Fanbase Reputation

2019Exploitable format / discourse memeactive

Also known as: Fandom Generalization · Fans When · Toxic Fanbase Memes · Fanbase Tier List

Fanbase Reputation is a 2019 meme format stereotyping fan communities, originating from Fandom Generalization GIF captions on iFunny and expanding into tier lists, "Fans Explaining" montages, and "X Slander" videos.

Fanbase Reputation refers to a broad category of internet memes that stereotype, rank, and mock the perceived behavior of fans belonging to specific franchises or communities. Rooted in long-running internet culture around "toxic fandoms," these memes took structured form around 2019 with Fandom Generalization GIF captions on iFunny, before expanding into tier lists, "Fans Explaining" montages, and "X Slander" videos across TikTok, Twitter, and Reddit. The format taps into a shared understanding that certain fanbases carry distinct reputations online, whether deserved or not.

TL;DR

Fanbase Reputation refers to a broad category of internet memes that stereotype, rank, and mock the perceived behavior of fans belonging to specific franchises or communities.

Overview

Fanbase Reputation memes work on a simple premise: every fandom has a stereotype, and those stereotypes are funny. The format typically assigns exaggerated traits, behaviors, or accusations to fans of specific media properties. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans get mocked for supposed homoeroticism. Rick and Morty fans are painted as pseudointellectual gatekeepers. K-Pop stans are characterized as hyper-aggressive online armies. The humor comes from the gap between what a piece of media actually is and how its most vocal fans behave, or are perceived to behave.

These memes take multiple forms: GIF captions pairing a reaction clip with a fanbase label, tier list rankings of "most toxic" fandoms on TierMaker, rapid-fire montage videos set to cartoon theme songs, and alignment charts sorting fanbases by behavior type. What links them is the shared vocabulary of fanbase reputations that the internet has collectively built over years of fandom discourse.

The practice of mocking specific fanbases predates the structured meme formats. As early as 2017, memes about Rick and Morty fans being pretentious and condescending spread widely after incidents like fans harassing the show's female writers and the Szechuan sauce McDonald's meltdowns. K-Pop stan behavior on Twitter attracted mockery around the same period, with BTS Army interactions becoming a frequent punchline.

The format crystallized on iFunny in early August 2019, when GIF captions began pairing short reaction clips with labels like "[Franchise] fans when..." followed by an exaggerated stereotype. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans were among the earliest and most frequent targets, often stereotyped based on the series' flamboyant character designs. By late September 2019, the format had expanded to mock Osu! players and other niche gaming communities.

Origin & Background

Platform
iFunny (GIF captions), Twitter (montage format)
Key People
Unknown, @OnePunchDio
Date
2019
Year
2019

The practice of mocking specific fanbases predates the structured meme formats. As early as 2017, memes about Rick and Morty fans being pretentious and condescending spread widely after incidents like fans harassing the show's female writers and the Szechuan sauce McDonald's meltdowns. K-Pop stan behavior on Twitter attracted mockery around the same period, with BTS Army interactions becoming a frequent punchline.

The format crystallized on iFunny in early August 2019, when GIF captions began pairing short reaction clips with labels like "[Franchise] fans when..." followed by an exaggerated stereotype. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans were among the earliest and most frequent targets, often stereotyped based on the series' flamboyant character designs. By late September 2019, the format had expanded to mock Osu! players and other niche gaming communities.

How It Spread

The Fandom Generalization format spread steadily through late 2019 and 2020 across iFunny, Reddit, and Twitter. Each fandom that developed a noticeable online reputation became fair game for the template.

On March 9, 2021, Twitter user @OnePunchDio posted a montage compiling multiple fandom generalization memes set to The Powerpuff Girls opening theme, creating the "Fans Explaining" variant. The montage format poked fun at fans of One Piece, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, Attack on Titan, and other anime titles in rapid succession. This montage style spread quickly because it let creators pack dozens of stereotypes into a single video.

By May 2022, the format experienced a second wave of virality under the name "X Slander," where "X" could be any community, profession, or group. The X Slander variant moved well beyond fandom territory to cover everything from national stereotypes to workplace humor.

TierMaker became a major hub for the ranking variant of fanbase reputation content. Templates like "Every Fandom Ever" (142 images, updated January 2023) and "The WORST Fanbases EVER" (64 images, updated April 2023) let users sort fanbases into tiers from harmless to toxic. On TikTok, "fandom tier list" videos ranking the worst fandoms to join became a popular subgenre during 2022-2023.

The discourse dimension also grew. In July 2022, Psychology Today published "How Fandom Turns Toxic" as part of its Science of Fandom blog series, analyzing how fan communities develop in-group and out-group dynamics that fuel the very stereotypes these memes capture. Screen Rant compiled Reddit discussions into listicles ranking the most toxic fandoms, with Star Wars, League of Legends, and Undertale consistently appearing near the top.

Platforms

TwitterTwitterReddit

Timeline

2023-01-15

First appears

2023-06-01

Goes viral

2024-01-01

Continues in use

2025-01-01

Fanbase Reputation is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Fanbase Reputation memes typically follow one of several formats:

1

GIF Caption: Find a reaction GIF showing intense, unhinged, or stereotypical behavior. Caption it with "[Franchise] fans when [exaggerated trigger]." Post on iFunny, Reddit, or Twitter.

2

Tier List: Use TierMaker or a similar tool to create a ranking of fanbases from "chill" to "toxic." Share the completed chart as an image for debate.

3

Montage / X Slander: Compile 10-30 short clips, each labeled with a different fanbase stereotype. Set to an upbeat cartoon theme (Powerpuff Girls and Scooby-Doo themes are common choices). Post as a video on TikTok, YouTube, or Twitter.

4

Alignment Chart: Create a grid sorting fanbases by two axes (e.g., "toxic vs. wholesome" and "small vs. massive"). Fill in fandom logos or names.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme format both reflects and shapes how people perceive fan communities. Certain fanbases developed such entrenched reputations through these memes that the stereotypes became self-fulfilling, with new fans entering communities already aware of the reputation attached to them.

Media outlets picked up on the discourse. Popdust catalogued "Toxic Fanbases We Love to Hate," covering how Rick and Morty's most vocal fans latched onto Rick's nihilism as a pseudo-philosophy and how BTS Army's protective instincts sometimes veered into racially charged bullying of dissenting voices. Fast Company published a piece arguing it was "time to forgive Rick and Morty for its toxic fandom," treating the fandom's reputation as a known cultural fact.

Psychology Today's analysis noted that the shift from fanwork-based status (writing fanfiction, creating fan art) to opinion-based status ("evangelists" who pontificate) within communities changed the dynamics of fandom itself, making reputation-based discourse more prominent. The academic coverage showed that fanbase reputation had moved from a niche internet joke to a recognized social pattern.

On a platform level, these memes drove significant engagement because they invited argument. Every tier list or slander video became a comment section battleground where fans defended their communities and attacked others, generating the exact kind of behavior the memes were mocking in the first place.

Fun Facts

The Powerpuff Girls theme and What's New Scooby-Doo? theme became unofficial soundtracks for fandom montage memes, chosen purely because their upbeat energy contrasts with the stereotypes being described.

Star Wars fans consistently rank among the most-discussed "toxic" fanbases on Reddit, partly due to harassment directed at actors like Jake Lloyd and Kelly Marie Tran.

TierMaker hosted a "FanBase TierList" template with 275 fandoms as of December 2023, showing just how granular the ranking impulse had gotten.

The concept of "cult followings" predates the internet entirely, with films like Reefer Madness (1936) gaining ironic fanbases that would fit right into modern fanbase reputation discourse.

Psychology Today's formal academic coverage in 2022 marked a point where fandom reputation discourse crossed from meme territory into behavioral science.

Derivatives & Variations

X Slander:

The montage format expanded beyond fandom to cover any group. "American States Slander," "College Major Slander," and "Historical Countries Explaining" all use the same rapid-fire GIF caption structure.

Fans Explaining Montages:

Specifically the anime-focused variant set to cartoon theme songs, popularized by @OnePunchDio in March 2021.

Fandom Alignment Charts:

Grid-based memes placing fanbases on axes like "toxic/wholesome" and "online/offline," popular on Reddit's r/memes and r/starterpacks.

"Average [X] Fan vs. Average [Y] Enjoyer":

The comparison format where one fanbase is portrayed as unhinged while another is shown as calm and composed, often using the buff "Average Enjoyer" face.

Toxic Fanbase Tier Lists:

TierMaker templates specifically designed for ranking fanbases by toxicity level, with dedicated templates for anime fandoms, gaming fandoms, and general media.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1
    Cult followingencyclopedia

Fanbase Reputation

2019Exploitable format / discourse memeactive

Also known as: Fandom Generalization · Fans When · Toxic Fanbase Memes · Fanbase Tier List

Fanbase Reputation is a 2019 meme format stereotyping fan communities, originating from Fandom Generalization GIF captions on iFunny and expanding into tier lists, "Fans Explaining" montages, and "X Slander" videos.

Fanbase Reputation refers to a broad category of internet memes that stereotype, rank, and mock the perceived behavior of fans belonging to specific franchises or communities. Rooted in long-running internet culture around "toxic fandoms," these memes took structured form around 2019 with Fandom Generalization GIF captions on iFunny, before expanding into tier lists, "Fans Explaining" montages, and "X Slander" videos across TikTok, Twitter, and Reddit. The format taps into a shared understanding that certain fanbases carry distinct reputations online, whether deserved or not.

TL;DR

Fanbase Reputation refers to a broad category of internet memes that stereotype, rank, and mock the perceived behavior of fans belonging to specific franchises or communities.

Overview

Fanbase Reputation memes work on a simple premise: every fandom has a stereotype, and those stereotypes are funny. The format typically assigns exaggerated traits, behaviors, or accusations to fans of specific media properties. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans get mocked for supposed homoeroticism. Rick and Morty fans are painted as pseudointellectual gatekeepers. K-Pop stans are characterized as hyper-aggressive online armies. The humor comes from the gap between what a piece of media actually is and how its most vocal fans behave, or are perceived to behave.

These memes take multiple forms: GIF captions pairing a reaction clip with a fanbase label, tier list rankings of "most toxic" fandoms on TierMaker, rapid-fire montage videos set to cartoon theme songs, and alignment charts sorting fanbases by behavior type. What links them is the shared vocabulary of fanbase reputations that the internet has collectively built over years of fandom discourse.

The practice of mocking specific fanbases predates the structured meme formats. As early as 2017, memes about Rick and Morty fans being pretentious and condescending spread widely after incidents like fans harassing the show's female writers and the Szechuan sauce McDonald's meltdowns. K-Pop stan behavior on Twitter attracted mockery around the same period, with BTS Army interactions becoming a frequent punchline.

The format crystallized on iFunny in early August 2019, when GIF captions began pairing short reaction clips with labels like "[Franchise] fans when..." followed by an exaggerated stereotype. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans were among the earliest and most frequent targets, often stereotyped based on the series' flamboyant character designs. By late September 2019, the format had expanded to mock Osu! players and other niche gaming communities.

Origin & Background

Platform
iFunny (GIF captions), Twitter (montage format)
Key People
Unknown, @OnePunchDio
Date
2019
Year
2019

The practice of mocking specific fanbases predates the structured meme formats. As early as 2017, memes about Rick and Morty fans being pretentious and condescending spread widely after incidents like fans harassing the show's female writers and the Szechuan sauce McDonald's meltdowns. K-Pop stan behavior on Twitter attracted mockery around the same period, with BTS Army interactions becoming a frequent punchline.

The format crystallized on iFunny in early August 2019, when GIF captions began pairing short reaction clips with labels like "[Franchise] fans when..." followed by an exaggerated stereotype. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans were among the earliest and most frequent targets, often stereotyped based on the series' flamboyant character designs. By late September 2019, the format had expanded to mock Osu! players and other niche gaming communities.

How It Spread

The Fandom Generalization format spread steadily through late 2019 and 2020 across iFunny, Reddit, and Twitter. Each fandom that developed a noticeable online reputation became fair game for the template.

On March 9, 2021, Twitter user @OnePunchDio posted a montage compiling multiple fandom generalization memes set to The Powerpuff Girls opening theme, creating the "Fans Explaining" variant. The montage format poked fun at fans of One Piece, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, Attack on Titan, and other anime titles in rapid succession. This montage style spread quickly because it let creators pack dozens of stereotypes into a single video.

By May 2022, the format experienced a second wave of virality under the name "X Slander," where "X" could be any community, profession, or group. The X Slander variant moved well beyond fandom territory to cover everything from national stereotypes to workplace humor.

TierMaker became a major hub for the ranking variant of fanbase reputation content. Templates like "Every Fandom Ever" (142 images, updated January 2023) and "The WORST Fanbases EVER" (64 images, updated April 2023) let users sort fanbases into tiers from harmless to toxic. On TikTok, "fandom tier list" videos ranking the worst fandoms to join became a popular subgenre during 2022-2023.

The discourse dimension also grew. In July 2022, Psychology Today published "How Fandom Turns Toxic" as part of its Science of Fandom blog series, analyzing how fan communities develop in-group and out-group dynamics that fuel the very stereotypes these memes capture. Screen Rant compiled Reddit discussions into listicles ranking the most toxic fandoms, with Star Wars, League of Legends, and Undertale consistently appearing near the top.

Platforms

TwitterTwitterReddit

Timeline

2023-01-15

First appears

2023-06-01

Goes viral

2024-01-01

Continues in use

2025-01-01

Fanbase Reputation is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Fanbase Reputation memes typically follow one of several formats:

1

GIF Caption: Find a reaction GIF showing intense, unhinged, or stereotypical behavior. Caption it with "[Franchise] fans when [exaggerated trigger]." Post on iFunny, Reddit, or Twitter.

2

Tier List: Use TierMaker or a similar tool to create a ranking of fanbases from "chill" to "toxic." Share the completed chart as an image for debate.

3

Montage / X Slander: Compile 10-30 short clips, each labeled with a different fanbase stereotype. Set to an upbeat cartoon theme (Powerpuff Girls and Scooby-Doo themes are common choices). Post as a video on TikTok, YouTube, or Twitter.

4

Alignment Chart: Create a grid sorting fanbases by two axes (e.g., "toxic vs. wholesome" and "small vs. massive"). Fill in fandom logos or names.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme format both reflects and shapes how people perceive fan communities. Certain fanbases developed such entrenched reputations through these memes that the stereotypes became self-fulfilling, with new fans entering communities already aware of the reputation attached to them.

Media outlets picked up on the discourse. Popdust catalogued "Toxic Fanbases We Love to Hate," covering how Rick and Morty's most vocal fans latched onto Rick's nihilism as a pseudo-philosophy and how BTS Army's protective instincts sometimes veered into racially charged bullying of dissenting voices. Fast Company published a piece arguing it was "time to forgive Rick and Morty for its toxic fandom," treating the fandom's reputation as a known cultural fact.

Psychology Today's analysis noted that the shift from fanwork-based status (writing fanfiction, creating fan art) to opinion-based status ("evangelists" who pontificate) within communities changed the dynamics of fandom itself, making reputation-based discourse more prominent. The academic coverage showed that fanbase reputation had moved from a niche internet joke to a recognized social pattern.

On a platform level, these memes drove significant engagement because they invited argument. Every tier list or slander video became a comment section battleground where fans defended their communities and attacked others, generating the exact kind of behavior the memes were mocking in the first place.

Fun Facts

The Powerpuff Girls theme and What's New Scooby-Doo? theme became unofficial soundtracks for fandom montage memes, chosen purely because their upbeat energy contrasts with the stereotypes being described.

Star Wars fans consistently rank among the most-discussed "toxic" fanbases on Reddit, partly due to harassment directed at actors like Jake Lloyd and Kelly Marie Tran.

TierMaker hosted a "FanBase TierList" template with 275 fandoms as of December 2023, showing just how granular the ranking impulse had gotten.

The concept of "cult followings" predates the internet entirely, with films like Reefer Madness (1936) gaining ironic fanbases that would fit right into modern fanbase reputation discourse.

Psychology Today's formal academic coverage in 2022 marked a point where fandom reputation discourse crossed from meme territory into behavioral science.

Derivatives & Variations

X Slander:

The montage format expanded beyond fandom to cover any group. "American States Slander," "College Major Slander," and "Historical Countries Explaining" all use the same rapid-fire GIF caption structure.

Fans Explaining Montages:

Specifically the anime-focused variant set to cartoon theme songs, popularized by @OnePunchDio in March 2021.

Fandom Alignment Charts:

Grid-based memes placing fanbases on axes like "toxic/wholesome" and "online/offline," popular on Reddit's r/memes and r/starterpacks.

"Average [X] Fan vs. Average [Y] Enjoyer":

The comparison format where one fanbase is portrayed as unhinged while another is shown as calm and composed, often using the buff "Average Enjoyer" face.

Toxic Fanbase Tier Lists:

TierMaker templates specifically designed for ranking fanbases by toxicity level, with dedicated templates for anime fandoms, gaming fandoms, and general media.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1
    Cult followingencyclopedia