Doomer

2018Wojak character / online archetypesemi-active

Also known as: Doomer Wojak · Doomer Guy

Doomer is a 2018 Wojak character of a nihilistic, chain-smoking young man in a black hoodie who believes the world is beyond saving.

Doomer is a Wojak-derived character depicting a depressed, nihilistic young man in a black beanie and hoodie, cigarette in hand, who believes the world is beyond saving. First posted to 4chan's /biz/ board in September 20183, the character quickly spread across boards and platforms as a shorthand for existential despair, spawning a female counterpart (Doomer Girl), an entire music microgenre (doomer wave), and mainstream media attention from outlets like The Atlantic and The New Yorker4.

TL;DR

Doomer a wojak character design representing a pessimistic, cynical millennial struggling with anxiety, depression, and hopelessness about the future.

Overview

The Doomer is a Wojak variant showing a gaunt young man, typically in his early-to-mid 20s, wearing a black beanie and dark hoodie with heavy bags under his eyes3. He's almost always drawn with a lit cigarette. The character represents a specific type of internet pessimism: someone who has given up on career advancement, romantic relationships, and the future of civilization in general5. Unlike the angry or resentful incel archetype, the Doomer is defined by quiet resignation. He drinks, smokes, takes late-night walks alone, and listens to post-punk and slowcore5.

The character sits within the broader "-oomer" Wojak family, which includes the 30 Year-Old Boomer, the Zoomer, and the Bloomer4. Each represents a different generational or psychological archetype, but the Doomer carved out a particularly strong following because it tapped into real anxieties about climate change, economic stagnation, and mental health decline among millennials and Gen Z2.

On September 16, 2018, an anonymous user posted the Doomer character to 4chan's /biz/ (business) board3. The image depicted a 23-year-old male described as deeply depressed, with "no hope of career advancement," who was also an alcoholic at "high risk" for opioid addiction3. The character was drawn in the simple Wojak style but distinguished by the black beanie, hoodie, and cigarette that would become its signature look.

The term "doomer" itself predates the meme by about a decade. It appeared as early as 2008 in internet peak oil communities, where forum members debated societal collapse scenarios related to resource depletion4. Canadian self-identified doomer Paul Chefurka ran a website encouraging readers to prepare for civilizational breakdown by modifying their homes and reconsidering having children4. But the word didn't reach mainstream internet culture until the 2018 Wojak version gave it a face.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan /biz/
Creator
Anonymous 4chan user
Date
2018
Year
2018

On September 16, 2018, an anonymous user posted the Doomer character to 4chan's /biz/ (business) board. The image depicted a 23-year-old male described as deeply depressed, with "no hope of career advancement," who was also an alcoholic at "high risk" for opioid addiction. The character was drawn in the simple Wojak style but distinguished by the black beanie, hoodie, and cigarette that would become its signature look.

The term "doomer" itself predates the meme by about a decade. It appeared as early as 2008 in internet peak oil communities, where forum members debated societal collapse scenarios related to resource depletion. Canadian self-identified doomer Paul Chefurka ran a website encouraging readers to prepare for civilizational breakdown by modifying their homes and reconsidering having children. But the word didn't reach mainstream internet culture until the 2018 Wojak version gave it a face.

How It Spread

The character moved fast across 4chan. Within two hours of the /biz/ post, it appeared on /x/ (paranormal board). The next day, September 17, it hit /r9k/, where another user paired Doomer traits with a screenshot of Ryan Gosling from Blade Runner 2049. That same day, variations began appearing on /pol/, some with anti-semitic elements.

The /pol/ threads became part of a broader pattern of 4chan users adopting the Doomer meme to discuss their own depression and mental health struggles openly, using the character as a proxy for genuine feelings.

On November 19, 2018, another anonymous user introduced "The 24 Year Old Go-Getter," a character who had moved past the Doomer phase. This figure shared traits with the Bloomer, the optimistic counterpart in the -oomer universe.

By 2019, the Doomer had spread well beyond 4chan. Jonathan Franzen's New Yorker essay "What if We Stopped Pretending?" used the doom framing that resonated with online Doomer communities, and the piece became popular in Facebook groups like Near Term Human Extinction Support Group. The term started appearing in mainstream commentary about climate pessimism.

In early January 2020, a female version called the Doomer Girl (or Doomerette) appeared. She had black hair, dark eyes, a black sweatshirt, and a choker. The character gained traction on Facebook and Twitter, often shown interacting with the original male Doomer or the Trad Girl. The Atlantic described her as "a quickly sketched cartoon woman with black hair, black clothes, and sad eyes ringed with red makeup".

The COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 boosted the Doomer archetype significantly. "Doomer"-themed playlists featuring the Wojak character alongside slowed-down post-punk and rock tracks surged on YouTube. Belarusian post-punk band Molchat Doma became the unofficial soundtrack of doomer culture after being tagged as "Russian doomer music" in viral playlists and memes.

Platforms

4chanRedditTwitterDiscord

Timeline

2018-06

Doomer character first appears on 4chan

2019-01

Widespread adoption across Reddit and Twitter

2020-03

Explodes in popularity during pandemic lockdowns

2021-06

Reaches peak cultural saturation

2023-01-01

Doomer entered the broader pop culture conversation

2025-01-01

Doomer is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The Doomer is typically used in one of several ways:

Character identification: Post the Doomer Wojak with a caption describing a relatable depressive or nihilistic behavior. Common examples: staying up until 4 AM, taking walks alone at 2 AM, only eating once a day, watching the news and feeling nothing. The humor comes from the specificity of the behavior and the recognition factor.

-Oomer comparison charts: Place the Doomer alongside other Wojak archetypes (Boomer, Zoomer, Bloomer, Coomer) in a multi-panel comparison showing how each type handles the same situation differently.

Doomer Girl interactions: Pair the male and female Doomer characters in conversation or interaction memes. These often play on the idea of two depressed people finding brief connection.

Doomer playlists: Create a YouTube or Spotify playlist of moody post-punk, slowcore, or ambient music, paired with the Doomer Wojak image as the cover. Slowed-down edits of existing tracks are common.

The tone is usually self-deprecating rather than aggressive. Doomer memes punch inward, not outward.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The Doomer crossed over from meme culture into mainstream media discourse in several waves. Jonathan Franzen's 2019 New Yorker essay on climate defeatism brought "doomer" into broader vocabulary, though Franzen didn't reference the meme directly. The essay was widely shared in online doomer communities, creating a feedback loop between highbrow journalism and internet culture.

Academic and scientific communities engaged with doomerism as a concept. Jem Bendell's "Deep Adaptation" paper became a flashpoint: downloaded half a million times, it sparked responses from climate scientists who worried that doom framing would paralyze rather than motivate. An essay published on OpenDemocracy argued the paper "relies heavily on misinterpreted climate science".

The meme also opened conversation about male mental health online. The r/doomer subreddit and similar communities served as informal support spaces where young men discussed depression, addiction, and alienation in ways they might not in other contexts. The Doomer gave people a low-stakes vocabulary for serious feelings.

Urban Dictionary entries for the Doomer tracked how the word's meaning shifted over time. Early definitions focused on peak oil survivalism, while later ones described a specific internet personality type defined by night walks, Radiohead, and resigned despair.

Full History

The word "doomer" has roots in the mid-2000s peak oil forums, where self-described doomers debated how to prepare for the end of cheap energy. U.S. Army Ranger Chris Lisle, writing survival tips for fellow doomers, recommended adopting "a positive attitude," because "hard times don't last, hard people do". These early doomers were practical preppers more than nihilists, focused on food chains, home modification, and whether to have children.

The 2018 4chan character changed the word's meaning. When the anonymous /biz/ poster drew that simple Wojak in a black beanie, they weren't thinking about oil reserves. The new Doomer was younger, more specifically internet-poisoned, and defined by emotional paralysis rather than survival planning. Kaitlyn Tiffany wrote in The Atlantic that the meme depicted young men who "are no longer pursuing friendships or relationships, and get no joy from anything because they know that the world is coming to an end".

The character worked because it arrived during a specific cultural moment. Mental health concerns among young adults were rising sharply, with rates of reported mental health struggles climbing from 13.7% in 2019 to 28.9% by 2023. The Doomer gave that statistical trend a cartoon face. Reddit's r/doomer subreddit became a gathering point where users discussed their depression through the lens of the meme, sharing night walk photos and post-punk playlists.

The Doomer Girl variant in January 2020 expanded the meme's reach beyond 4chan's male-dominated boards. Women on Twitter and Tumblr claimed the character from its imageboard origins, using it for self-expression and humor about their own existential dread. The Atlantic compared the format to rage comics in how it used simple drawings to convey complex emotional states. The Doomer Girl often appeared in image macros alongside the original Doomer, their interactions ranging from romantic to antagonistic.

Doomer wave music became its own microgenre. Pitchfork writer Cat Zhang described the doomer as "a nihilistic, 20-something male whose despair about the world causes him to retreat from traditional society". The musical style started as slowed-down edits of depressive tracks, inspired by vaporwave production techniques, but expanded to include original post-punk and ambient music. Zhang compared Molchat Doma's synth-driven post-punk to "a nighttime counterpart to the vaporwave subgenre 'mallwave,' which sounds like a eulogy to the lost promise of suburban idyll".

The Doomer also intersected with climate discourse in significant ways. Sustainability professor Jem Bendell's self-published paper "Deep Adaptation: A Map for Navigating Climate Tragedy" became what the BBC called "the closest thing to a manifesto for a generation of self-described 'climate doomers'". The paper, downloaded over half a million times by March 2020, argued that civilizational breakdown was inevitable and that people should prepare rather than prevent. Climate scientist Michael E. Mann pushed back hard, calling it "pseudo-scientific nonsense" and labeling Bendell's "doomist framing" a "dangerous new strain of crypto-denialism" that led to the same inaction as outright climate denial.

The tension between legitimate concern and performative despair is the Doomer's central contradiction. Some critics argue that doomer memes raise awareness about real global problems, while others say the exaggerated hopelessness creates a feedback loop that deepens despair and discourages action. The line between meme and identity blurred as users on forums described themselves as doomers without irony, adopting the lifestyle traits (night walks, cigarettes, Radiohead) as genuine habits rather than jokes.

Fun Facts

The original Doomer was specifically described as 23 years old with "no hope of career advancement" and a "high risk" for opioid addiction.

Ryan Gosling's character from Blade Runner 2049 became an unofficial secondary face of the Doomer archetype after a /r9k/ user paired the two on September 17, 2018.

U.S. Army Ranger Chris Lisle, an early 2000s doomer, advised fellow pessimists to "adopt a positive attitude" because "hard times don't last, hard people do".

The Doomer character appeared just months after the 30 Year-Old Boomer Wojak, part of a rapid expansion of the -oomer character family on 4chan in 2018.

Pitchfork's Cat Zhang compared doomer wave music to a "nighttime counterpart" of mallwave, calling it a "eulogy to the lost promise of suburban idyll".

Derivatives & Variations

Doomerette (female Doomer variant)

A variation of Doomer

(2018)

Boomer vs Doomer comparisons

A variation of Doomer

(2018)

Profession-specific Doomers (Doomer developer, Doomer investor, etc.)

A variation of Doomer

(2018)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (5)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
    Doomerencyclopedia
  5. 5

Doomer

2018Wojak character / online archetypesemi-active

Also known as: Doomer Wojak · Doomer Guy

Doomer is a 2018 Wojak character of a nihilistic, chain-smoking young man in a black hoodie who believes the world is beyond saving.

Doomer is a Wojak-derived character depicting a depressed, nihilistic young man in a black beanie and hoodie, cigarette in hand, who believes the world is beyond saving. First posted to 4chan's /biz/ board in September 2018, the character quickly spread across boards and platforms as a shorthand for existential despair, spawning a female counterpart (Doomer Girl), an entire music microgenre (doomer wave), and mainstream media attention from outlets like The Atlantic and The New Yorker.

TL;DR

Doomer a wojak character design representing a pessimistic, cynical millennial struggling with anxiety, depression, and hopelessness about the future.

Overview

The Doomer is a Wojak variant showing a gaunt young man, typically in his early-to-mid 20s, wearing a black beanie and dark hoodie with heavy bags under his eyes. He's almost always drawn with a lit cigarette. The character represents a specific type of internet pessimism: someone who has given up on career advancement, romantic relationships, and the future of civilization in general. Unlike the angry or resentful incel archetype, the Doomer is defined by quiet resignation. He drinks, smokes, takes late-night walks alone, and listens to post-punk and slowcore.

The character sits within the broader "-oomer" Wojak family, which includes the 30 Year-Old Boomer, the Zoomer, and the Bloomer. Each represents a different generational or psychological archetype, but the Doomer carved out a particularly strong following because it tapped into real anxieties about climate change, economic stagnation, and mental health decline among millennials and Gen Z.

On September 16, 2018, an anonymous user posted the Doomer character to 4chan's /biz/ (business) board. The image depicted a 23-year-old male described as deeply depressed, with "no hope of career advancement," who was also an alcoholic at "high risk" for opioid addiction. The character was drawn in the simple Wojak style but distinguished by the black beanie, hoodie, and cigarette that would become its signature look.

The term "doomer" itself predates the meme by about a decade. It appeared as early as 2008 in internet peak oil communities, where forum members debated societal collapse scenarios related to resource depletion. Canadian self-identified doomer Paul Chefurka ran a website encouraging readers to prepare for civilizational breakdown by modifying their homes and reconsidering having children. But the word didn't reach mainstream internet culture until the 2018 Wojak version gave it a face.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan /biz/
Creator
Anonymous 4chan user
Date
2018
Year
2018

On September 16, 2018, an anonymous user posted the Doomer character to 4chan's /biz/ (business) board. The image depicted a 23-year-old male described as deeply depressed, with "no hope of career advancement," who was also an alcoholic at "high risk" for opioid addiction. The character was drawn in the simple Wojak style but distinguished by the black beanie, hoodie, and cigarette that would become its signature look.

The term "doomer" itself predates the meme by about a decade. It appeared as early as 2008 in internet peak oil communities, where forum members debated societal collapse scenarios related to resource depletion. Canadian self-identified doomer Paul Chefurka ran a website encouraging readers to prepare for civilizational breakdown by modifying their homes and reconsidering having children. But the word didn't reach mainstream internet culture until the 2018 Wojak version gave it a face.

How It Spread

The character moved fast across 4chan. Within two hours of the /biz/ post, it appeared on /x/ (paranormal board). The next day, September 17, it hit /r9k/, where another user paired Doomer traits with a screenshot of Ryan Gosling from Blade Runner 2049. That same day, variations began appearing on /pol/, some with anti-semitic elements.

The /pol/ threads became part of a broader pattern of 4chan users adopting the Doomer meme to discuss their own depression and mental health struggles openly, using the character as a proxy for genuine feelings.

On November 19, 2018, another anonymous user introduced "The 24 Year Old Go-Getter," a character who had moved past the Doomer phase. This figure shared traits with the Bloomer, the optimistic counterpart in the -oomer universe.

By 2019, the Doomer had spread well beyond 4chan. Jonathan Franzen's New Yorker essay "What if We Stopped Pretending?" used the doom framing that resonated with online Doomer communities, and the piece became popular in Facebook groups like Near Term Human Extinction Support Group. The term started appearing in mainstream commentary about climate pessimism.

In early January 2020, a female version called the Doomer Girl (or Doomerette) appeared. She had black hair, dark eyes, a black sweatshirt, and a choker. The character gained traction on Facebook and Twitter, often shown interacting with the original male Doomer or the Trad Girl. The Atlantic described her as "a quickly sketched cartoon woman with black hair, black clothes, and sad eyes ringed with red makeup".

The COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 boosted the Doomer archetype significantly. "Doomer"-themed playlists featuring the Wojak character alongside slowed-down post-punk and rock tracks surged on YouTube. Belarusian post-punk band Molchat Doma became the unofficial soundtrack of doomer culture after being tagged as "Russian doomer music" in viral playlists and memes.

Platforms

4chanRedditTwitterDiscord

Timeline

2018-06

Doomer character first appears on 4chan

2019-01

Widespread adoption across Reddit and Twitter

2020-03

Explodes in popularity during pandemic lockdowns

2021-06

Reaches peak cultural saturation

2023-01-01

Doomer entered the broader pop culture conversation

2025-01-01

Doomer is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The Doomer is typically used in one of several ways:

Character identification: Post the Doomer Wojak with a caption describing a relatable depressive or nihilistic behavior. Common examples: staying up until 4 AM, taking walks alone at 2 AM, only eating once a day, watching the news and feeling nothing. The humor comes from the specificity of the behavior and the recognition factor.

-Oomer comparison charts: Place the Doomer alongside other Wojak archetypes (Boomer, Zoomer, Bloomer, Coomer) in a multi-panel comparison showing how each type handles the same situation differently.

Doomer Girl interactions: Pair the male and female Doomer characters in conversation or interaction memes. These often play on the idea of two depressed people finding brief connection.

Doomer playlists: Create a YouTube or Spotify playlist of moody post-punk, slowcore, or ambient music, paired with the Doomer Wojak image as the cover. Slowed-down edits of existing tracks are common.

The tone is usually self-deprecating rather than aggressive. Doomer memes punch inward, not outward.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The Doomer crossed over from meme culture into mainstream media discourse in several waves. Jonathan Franzen's 2019 New Yorker essay on climate defeatism brought "doomer" into broader vocabulary, though Franzen didn't reference the meme directly. The essay was widely shared in online doomer communities, creating a feedback loop between highbrow journalism and internet culture.

Academic and scientific communities engaged with doomerism as a concept. Jem Bendell's "Deep Adaptation" paper became a flashpoint: downloaded half a million times, it sparked responses from climate scientists who worried that doom framing would paralyze rather than motivate. An essay published on OpenDemocracy argued the paper "relies heavily on misinterpreted climate science".

The meme also opened conversation about male mental health online. The r/doomer subreddit and similar communities served as informal support spaces where young men discussed depression, addiction, and alienation in ways they might not in other contexts. The Doomer gave people a low-stakes vocabulary for serious feelings.

Urban Dictionary entries for the Doomer tracked how the word's meaning shifted over time. Early definitions focused on peak oil survivalism, while later ones described a specific internet personality type defined by night walks, Radiohead, and resigned despair.

Full History

The word "doomer" has roots in the mid-2000s peak oil forums, where self-described doomers debated how to prepare for the end of cheap energy. U.S. Army Ranger Chris Lisle, writing survival tips for fellow doomers, recommended adopting "a positive attitude," because "hard times don't last, hard people do". These early doomers were practical preppers more than nihilists, focused on food chains, home modification, and whether to have children.

The 2018 4chan character changed the word's meaning. When the anonymous /biz/ poster drew that simple Wojak in a black beanie, they weren't thinking about oil reserves. The new Doomer was younger, more specifically internet-poisoned, and defined by emotional paralysis rather than survival planning. Kaitlyn Tiffany wrote in The Atlantic that the meme depicted young men who "are no longer pursuing friendships or relationships, and get no joy from anything because they know that the world is coming to an end".

The character worked because it arrived during a specific cultural moment. Mental health concerns among young adults were rising sharply, with rates of reported mental health struggles climbing from 13.7% in 2019 to 28.9% by 2023. The Doomer gave that statistical trend a cartoon face. Reddit's r/doomer subreddit became a gathering point where users discussed their depression through the lens of the meme, sharing night walk photos and post-punk playlists.

The Doomer Girl variant in January 2020 expanded the meme's reach beyond 4chan's male-dominated boards. Women on Twitter and Tumblr claimed the character from its imageboard origins, using it for self-expression and humor about their own existential dread. The Atlantic compared the format to rage comics in how it used simple drawings to convey complex emotional states. The Doomer Girl often appeared in image macros alongside the original Doomer, their interactions ranging from romantic to antagonistic.

Doomer wave music became its own microgenre. Pitchfork writer Cat Zhang described the doomer as "a nihilistic, 20-something male whose despair about the world causes him to retreat from traditional society". The musical style started as slowed-down edits of depressive tracks, inspired by vaporwave production techniques, but expanded to include original post-punk and ambient music. Zhang compared Molchat Doma's synth-driven post-punk to "a nighttime counterpart to the vaporwave subgenre 'mallwave,' which sounds like a eulogy to the lost promise of suburban idyll".

The Doomer also intersected with climate discourse in significant ways. Sustainability professor Jem Bendell's self-published paper "Deep Adaptation: A Map for Navigating Climate Tragedy" became what the BBC called "the closest thing to a manifesto for a generation of self-described 'climate doomers'". The paper, downloaded over half a million times by March 2020, argued that civilizational breakdown was inevitable and that people should prepare rather than prevent. Climate scientist Michael E. Mann pushed back hard, calling it "pseudo-scientific nonsense" and labeling Bendell's "doomist framing" a "dangerous new strain of crypto-denialism" that led to the same inaction as outright climate denial.

The tension between legitimate concern and performative despair is the Doomer's central contradiction. Some critics argue that doomer memes raise awareness about real global problems, while others say the exaggerated hopelessness creates a feedback loop that deepens despair and discourages action. The line between meme and identity blurred as users on forums described themselves as doomers without irony, adopting the lifestyle traits (night walks, cigarettes, Radiohead) as genuine habits rather than jokes.

Fun Facts

The original Doomer was specifically described as 23 years old with "no hope of career advancement" and a "high risk" for opioid addiction.

Ryan Gosling's character from Blade Runner 2049 became an unofficial secondary face of the Doomer archetype after a /r9k/ user paired the two on September 17, 2018.

U.S. Army Ranger Chris Lisle, an early 2000s doomer, advised fellow pessimists to "adopt a positive attitude" because "hard times don't last, hard people do".

The Doomer character appeared just months after the 30 Year-Old Boomer Wojak, part of a rapid expansion of the -oomer character family on 4chan in 2018.

Pitchfork's Cat Zhang compared doomer wave music to a "nighttime counterpart" of mallwave, calling it a "eulogy to the lost promise of suburban idyll".

Derivatives & Variations

Doomerette (female Doomer variant)

A variation of Doomer

(2018)

Boomer vs Doomer comparisons

A variation of Doomer

(2018)

Profession-specific Doomers (Doomer developer, Doomer investor, etc.)

A variation of Doomer

(2018)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (5)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
    Doomerencyclopedia
  5. 5