Internet Tough Guy

2002Image macro / internet slang / archetypeclassic

Also known as: ITG · E-Thug

Internet Tough Guy is a 2002 image-macro meme of an oversized-glasses-wearing kid at a computer, mocking online commenters who threaten physical violence from keyboard safety.

Internet Tough Guy (ITG) is a pejorative label for online commenters who threaten physical violence from behind the safety of a keyboard. The term first appeared on a bodybuilding forum in May 2002 and quickly spread across message boards, eventually spawning one of the internet's most recognizable image macros: a chubby kid with oversized glasses posing next to a vintage computer1. The concept became a foundational piece of internet culture, giving communities a shorthand way to mock empty bravado online.

TL;DR

Internet Tough Guy (ITG) is a pejorative label for online commenters who threaten physical violence from behind the safety of a keyboard.

Overview

Internet Tough Guy refers to a specific type of online behavior: someone who boasts about physical strength, combat skills, or willingness to fight while hiding behind screen anonymity. The typical ITG claims martial arts mastery, military service, or an impressive physique, and threatens to beat up anyone who disagrees with them6. In practice, the consensus across forums was that most ITGs were angry, socially awkward young men using the internet as a stage for the tough persona they couldn't pull off in person6.

The term comes paired with a famous image macro showing a heavyset kid with thick glasses and a half-smoked cigarette sitting next to an old computer against wood-paneled walls1. This image became the visual shorthand for the concept, posted as a reply whenever someone got too aggressive in a thread. The identity of the kid in the photo has never been confirmed1.

The phrase "Internet Tough Guy" first showed up on the Elite Fitness bodybuilding forum on May 13, 20025. A member named SSAlexSS posted a question about the purpose of powerlifting exercises, questioning why anyone would pursue raw strength over aesthetics2. Another member, t3c, fired back that SSAlexSS was ignorant about training and called him an "Internet tough guy"5.

The label stuck because it named something everyone on early 2000s forums had already experienced. By November 21, 2002, the phrase appeared on CoasterBuzz, a roller coaster enthusiast forum, where a user complained about aggressive behavior and noted that most posters wouldn't be intimidating in person3. That CoasterBuzz thread also introduced the abbreviation "ITG"5.

The image macro's origin is murkier. The photo of the glasses-wearing kid at the computer circulated on message boards as a stock response to overblown threats, but nobody has successfully identified the subject1. The Daily Dot investigated the mystery in depth after a Reddit user posted a supposed "before and after" that turned out to be someone else entirely1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Elite Fitness forums (term), unknown (image macro)
Key People
t3c, Unknown
Date
2002
Year
2002

The phrase "Internet Tough Guy" first showed up on the Elite Fitness bodybuilding forum on May 13, 2002. A member named SSAlexSS posted a question about the purpose of powerlifting exercises, questioning why anyone would pursue raw strength over aesthetics. Another member, t3c, fired back that SSAlexSS was ignorant about training and called him an "Internet tough guy".

The label stuck because it named something everyone on early 2000s forums had already experienced. By November 21, 2002, the phrase appeared on CoasterBuzz, a roller coaster enthusiast forum, where a user complained about aggressive behavior and noted that most posters wouldn't be intimidating in person. That CoasterBuzz thread also introduced the abbreviation "ITG".

The image macro's origin is murkier. The photo of the glasses-wearing kid at the computer circulated on message boards as a stock response to overblown threats, but nobody has successfully identified the subject. The Daily Dot investigated the mystery in depth after a Reddit user posted a supposed "before and after" that turned out to be someone else entirely.

How It Spread

On January 23, 2004, Urban Dictionary got its first entry for the abbreviation "ITG," with the full phrase "Internet Tough Guy" added five months later. Around the same time, on January 27, 2004, Something Awful founder Rich "Lowtax" Kyanka published an article titled "I Wanna Be an Internet Tough Guy," breaking down the archetype's common traits and behavioral patterns.

The term hit 4chan on May 3, 2007, with the first archived thread on /b/ (random) referencing it during discussion of a raid on the virtual avatar site Subeta. It spread to /v/ (video games) and /x/ (paranormal) boards that same year. Since 2007, more than 4,700 4chan threads have been archived containing the phrase.

Cracked published a piece on August 5, 2009 tracing the evolution of internet trolling, noting that a stereotypical ITG would offer up a physical address and challenge other posters to real-life fights. The concept by then was well-established enough to warrant its own TV Tropes page and a dedicated Tumblr tag.

The image macro got its own mini-mystery in the early 2010s. A Reddit user named Shayde098 posted what they claimed was a "Before and After" photo of the original Internet Tough Guy. The site briefly believed the real ITG had surfaced, looking fit and healthy. The Daily Dot traced the "after" photo to Tim Madison, a Fark user who had posted a YouTube video of himself playing music in a wood-paneled room in 2009. A fellow Fark member had noticed the similar wood paneling and jokingly connected the two. Madison, using the handle mirazh1976, explicitly clarified he was not the original ITG: "I never said I was the original Internet tough guy meme. I am the guy being compared to him".

How to Use This Meme

The Internet Tough Guy concept works in two main ways:

As a label: When someone in a comment section or forum starts making physical threats, claiming combat expertise, or bragging about fights they've won, other users typically call them an "Internet Tough Guy" or just "ITG" to deflate the posturing.

As an image macro: The classic photo of the kid at the computer gets posted as a reply to anyone acting tough online. Sometimes the image includes caption text mocking the specific threats being made. The format is simple: screenshot or quote the overblown threat, then reply with the ITG image.

Common ITG claims that trigger the label include bragging about martial arts training, claiming military backgrounds (often with suspiciously vague details), threatening to find someone's address, and offering to meet for a physical confrontation. The humor comes from the gap between the aggressive words and the presumed reality of the person typing them.

Cultural Impact

Internet Tough Guy became one of the first widely recognized internet archetypes, predating most formal meme taxonomy. The concept directly influenced how online communities developed self-policing norms. Calling someone an ITG was an early form of community moderation through mockery.

The archetype spawned related concepts across the internet. The Navy Seal Copypasta, which emerged on 4chan around 2010, is essentially a concentrated parody of every ITG trope at once: an anonymous poster claims 300 confirmed kills, training in "gorilla warfare," and the ability to kill in over 700 ways with bare hands. The copypasta became one of the most recognizable text memes on the internet, frequently used on Twitch streams through text-to-speech donations.

All The Tropes, a wiki documenting narrative conventions, maintains an entry noting that while most ITG threats are empty bluster, the archetype also carries a cautionary edge: occasionally, genuinely dangerous people do make threats online.

Fun Facts

The original ITG image macro subject has never been identified despite multiple investigations. The Daily Dot called him "one of the most iconic faces of the Internet" whose "true identity remains a mystery".

Tim Madison, the Fark user mistakenly identified as the grown-up ITG, offered to photograph the wood paneling in his family's converted garage to prove the backgrounds weren't the same.

The very first use of the term came from a bodybuilding forum argument about whether powerlifting was pointless compared to bodybuilding.

Over 4,700 4chan threads have been archived containing the phrase "Internet Tough Guy" since 2007.

The CoasterBuzz post that helped popularize the term was written by someone who was tired of aggressive behavior on a forum about amusement park rides.

Derivatives & Variations

Navy Seal Copypasta:

A long satirical message parodying ITG behavior, featuring absurd claims about military service and combat expertise. Originated on 4chan around 2010 and became one of the internet's most copied text blocks[7].

John Copypasta:

A spinoff story that riffed on the Navy Seal Copypasta's format[7].

E-Thug:

An alternative term for the same behavior, used more commonly on hip-hop and gaming forums[5].

Frequently Asked Questions

Internet Tough Guy

2002Image macro / internet slang / archetypeclassic

Also known as: ITG · E-Thug

Internet Tough Guy is a 2002 image-macro meme of an oversized-glasses-wearing kid at a computer, mocking online commenters who threaten physical violence from keyboard safety.

Internet Tough Guy (ITG) is a pejorative label for online commenters who threaten physical violence from behind the safety of a keyboard. The term first appeared on a bodybuilding forum in May 2002 and quickly spread across message boards, eventually spawning one of the internet's most recognizable image macros: a chubby kid with oversized glasses posing next to a vintage computer. The concept became a foundational piece of internet culture, giving communities a shorthand way to mock empty bravado online.

TL;DR

Internet Tough Guy (ITG) is a pejorative label for online commenters who threaten physical violence from behind the safety of a keyboard.

Overview

Internet Tough Guy refers to a specific type of online behavior: someone who boasts about physical strength, combat skills, or willingness to fight while hiding behind screen anonymity. The typical ITG claims martial arts mastery, military service, or an impressive physique, and threatens to beat up anyone who disagrees with them. In practice, the consensus across forums was that most ITGs were angry, socially awkward young men using the internet as a stage for the tough persona they couldn't pull off in person.

The term comes paired with a famous image macro showing a heavyset kid with thick glasses and a half-smoked cigarette sitting next to an old computer against wood-paneled walls. This image became the visual shorthand for the concept, posted as a reply whenever someone got too aggressive in a thread. The identity of the kid in the photo has never been confirmed.

The phrase "Internet Tough Guy" first showed up on the Elite Fitness bodybuilding forum on May 13, 2002. A member named SSAlexSS posted a question about the purpose of powerlifting exercises, questioning why anyone would pursue raw strength over aesthetics. Another member, t3c, fired back that SSAlexSS was ignorant about training and called him an "Internet tough guy".

The label stuck because it named something everyone on early 2000s forums had already experienced. By November 21, 2002, the phrase appeared on CoasterBuzz, a roller coaster enthusiast forum, where a user complained about aggressive behavior and noted that most posters wouldn't be intimidating in person. That CoasterBuzz thread also introduced the abbreviation "ITG".

The image macro's origin is murkier. The photo of the glasses-wearing kid at the computer circulated on message boards as a stock response to overblown threats, but nobody has successfully identified the subject. The Daily Dot investigated the mystery in depth after a Reddit user posted a supposed "before and after" that turned out to be someone else entirely.

Origin & Background

Platform
Elite Fitness forums (term), unknown (image macro)
Key People
t3c, Unknown
Date
2002
Year
2002

The phrase "Internet Tough Guy" first showed up on the Elite Fitness bodybuilding forum on May 13, 2002. A member named SSAlexSS posted a question about the purpose of powerlifting exercises, questioning why anyone would pursue raw strength over aesthetics. Another member, t3c, fired back that SSAlexSS was ignorant about training and called him an "Internet tough guy".

The label stuck because it named something everyone on early 2000s forums had already experienced. By November 21, 2002, the phrase appeared on CoasterBuzz, a roller coaster enthusiast forum, where a user complained about aggressive behavior and noted that most posters wouldn't be intimidating in person. That CoasterBuzz thread also introduced the abbreviation "ITG".

The image macro's origin is murkier. The photo of the glasses-wearing kid at the computer circulated on message boards as a stock response to overblown threats, but nobody has successfully identified the subject. The Daily Dot investigated the mystery in depth after a Reddit user posted a supposed "before and after" that turned out to be someone else entirely.

How It Spread

On January 23, 2004, Urban Dictionary got its first entry for the abbreviation "ITG," with the full phrase "Internet Tough Guy" added five months later. Around the same time, on January 27, 2004, Something Awful founder Rich "Lowtax" Kyanka published an article titled "I Wanna Be an Internet Tough Guy," breaking down the archetype's common traits and behavioral patterns.

The term hit 4chan on May 3, 2007, with the first archived thread on /b/ (random) referencing it during discussion of a raid on the virtual avatar site Subeta. It spread to /v/ (video games) and /x/ (paranormal) boards that same year. Since 2007, more than 4,700 4chan threads have been archived containing the phrase.

Cracked published a piece on August 5, 2009 tracing the evolution of internet trolling, noting that a stereotypical ITG would offer up a physical address and challenge other posters to real-life fights. The concept by then was well-established enough to warrant its own TV Tropes page and a dedicated Tumblr tag.

The image macro got its own mini-mystery in the early 2010s. A Reddit user named Shayde098 posted what they claimed was a "Before and After" photo of the original Internet Tough Guy. The site briefly believed the real ITG had surfaced, looking fit and healthy. The Daily Dot traced the "after" photo to Tim Madison, a Fark user who had posted a YouTube video of himself playing music in a wood-paneled room in 2009. A fellow Fark member had noticed the similar wood paneling and jokingly connected the two. Madison, using the handle mirazh1976, explicitly clarified he was not the original ITG: "I never said I was the original Internet tough guy meme. I am the guy being compared to him".

How to Use This Meme

The Internet Tough Guy concept works in two main ways:

As a label: When someone in a comment section or forum starts making physical threats, claiming combat expertise, or bragging about fights they've won, other users typically call them an "Internet Tough Guy" or just "ITG" to deflate the posturing.

As an image macro: The classic photo of the kid at the computer gets posted as a reply to anyone acting tough online. Sometimes the image includes caption text mocking the specific threats being made. The format is simple: screenshot or quote the overblown threat, then reply with the ITG image.

Common ITG claims that trigger the label include bragging about martial arts training, claiming military backgrounds (often with suspiciously vague details), threatening to find someone's address, and offering to meet for a physical confrontation. The humor comes from the gap between the aggressive words and the presumed reality of the person typing them.

Cultural Impact

Internet Tough Guy became one of the first widely recognized internet archetypes, predating most formal meme taxonomy. The concept directly influenced how online communities developed self-policing norms. Calling someone an ITG was an early form of community moderation through mockery.

The archetype spawned related concepts across the internet. The Navy Seal Copypasta, which emerged on 4chan around 2010, is essentially a concentrated parody of every ITG trope at once: an anonymous poster claims 300 confirmed kills, training in "gorilla warfare," and the ability to kill in over 700 ways with bare hands. The copypasta became one of the most recognizable text memes on the internet, frequently used on Twitch streams through text-to-speech donations.

All The Tropes, a wiki documenting narrative conventions, maintains an entry noting that while most ITG threats are empty bluster, the archetype also carries a cautionary edge: occasionally, genuinely dangerous people do make threats online.

Fun Facts

The original ITG image macro subject has never been identified despite multiple investigations. The Daily Dot called him "one of the most iconic faces of the Internet" whose "true identity remains a mystery".

Tim Madison, the Fark user mistakenly identified as the grown-up ITG, offered to photograph the wood paneling in his family's converted garage to prove the backgrounds weren't the same.

The very first use of the term came from a bodybuilding forum argument about whether powerlifting was pointless compared to bodybuilding.

Over 4,700 4chan threads have been archived containing the phrase "Internet Tough Guy" since 2007.

The CoasterBuzz post that helped popularize the term was written by someone who was tired of aggressive behavior on a forum about amusement park rides.

Derivatives & Variations

Navy Seal Copypasta:

A long satirical message parodying ITG behavior, featuring absurd claims about military service and combat expertise. Originated on 4chan around 2010 and became one of the internet's most copied text blocks[7].

John Copypasta:

A spinoff story that riffed on the Navy Seal Copypasta's format[7].

E-Thug:

An alternative term for the same behavior, used more commonly on hip-hop and gaming forums[5].

Frequently Asked Questions