Ice War On Europa Warforever

2025Collaborative fiction / worldbuilding meme / hashtag trendactive

Also known as: War Forever ยท War-Torn Ice Moon ยท Europa Ice War

Ice War On Europa Warforever is a 2025 collaborative sci-fi meme trend started by @lolt64, featuring user-generated satirical fiction about an endless war on Jupiter's Europa with the rallying cry #WarForever.

Ice War on Europa, tagged #WarForever, is a collaborative sci-fi fiction project and meme trend that imagines an endless, pointless war fought on Jupiter's frozen moon Europa. Started by Twitter/X user @lolt64 in January 2025 as an RPG zine project, it exploded across social media in April 2025 when thousands of users began posting satirical micro-fiction, fan art, and memes as if they were soldiers trapped in the conflict. NASA's official Europa Clipper account even joined in, tweeting "Science Forever" as a nod to the catchphrase3.

TL;DR

Ice War on Europa, tagged #WarForever, is a collaborative sci-fi fiction project and meme trend that imagines an endless, pointless war fought on Jupiter's frozen moon Europa.

Overview

The Ice War on Europa is built around a simple, bleak premise: humanity is fighting a never-ending war on Europa, a moon of Jupiter covered in ice with a suspected liquid ocean beneath the surface1. Users post in-character as exhausted soldiers, bureaucrats, and conscripts stuck in a frozen hellscape with no clear objective and no hope of going home. The hashtag #WarForever ties the posts together, and the tone leans hard into dark comedy and anti-war absurdity rather than any kind of heroic military fantasy3.

Posts typically feature gritty imagery of exoskeletons and frozen visors, sarcastically upbeat propaganda, or mundane complaints about life on an ice moon2. The term "warmie" emerged as an in-universe insult for soldiers who still clung to the hope of feeling warmth again3. The overall aesthetic blends grimdark science fiction with the kind of deadpan hopelessness you'd find in a war veteran's group chat, if that war happened to be fought in crystalline tunnels beneath Jupiter's gaze.

On January 9, 2025, X user @lolt64 posted what would become the first known reference to the project, writing simply "the frozen wastes of europa." The post picked up over 400 likes in three months3. Over the following weeks, @lolt64 built out the tone and setting through subsequent tweets. A January 12 post gathered over 1,000 likes, and a January 17 post reached 4,000 likes in the same timeframe3.

The project was conceived as an RPG zine, not a spontaneous internet happening. @lolt64 designed the setting with a specific creative vision: war as something absurd and pointless, not glorious. He later compared the tone to BJ Blazkowicz's grim inner thoughts in Wolfenstein3.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter / X (RPG zine project), Twitter / Tumblr (viral spread)
Creator
@lolt64
Date
2025
Year
2025

On January 9, 2025, X user @lolt64 posted what would become the first known reference to the project, writing simply "the frozen wastes of europa." The post picked up over 400 likes in three months. Over the following weeks, @lolt64 built out the tone and setting through subsequent tweets. A January 12 post gathered over 1,000 likes, and a January 17 post reached 4,000 likes in the same timeframe.

The project was conceived as an RPG zine, not a spontaneous internet happening. @lolt64 designed the setting with a specific creative vision: war as something absurd and pointless, not glorious. He later compared the tone to BJ Blazkowicz's grim inner thoughts in Wolfenstein.

How It Spread

By early April 2025, @lolt64's posts were gaining consistent traction. On April 9, he posted an image captioned "MEANWHILE, ON THE WAR-TORN ICE MOON EUROPA, IN THE PRE-WAR GLOBAL CHAT THAT NEVER SHUT DOWNโ€ฆ" showing a fictional conversation between soldiers stationed on Europa. The post earned nearly 2,000 likes.

Then, on April 18, the trend detonated. Multiple Twitter users began posting their own contributions to the Ice War universe. X user @tarnationface wrote "the Ice War has been going on for so long now that you can see the trench network from space," pulling in over 15,000 likes in three days. That same day, @laserboat999 posted "Imagine bleeding out on the glacier and looking up and seeing this" alongside a photo of Jupiter, which collected over 25,000 likes in three days.

By April 19, the trend was everywhere. X user @SpaceBasedFox posted a Bart Simpson edit that hit over 26,000 likes in two days. The same day, NASA's official Europa Clipper X account posted "Science Forever," a direct play on the #WarForever catchphrase. A Tumblr compilation of Twitter screenshots became one of the more searchable entry points for users without Twitter accounts.

On April 20, @lolt64 addressed the trend directly. He clarified that the Ice War on Europa was not a Backrooms-style or Goncharov-style piece of spontaneous collective fiction. It was a concrete project he started, with a planned RPG release. He encouraged fan contributions but wanted people to understand the war was meant to be "absurd and pointless," not "badass". The project was later confirmed to use the FIST tabletop RPG system (a paranormal mercenary game inspired by Metal Gear Solid and The A-Team), with a Kickstarter campaign planned for September 2025 under the title "War-Torn Ice Moon".

How to Use This Meme

Participating in the Ice War on Europa typically involves posting in-character as someone caught up in the forever war. Common approaches include:

1

Soldier posts โ€” Write a short vignette or complaint as a weary combatant on the ice. Reference the cold, the pointlessness, the trenches, or the distant view of Jupiter.

2

Propaganda parodies โ€” Create fake recruitment posters or morale-boosting messages that are obviously dystopian.

3

Global chat logs โ€” Write fictional chat room conversations between soldiers, officials, or civilians trapped in the conflict.

4

Fan art โ€” Draw soldiers in exoskeletons, frozen landscapes, or scenes from the crystalline tunnels beneath Europa's surface.

5

Reaction edits โ€” Take existing meme templates (Simpsons, SpongeBob, etc.) and recontextualize them as Europa War content.

Cultural Impact

The Ice War on Europa bridged several communities. Sci-fi and gaming circles picked it up early because of its RPG roots, but the trend's real reach came when general meme accounts started posting. NASA's participation on April 19 marked a rare case of a government space agency riffing on a fictional war meme in real time.

The trend also sparked renewed interest in Europa itself as a subject for space art. A sci-fi art blog rounded up decades of Europa paintings by artists like Steve R. Dodd, Donato Giancola, David A. Hardy, and Ron Miller, framing them half-seriously as "propaganda designed to appease the warmie conscripts". Richard Bizley's submarine artwork and Bob Eggleton's "Marooned on Europa" painting gained fresh attention in the context of the meme.

The project's connection to the FIST RPG system brought attention to the indie tabletop scene. FIST, created by B. Everett Dutton and first published in 2020, already had a companion game called Planet Fist that dealt with a similar premise of an endless war on an alien world. The War-Torn Ice Moon zine fit naturally into that lineage.

Fun Facts

Europa likely has a massive liquid water ocean beneath its ice, which is why scientists (and sci-fi writers) find it so compelling. Richard Bizley's artwork depicts submarines and alien eels in that subterranean sea.

The creator specifically distinguished the project from Backrooms and SCP Foundation, noting it's not collective fiction but fan fiction of an existing narrative he wrote.

Planet Fist, a related standalone game in the FIST RPG ecosystem, already explored a similar premise of an endless war on an alien world fought by cloned soldiers, making the Europa zine a natural fit.

Ron Miller's 1990 painting of "seismic prospecting" on Europa, from the Soviet/American Space Art Book, is one of the oldest artistic depictions of human activity on the moon.

The meme's gaming community crossover was strong because the #WarForever scenario mirrors the "endless, grueling grind with no clear objective" feeling familiar to anyone who's played a looter-shooter or MMO.

Derivatives & Variations

"Warmie" as slang

โ€” The in-universe insult for anyone hoping to feel warmth again spread beyond the original project and became a standalone joke format[3].

Simpsons edits

โ€” @SpaceBasedFox's Bart Simpson Europa meme was one of the highest-performing derivatives, hitting 26,000+ likes[3].

NASA's "Science Forever"

โ€” The official Europa Clipper account's tweet became a meme in its own right, screenshotted and reshared as an example of institutional shitposting[3].

Space art recontextualizations

โ€” Decades-old Europa paintings by artists like David A. Hardy and Ron Miller were reframed as in-universe war propaganda[1].

War-Torn Ice Moon RPG zine

โ€” The official tabletop product using the FIST system, with a Kickstarter campaign announced for September 2025[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

Ice War On Europa Warforever

2025Collaborative fiction / worldbuilding meme / hashtag trendactive

Also known as: War Forever ยท War-Torn Ice Moon ยท Europa Ice War

Ice War On Europa Warforever is a 2025 collaborative sci-fi meme trend started by @lolt64, featuring user-generated satirical fiction about an endless war on Jupiter's Europa with the rallying cry #WarForever.

Ice War on Europa, tagged #WarForever, is a collaborative sci-fi fiction project and meme trend that imagines an endless, pointless war fought on Jupiter's frozen moon Europa. Started by Twitter/X user @lolt64 in January 2025 as an RPG zine project, it exploded across social media in April 2025 when thousands of users began posting satirical micro-fiction, fan art, and memes as if they were soldiers trapped in the conflict. NASA's official Europa Clipper account even joined in, tweeting "Science Forever" as a nod to the catchphrase.

TL;DR

Ice War on Europa, tagged #WarForever, is a collaborative sci-fi fiction project and meme trend that imagines an endless, pointless war fought on Jupiter's frozen moon Europa.

Overview

The Ice War on Europa is built around a simple, bleak premise: humanity is fighting a never-ending war on Europa, a moon of Jupiter covered in ice with a suspected liquid ocean beneath the surface. Users post in-character as exhausted soldiers, bureaucrats, and conscripts stuck in a frozen hellscape with no clear objective and no hope of going home. The hashtag #WarForever ties the posts together, and the tone leans hard into dark comedy and anti-war absurdity rather than any kind of heroic military fantasy.

Posts typically feature gritty imagery of exoskeletons and frozen visors, sarcastically upbeat propaganda, or mundane complaints about life on an ice moon. The term "warmie" emerged as an in-universe insult for soldiers who still clung to the hope of feeling warmth again. The overall aesthetic blends grimdark science fiction with the kind of deadpan hopelessness you'd find in a war veteran's group chat, if that war happened to be fought in crystalline tunnels beneath Jupiter's gaze.

On January 9, 2025, X user @lolt64 posted what would become the first known reference to the project, writing simply "the frozen wastes of europa." The post picked up over 400 likes in three months. Over the following weeks, @lolt64 built out the tone and setting through subsequent tweets. A January 12 post gathered over 1,000 likes, and a January 17 post reached 4,000 likes in the same timeframe.

The project was conceived as an RPG zine, not a spontaneous internet happening. @lolt64 designed the setting with a specific creative vision: war as something absurd and pointless, not glorious. He later compared the tone to BJ Blazkowicz's grim inner thoughts in Wolfenstein.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter / X (RPG zine project), Twitter / Tumblr (viral spread)
Creator
@lolt64
Date
2025
Year
2025

On January 9, 2025, X user @lolt64 posted what would become the first known reference to the project, writing simply "the frozen wastes of europa." The post picked up over 400 likes in three months. Over the following weeks, @lolt64 built out the tone and setting through subsequent tweets. A January 12 post gathered over 1,000 likes, and a January 17 post reached 4,000 likes in the same timeframe.

The project was conceived as an RPG zine, not a spontaneous internet happening. @lolt64 designed the setting with a specific creative vision: war as something absurd and pointless, not glorious. He later compared the tone to BJ Blazkowicz's grim inner thoughts in Wolfenstein.

How It Spread

By early April 2025, @lolt64's posts were gaining consistent traction. On April 9, he posted an image captioned "MEANWHILE, ON THE WAR-TORN ICE MOON EUROPA, IN THE PRE-WAR GLOBAL CHAT THAT NEVER SHUT DOWNโ€ฆ" showing a fictional conversation between soldiers stationed on Europa. The post earned nearly 2,000 likes.

Then, on April 18, the trend detonated. Multiple Twitter users began posting their own contributions to the Ice War universe. X user @tarnationface wrote "the Ice War has been going on for so long now that you can see the trench network from space," pulling in over 15,000 likes in three days. That same day, @laserboat999 posted "Imagine bleeding out on the glacier and looking up and seeing this" alongside a photo of Jupiter, which collected over 25,000 likes in three days.

By April 19, the trend was everywhere. X user @SpaceBasedFox posted a Bart Simpson edit that hit over 26,000 likes in two days. The same day, NASA's official Europa Clipper X account posted "Science Forever," a direct play on the #WarForever catchphrase. A Tumblr compilation of Twitter screenshots became one of the more searchable entry points for users without Twitter accounts.

On April 20, @lolt64 addressed the trend directly. He clarified that the Ice War on Europa was not a Backrooms-style or Goncharov-style piece of spontaneous collective fiction. It was a concrete project he started, with a planned RPG release. He encouraged fan contributions but wanted people to understand the war was meant to be "absurd and pointless," not "badass". The project was later confirmed to use the FIST tabletop RPG system (a paranormal mercenary game inspired by Metal Gear Solid and The A-Team), with a Kickstarter campaign planned for September 2025 under the title "War-Torn Ice Moon".

How to Use This Meme

Participating in the Ice War on Europa typically involves posting in-character as someone caught up in the forever war. Common approaches include:

1

Soldier posts โ€” Write a short vignette or complaint as a weary combatant on the ice. Reference the cold, the pointlessness, the trenches, or the distant view of Jupiter.

2

Propaganda parodies โ€” Create fake recruitment posters or morale-boosting messages that are obviously dystopian.

3

Global chat logs โ€” Write fictional chat room conversations between soldiers, officials, or civilians trapped in the conflict.

4

Fan art โ€” Draw soldiers in exoskeletons, frozen landscapes, or scenes from the crystalline tunnels beneath Europa's surface.

5

Reaction edits โ€” Take existing meme templates (Simpsons, SpongeBob, etc.) and recontextualize them as Europa War content.

Cultural Impact

The Ice War on Europa bridged several communities. Sci-fi and gaming circles picked it up early because of its RPG roots, but the trend's real reach came when general meme accounts started posting. NASA's participation on April 19 marked a rare case of a government space agency riffing on a fictional war meme in real time.

The trend also sparked renewed interest in Europa itself as a subject for space art. A sci-fi art blog rounded up decades of Europa paintings by artists like Steve R. Dodd, Donato Giancola, David A. Hardy, and Ron Miller, framing them half-seriously as "propaganda designed to appease the warmie conscripts". Richard Bizley's submarine artwork and Bob Eggleton's "Marooned on Europa" painting gained fresh attention in the context of the meme.

The project's connection to the FIST RPG system brought attention to the indie tabletop scene. FIST, created by B. Everett Dutton and first published in 2020, already had a companion game called Planet Fist that dealt with a similar premise of an endless war on an alien world. The War-Torn Ice Moon zine fit naturally into that lineage.

Fun Facts

Europa likely has a massive liquid water ocean beneath its ice, which is why scientists (and sci-fi writers) find it so compelling. Richard Bizley's artwork depicts submarines and alien eels in that subterranean sea.

The creator specifically distinguished the project from Backrooms and SCP Foundation, noting it's not collective fiction but fan fiction of an existing narrative he wrote.

Planet Fist, a related standalone game in the FIST RPG ecosystem, already explored a similar premise of an endless war on an alien world fought by cloned soldiers, making the Europa zine a natural fit.

Ron Miller's 1990 painting of "seismic prospecting" on Europa, from the Soviet/American Space Art Book, is one of the oldest artistic depictions of human activity on the moon.

The meme's gaming community crossover was strong because the #WarForever scenario mirrors the "endless, grueling grind with no clear objective" feeling familiar to anyone who's played a looter-shooter or MMO.

Derivatives & Variations

"Warmie" as slang

โ€” The in-universe insult for anyone hoping to feel warmth again spread beyond the original project and became a standalone joke format[3].

Simpsons edits

โ€” @SpaceBasedFox's Bart Simpson Europa meme was one of the highest-performing derivatives, hitting 26,000+ likes[3].

NASA's "Science Forever"

โ€” The official Europa Clipper account's tweet became a meme in its own right, screenshotted and reshared as an example of institutional shitposting[3].

Space art recontextualizations

โ€” Decades-old Europa paintings by artists like David A. Hardy and Ron Miller were reframed as in-universe war propaganda[1].

War-Torn Ice Moon RPG zine

โ€” The official tabletop product using the FIST system, with a Kickstarter campaign announced for September 2025[4].

Frequently Asked Questions