FUUUUU

2008Rage comic / exploitable templateclassic

Also known as: Rage Guy · FFFFFUUUUUUUU · FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU · F7U12

FUUUUU is a 2008 four-panel MS Paint comic format where the crudely drawn Rage Guy character screams in fury after hitting mundane frustrations, establishing the foundation of the Rage Comics genre.

FUUUUU is a four-panel MS Paint comic format where a crudely drawn character called Rage Guy screams "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in the final panel after hitting a mundane but infuriating snag. The format appeared on 4chan's /b/ board in 2008 and became the foundation for the entire Rage Comics genre. BuzzFeed's Tanner Ringerud explained its lasting appeal: "Rageguy is so popular because of the classic maxim, 'it's funny because it's true'"1.

TL;DR

FUUUUU is a four-panel MS Paint comic format where a crudely drawn character called Rage Guy screams "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in the final panel after hitting a mundane but infuriating snag.

Overview

The format is a four-panel comic drawn in MS Paint. Three panels set up a relatable everyday annoyance, and the fourth shows a distorted, wide-mouthed screaming face with "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" written in red text alongside it. The word itself is an elongated form of the expletive, used to convey extreme frustration, with the length reflecting how upset the person is2. Because the art required no skill at all, anyone could make one. That accessibility drove rapid adoption across imageboards and forums in the late 2000s.

The first FUUUUU comic appeared on 4chan's /b/ imageboard in 20083. An anonymous user drew a four-panel MS Paint comic about the universal agony of toilet splashback: three panels illustrated the setup, then the now-iconic screaming face appeared with "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in red text beside it. The scenario was so mundane and widely relatable that copycat comics started appearing almost immediately.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan /b/
Creator
Unknown
Date
2008
Year
2008

The first FUUUUU comic appeared on 4chan's /b/ imageboard in 2008. An anonymous user drew a four-panel MS Paint comic about the universal agony of toilet splashback: three panels illustrated the setup, then the now-iconic screaming face appeared with "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in red text beside it. The scenario was so mundane and widely relatable that copycat comics started appearing almost immediately.

How It Spread

Other 4chan users adopted the format fast, sticking to the three-setup-panels-plus-screaming-face structure. The comics migrated to Reddit, where a subreddit named FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU (abbreviated F7U12 for its seven F's and twelve U's) grew into one of the platform's busiest meme communities.

Rage Guy's popularity sparked the creation of new characters for different emotional reactions, building out the broader Rage Comics genre with faces like Trollface, Forever Alone, and Me Gusta. In December 2010, Mashable nominated Rage Guy as a finalist for "Best Internet Meme" alongside Sad Keanu, Double Rainbow, and Bed Intruder. KYM editor Brad Kim credited the format's appeal to comics that "tend to illustrate real-life anecdotes that others can easily empathize with".

That same year, Hot Topic began selling Rage Guy t-shirts, triggering backlash from Reddit and 4chan users. In protest, users created deliberately offensive spinoff characters dubbed "Race Guy" to make the image toxic enough that retailers would stop profiting from it.

How to Use This Meme

The classic FUUUUU comic follows a simple recipe:

1

Open MS Paint or any basic drawing tool

2

Draw three panels showing a common frustration building up

3

Place the Rage Guy screaming face in the fourth panel

4

Write "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in red text next to the face

Cultural Impact

The 2010 Mashable Awards nomination placed FUUUUU among that year's biggest viral hits, including the Bed Intruder Song and Double Rainbow. While Bed Intruder won, the nomination confirmed how deeply the four-panel rage format had shaped online humor.

The Hot Topic t-shirt incident became an early flashpoint in the tension between meme communities and commercial interests. Rather than let a retailer profit from their creation, users chose to sabotage the meme itself, a tactic that would reappear across meme culture for years after.

FUUUUU's biggest impact was structural. The single screaming face launched an entire ecosystem of Rage Comics that defined internet humor from roughly 2009 to 2013, when the format gradually gave way to newer meme styles.

Fun Facts

The 2010 Mashable Awards placed FUUUUU alongside Sad Keanu and Double Rainbow as a finalist for Best Internet Meme.

"FUUUUU" can express shock, surprise, or disappointment beyond pure anger, making it more versatile than a straight profanity.

The format's broad reach rested on empathy. As Brad Kim noted, Rage Guy comics work because they capture "real-life anecdotes that others can easily empathize with".

Derivatives & Variations

Rage Comics

— The full genre of emotion-based multi-panel comics, including characters like Trollface, Forever Alone, and Me Gusta, all built on the template Rage Guy created[1].

Frequently Asked Questions

FUUUUU

2008Rage comic / exploitable templateclassic

Also known as: Rage Guy · FFFFFUUUUUUUU · FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU · F7U12

FUUUUU is a 2008 four-panel MS Paint comic format where the crudely drawn Rage Guy character screams in fury after hitting mundane frustrations, establishing the foundation of the Rage Comics genre.

FUUUUU is a four-panel MS Paint comic format where a crudely drawn character called Rage Guy screams "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in the final panel after hitting a mundane but infuriating snag. The format appeared on 4chan's /b/ board in 2008 and became the foundation for the entire Rage Comics genre. BuzzFeed's Tanner Ringerud explained its lasting appeal: "Rageguy is so popular because of the classic maxim, 'it's funny because it's true'".

TL;DR

FUUUUU is a four-panel MS Paint comic format where a crudely drawn character called Rage Guy screams "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in the final panel after hitting a mundane but infuriating snag.

Overview

The format is a four-panel comic drawn in MS Paint. Three panels set up a relatable everyday annoyance, and the fourth shows a distorted, wide-mouthed screaming face with "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" written in red text alongside it. The word itself is an elongated form of the expletive, used to convey extreme frustration, with the length reflecting how upset the person is. Because the art required no skill at all, anyone could make one. That accessibility drove rapid adoption across imageboards and forums in the late 2000s.

The first FUUUUU comic appeared on 4chan's /b/ imageboard in 2008. An anonymous user drew a four-panel MS Paint comic about the universal agony of toilet splashback: three panels illustrated the setup, then the now-iconic screaming face appeared with "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in red text beside it. The scenario was so mundane and widely relatable that copycat comics started appearing almost immediately.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan /b/
Creator
Unknown
Date
2008
Year
2008

The first FUUUUU comic appeared on 4chan's /b/ imageboard in 2008. An anonymous user drew a four-panel MS Paint comic about the universal agony of toilet splashback: three panels illustrated the setup, then the now-iconic screaming face appeared with "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in red text beside it. The scenario was so mundane and widely relatable that copycat comics started appearing almost immediately.

How It Spread

Other 4chan users adopted the format fast, sticking to the three-setup-panels-plus-screaming-face structure. The comics migrated to Reddit, where a subreddit named FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUU (abbreviated F7U12 for its seven F's and twelve U's) grew into one of the platform's busiest meme communities.

Rage Guy's popularity sparked the creation of new characters for different emotional reactions, building out the broader Rage Comics genre with faces like Trollface, Forever Alone, and Me Gusta. In December 2010, Mashable nominated Rage Guy as a finalist for "Best Internet Meme" alongside Sad Keanu, Double Rainbow, and Bed Intruder. KYM editor Brad Kim credited the format's appeal to comics that "tend to illustrate real-life anecdotes that others can easily empathize with".

That same year, Hot Topic began selling Rage Guy t-shirts, triggering backlash from Reddit and 4chan users. In protest, users created deliberately offensive spinoff characters dubbed "Race Guy" to make the image toxic enough that retailers would stop profiting from it.

How to Use This Meme

The classic FUUUUU comic follows a simple recipe:

1

Open MS Paint or any basic drawing tool

2

Draw three panels showing a common frustration building up

3

Place the Rage Guy screaming face in the fourth panel

4

Write "FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUU-" in red text next to the face

Cultural Impact

The 2010 Mashable Awards nomination placed FUUUUU among that year's biggest viral hits, including the Bed Intruder Song and Double Rainbow. While Bed Intruder won, the nomination confirmed how deeply the four-panel rage format had shaped online humor.

The Hot Topic t-shirt incident became an early flashpoint in the tension between meme communities and commercial interests. Rather than let a retailer profit from their creation, users chose to sabotage the meme itself, a tactic that would reappear across meme culture for years after.

FUUUUU's biggest impact was structural. The single screaming face launched an entire ecosystem of Rage Comics that defined internet humor from roughly 2009 to 2013, when the format gradually gave way to newer meme styles.

Fun Facts

The 2010 Mashable Awards placed FUUUUU alongside Sad Keanu and Double Rainbow as a finalist for Best Internet Meme.

"FUUUUU" can express shock, surprise, or disappointment beyond pure anger, making it more versatile than a straight profanity.

The format's broad reach rested on empathy. As Brad Kim noted, Rage Guy comics work because they capture "real-life anecdotes that others can easily empathize with".

Derivatives & Variations

Rage Comics

— The full genre of emotion-based multi-panel comics, including characters like Trollface, Forever Alone, and Me Gusta, all built on the template Rage Guy created[1].

Frequently Asked Questions