's Barney Stinson.

"Challenge Accepted" is a catchphrase and rage comic format used to declare willingness to tackle a difficult or absurd task. The phrase was popularized by the character Barney Stinson on *How I Met Your Mother* starting in 2006, then entered meme culture in late 2010 when a BodyBuilding Forums user paired it with a smug stick figure illustration. It became one of the signature rage comic formats of the early 2010s, spawning dedicated pages across Tumblr, Facebook, and Meme Generator.

TL;DR

"Challenge Accepted" is a catchphrase and rage comic format used to declare willingness to tackle a difficult or absurd task.

Overview

"Challenge Accepted" works as both a standalone catchphrase and a rage comic panel. The rage comic version depicts a stick figure with crossed arms and a distinctly smug facial expression, conveying total confidence in the face of an obviously difficult situation. The format typically appears as the final panel in a rage comic strip, following a setup where someone states that a task is impossible or inadvisable. The speaker responds with "Challenge Accepted," implying they will attempt the task regardless of warnings, common sense, or physical limitations.

The phrase itself carries a tone of cocky determination. It's used both sincerely (actually planning to try something hard) and ironically (acknowledging the absurdity of attempting something clearly ill-advised).

The phrase entered pop culture through the CBS sitcom *How I Met Your Mother*. The character Barney Stinson, played by Neil Patrick Harris, first used it in Season 2, Episode 6, "Aldrin Justice," which aired on October 23, 2006. In the scene, Stinson announces his intention to seduce an older woman, declaring "I accept your challenge" despite never actually being challenged. The catchphrase became a recurring part of the character's personality throughout the show's run. The phrase proved popular enough that the Season 6 finale (Episode 24) was titled "Challenge Accepted" when it aired on May 16, 2011.

The meme version arrived four years after the TV debut. On November 12, 2010, BodyBuilding Forums member MK posted a thread containing two examples pairing the phrase with a new rage comic character, a stick figure standing with crossed arms and a smug look on its face. This visual format gave the catchphrase a distinct identity separate from its television origins, making it easily shareable and remixable in the rage comic ecosystem.

Origin & Background

Platform
*How I Met Your Mother* (catchphrase), BodyBuilding Forums (rage comic format)
Key People
MK
Date
2006 (catchphrase), 2010 (rage comic)
Year
2006

The phrase entered pop culture through the CBS sitcom *How I Met Your Mother*. The character Barney Stinson, played by Neil Patrick Harris, first used it in Season 2, Episode 6, "Aldrin Justice," which aired on October 23, 2006. In the scene, Stinson announces his intention to seduce an older woman, declaring "I accept your challenge" despite never actually being challenged. The catchphrase became a recurring part of the character's personality throughout the show's run. The phrase proved popular enough that the Season 6 finale (Episode 24) was titled "Challenge Accepted" when it aired on May 16, 2011.

The meme version arrived four years after the TV debut. On November 12, 2010, BodyBuilding Forums member MK posted a thread containing two examples pairing the phrase with a new rage comic character, a stick figure standing with crossed arms and a smug look on its face. This visual format gave the catchphrase a distinct identity separate from its television origins, making it easily shareable and remixable in the rage comic ecosystem.

How It Spread

The rage comic character took off quickly once it escaped the BodyBuilding Forums. On November 26, 2010, just two weeks after the original post, a dedicated Tumblr blog called "Fuck Yeah Challenge Accepted Guy" launched. By December 13, 2010, a Facebook page for "Challenge Accepted" was live, and it racked up over 145,000 likes within its first two years.

The meme's infrastructure kept expanding into 2011. On April 14, a Meme Generator page went live, giving users an easy tool to create their own image macros with the rage comic face. The format was flexible enough to work in both multi-panel rage comics and standalone image macros. On October 27, 2011, FunnyJunk user JanFebMar uploaded photos of a pumpkin carved to look like the Challenge Accepted face, showing the meme had crossed over into physical media.

By mid-2012, the meme had reached peak saturation. On June 21, 2012, the humor blog Smosh published a roundup titled "Best of the 'Challenge Accepted' Meme," collecting notable examples from across the internet. The Cheezburger network's Memebase site also became a regular home for Challenge Accepted rage comics.

Platforms

4chanRedditTumblrTwitter

Timeline

2010-01

Challenge Accepted meme emerges

2010-06

Spreads across major platforms

2011-2013

Peak of usage

2012-01-01

Challenge Accepted reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

2013-01-01

Brands and companies started using Challenge Accepted in marketing

2014-present

Declines as newer memes emerge

2015-01-01

Challenge Accepted entered the broader pop culture conversation

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a simple pattern:

1

Present a situation where someone says something is impossible, forbidden, or extremely difficult ("This exam is impossible to pass" or "No one can eat 50 hot dogs").

2

The final panel shows the Challenge Accepted rage face or just the phrase "Challenge Accepted."

3

The humor comes from the gap between the obvious difficulty and the speaker's unflinching confidence.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Challenge Accepted contributed to the vocabulary of reaction memes and influenced how subsequent determination-expressing memes would be formatted.

Fun Facts

The BodyBuilding Forums, not Reddit or 4chan, were the birthplace of the rage comic version. The forums have been a surprisingly prolific source of meme culture.

The phrase appeared on television for over four years before anyone turned it into a rage comic format.

The Facebook page hit 145,000 likes in roughly two years, solid numbers for an early 2010s meme page.

The meme crossed from digital to physical when a user carved a Challenge Accepted pumpkin for Halloween 2011.

Derivatives & Variations

Challenge Considered:

A variant rage comic character used to indicate that a task is being thought over rather than immediately accepted[3].

Challenge Denied:

A companion character that flatly rejects the proposed task, serving as the opposite reaction to Challenge Accepted[3].

Frequently Asked Questions