It's Over 9000

2006Catchphrase / video remix / exploitablesemi-active

Also known as: Over 9000 · Over Nine Thousand · It's Over Nine Thousand

It's Over 9000 is a 2006 video-remix meme from YouTuber Kajetokun's viral Dragon Ball Z clip of Vegeta screaming about Goku's power level, which became internet slang for any huge quantity.

"It's Over 9000!" is a catchphrase meme from Dragon Ball Z that took off in late 2006 after a YouTuber named Kajetokun uploaded an edited clip of Vegeta screaming about Goku's power level. The line, which was actually "over 8000" in the original Japanese version, became one of the internet's go-to ways to describe absurdly large quantities of anything. It spread through 4chan, YTMND, and YouTube remixes before hitting mainstream awareness when Oprah Winfrey unknowingly read a troll post referencing "9000 penises" on her show in 2008.

TL;DR

The meme centers on a scene from Dragon Ball Z where the Saiyan warrior Vegeta checks his scouter device to read the power level of the protagonist Goku and screams "It's over nine thousand!" while crushing the scouter in his fist.

Overview

The meme centers on a scene from Dragon Ball Z where the Saiyan warrior Vegeta checks his scouter device to read the power level of the protagonist Goku and screams "It's over nine thousand!" while crushing the scouter in his fist2. In practice, people use the phrase as a stand-in for any ridiculously large number, swapping it into conversations about test scores, follower counts, prices, or anything else where hyperbole fits4.

The original Japanese line actually says "over 8000," not 9000. According to the Daizenshuu 7 guidebook, the English dubbing team at Ocean Productions changed the number because saying "9000" better matched Vegeta's animated mouth movements3. The English dub was already known for loose translations, so this numeric bump fit right in with the show's localization quirks3.

The scene comes from Episode 21 of Dragon Ball Z's Saiyan Saga, titled "The Return of Goku," which first aired in the United States on April 19, 19973. In it, Goku arrives on the battlefield after training in the Other World and powers up in rage upon learning that Vegeta and Nappa killed his allies Yamcha, Tenshinhan, Chaozu, and Piccolo3. When Nappa asks about Goku's power level, Vegeta reads his scouter and delivers the famous line.

The meme itself was born on October 17, 2006, when YouTube user Weston "Kajetokun" Durant uploaded a YouTube Poop edit of the scene, playing up how awkwardly Brian Drummond phrased the English line to match Vegeta's mouth animation3. Kajetokun made it as a throwaway joke for his friends. His friend Patrick then posted it on 4chan's /b/ board, and by the next morning the video had 20,000 views1. Shortly after, webcomic VG Cats linked it from their front page, and Kajetokun woke up to 200,000 views1.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (Kajetokun's video), 4chan's /b/ board (viral spread)
Key People
Weston "Kajetokun" Durant, Brian Drummond
Date
2006
Year
2006

The scene comes from Episode 21 of Dragon Ball Z's Saiyan Saga, titled "The Return of Goku," which first aired in the United States on April 19, 1997. In it, Goku arrives on the battlefield after training in the Other World and powers up in rage upon learning that Vegeta and Nappa killed his allies Yamcha, Tenshinhan, Chaozu, and Piccolo. When Nappa asks about Goku's power level, Vegeta reads his scouter and delivers the famous line.

The meme itself was born on October 17, 2006, when YouTube user Weston "Kajetokun" Durant uploaded a YouTube Poop edit of the scene, playing up how awkwardly Brian Drummond phrased the English line to match Vegeta's mouth animation. Kajetokun made it as a throwaway joke for his friends. His friend Patrick then posted it on 4chan's /b/ board, and by the next morning the video had 20,000 views. Shortly after, webcomic VG Cats linked it from their front page, and Kajetokun woke up to 200,000 views.

How It Spread

The meme moved fast across the platforms that mattered in 2006. On 4chan, users turned the phrase into image macros and demotivational posters, while YTMND hosted parody sites built around it. The first Urban Dictionary entry for "over 9000" was submitted on November 21, 2006, defining it as a reference to Vegeta's scouter reading.

By 2007, the phrase had become so embedded in 4chan's culture that moderators set up a word filter converting every instance of the number 7 into "over 9000". Dragon Ball fans on YouTube pumped out remix after remix of the original scene. The most-viewed version eventually crossed 15 million views.

The biggest mainstream moment came in September 2008, when an anonymous troll posted a message on Oprah Winfrey's official show message board claiming to represent "an organized network of over 9,000 pedophiles". Oprah read the bait on air, telling her audience about a group with "over 9,000 penises" that were "all raping children". The Anonymous community celebrated the prank, and clips of Oprah's reaction spread across YouTube before Harpo, Inc. filed copyright takedowns. Remix videos of the Oprah clip kept resurfacing despite the takedowns.

Google Trends data showed that searches for the meme phrase "Over 9000" eventually overtook searches for "HAL 9000," the computer from Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Platforms

YouTubeRedditTwitter

Timeline

2007-01-01

Meme still see steady use

2008-01-01

It's Over 9000 reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The phrase works as a drop-in response whenever someone asks about a number or quantity. Common approaches:

1

Quantity response: Someone asks "how many hours did you study?" You answer "It's over 9000!"

2

Image macro format: Take the four-panel exploitable comic of Vegeta reading his scouter and label the panels with a setup question and the "over 9000" punchline.

3

Video remix: Edit the original Kajetokun clip or the raw anime footage into new contexts, typically layering it over footage where someone is measuring, counting, or powering up.

4

Trolling bait: Drop the number 9000 into serious discussions to derail them, following in the tradition of the Oprah prank.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme crossed from internet subculture to mainstream pop culture through several notable moments. Oprah Winfrey's on-air reading of the troll post in 2008 brought the phrase to a television audience of millions, though she clearly didn't understand the reference.

In professional wrestling, Xavier Woods disclosed in 2013 that "It's Over 9000" is printed on his attire, and Ronda Rousey's WrestleMania 31 appearance featured a Vegeta-themed tank top with the phrase. Video game developers have included it as easter eggs: Doom Eternal (2020) and DuckTales Season 2 both worked in references.

The meme's influence on Dragon Ball's own English-language identity is significant. Funimation retained the "9000" number in all subsequent dubs and games rather than correcting it to the original "8000," effectively letting the meme rewrite the franchise's canon for English-speaking audiences. The meme's absence from Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot (2020) was treated as a notable omission by gaming press.

Google search data confirmed the meme's reach: the phrase "Over 9000" outpaced searches for "HAL 9000" from 2001: A Space Odyssey, a far older and more established cultural reference.

Full History

The Dragon Ball franchise has always treated power levels as a key narrative device. Characters use scouters, wearable devices that quantify a fighter's strength as a number. The concept created a natural setup for memes: any time someone mentions a quantity, you can slap "over 9000" on it. But the meme didn't happen organically from the show's 1997 airing. It took nine years and one bored video editor to make it click.

Kajetokun's October 2006 edit was a YouTube Poop, a genre of remix videos that cuts, loops, and distorts existing footage for comedic effect. In a 2008 interview with Japanator, Kajetokun explained that his comedy style wasn't planned out: "It all starts with one joke," he said. For the Over 9000 clip, the joke was simply how ridiculous Drummond's delivery sounded when isolated and exaggerated. He didn't consider himself a meme pioneer. "Over 9000 is the only one, I think, that became ingrained into Internet culture," he told Japanator. "I mean hell, if my college counselor knew about it before I said anything, that's got to mean something".

The phrase's utility as a universal number joke made it sticky. Urban Dictionary entries from late 2006 show users already applying it beyond Dragon Ball contexts, using it as a response to any question about quantity. On 4chan, it became a staple of the trolling toolkit. The 2007 word filter prank, where mods replaced all instances of the number 7 with "over 9000," was both a nod to the meme's dominance on the board and a way to annoy users who didn't get the reference.

The Oprah incident in September 2008 marked the meme's crossover from internet inside joke to mainstream news oddity. The troll post was a deliberate bait aimed at Winfrey's unfamiliarity with internet culture. When she read the claim about "9,000 penises" with complete sincerity, it validated what 4chan users had long believed: normies didn't understand the internet. The clip became its own meme, generating dozens of remixes and edits even after Harpo's legal team tried to scrub it from YouTube.

The phrase also embedded itself into the Dragon Ball franchise's English-language identity. When Funimation re-dubbed DBZ with Christopher Sabat voicing Vegeta, they kept the "over 9000" line rather than correcting it to 8000. Video games based on the franchise have referenced it repeatedly. Craig Elvy of Screen Rant noted that the absence of the "It's Over 9000" line from the 2020 game Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot was considered conspicuous, given how iconic the phrase had become.

Beyond Dragon Ball media, the phrase has shown up across pop culture. Gamezone referenced it in PlayStation 3 coverage of Final Fantasy XIII, DuckTales Season 2 Episode 17 included a nod to it, and the 2020 game Doom Eternal hid it as an easter egg. Professional wrestler Xavier Woods told interviewers in 2013 that he always has the phrase printed on his wrestling attire, and Ronda Rousey wore a Vegeta-referencing tank top at WrestleMania 31.

Kajetokun himself remained grounded about his accidental fame. When asked about meeting fans at anime conventions, he described a mix of genuinely cool people and others who just shouted memes at him. "I'm just a normal guy and I like it when people approach me as a normal person and talk to me," he said. He went on to make other videos, including edits of Mega Man cartoons and fighting game footage, but none reached the same level of cultural penetration.

Fun Facts

Goku's power level is actually "over 8000" in the original Japanese manga and anime. The English dub changed it to 9000 because the word better matched Vegeta's animated lip movements.

The highest power level ever read from a scouter in Dragon Ball Z is Captain Ginyu's reading of 180,000 for Goku. The highest mentioned number is Frieza's self-reported 530,000.

Kajetokun said his video editing process is unplanned: "The rest of the ideas for the movie really come about as I'm making the movie".

Kajetokun's college counselor knew about the meme before Kajetokun mentioned it, which surprised him enough to cite it as proof of the meme's reach.

The Dragon Ball publisher V-Jump listed the highest power level ever as 2,500,000,000 for Super Saiyan Gogeta.

Derivatives & Variations

It's Over 9000 Variations

Different takes on the It's Over 9000 format with modified content

(2006)

It's Over 9000 Mashups

Combinations of It's Over 9000 with other popular memes

(2007)

It's Over 9000 Remixes

Updated versions with current events and references

(2007)

Frequently Asked Questions

It's Over 9000

2006Catchphrase / video remix / exploitablesemi-active

Also known as: Over 9000 · Over Nine Thousand · It's Over Nine Thousand

It's Over 9000 is a 2006 video-remix meme from YouTuber Kajetokun's viral Dragon Ball Z clip of Vegeta screaming about Goku's power level, which became internet slang for any huge quantity.

"It's Over 9000!" is a catchphrase meme from Dragon Ball Z that took off in late 2006 after a YouTuber named Kajetokun uploaded an edited clip of Vegeta screaming about Goku's power level. The line, which was actually "over 8000" in the original Japanese version, became one of the internet's go-to ways to describe absurdly large quantities of anything. It spread through 4chan, YTMND, and YouTube remixes before hitting mainstream awareness when Oprah Winfrey unknowingly read a troll post referencing "9000 penises" on her show in 2008.

TL;DR

The meme centers on a scene from Dragon Ball Z where the Saiyan warrior Vegeta checks his scouter device to read the power level of the protagonist Goku and screams "It's over nine thousand!" while crushing the scouter in his fist.

Overview

The meme centers on a scene from Dragon Ball Z where the Saiyan warrior Vegeta checks his scouter device to read the power level of the protagonist Goku and screams "It's over nine thousand!" while crushing the scouter in his fist. In practice, people use the phrase as a stand-in for any ridiculously large number, swapping it into conversations about test scores, follower counts, prices, or anything else where hyperbole fits.

The original Japanese line actually says "over 8000," not 9000. According to the Daizenshuu 7 guidebook, the English dubbing team at Ocean Productions changed the number because saying "9000" better matched Vegeta's animated mouth movements. The English dub was already known for loose translations, so this numeric bump fit right in with the show's localization quirks.

The scene comes from Episode 21 of Dragon Ball Z's Saiyan Saga, titled "The Return of Goku," which first aired in the United States on April 19, 1997. In it, Goku arrives on the battlefield after training in the Other World and powers up in rage upon learning that Vegeta and Nappa killed his allies Yamcha, Tenshinhan, Chaozu, and Piccolo. When Nappa asks about Goku's power level, Vegeta reads his scouter and delivers the famous line.

The meme itself was born on October 17, 2006, when YouTube user Weston "Kajetokun" Durant uploaded a YouTube Poop edit of the scene, playing up how awkwardly Brian Drummond phrased the English line to match Vegeta's mouth animation. Kajetokun made it as a throwaway joke for his friends. His friend Patrick then posted it on 4chan's /b/ board, and by the next morning the video had 20,000 views. Shortly after, webcomic VG Cats linked it from their front page, and Kajetokun woke up to 200,000 views.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (Kajetokun's video), 4chan's /b/ board (viral spread)
Key People
Weston "Kajetokun" Durant, Brian Drummond
Date
2006
Year
2006

The scene comes from Episode 21 of Dragon Ball Z's Saiyan Saga, titled "The Return of Goku," which first aired in the United States on April 19, 1997. In it, Goku arrives on the battlefield after training in the Other World and powers up in rage upon learning that Vegeta and Nappa killed his allies Yamcha, Tenshinhan, Chaozu, and Piccolo. When Nappa asks about Goku's power level, Vegeta reads his scouter and delivers the famous line.

The meme itself was born on October 17, 2006, when YouTube user Weston "Kajetokun" Durant uploaded a YouTube Poop edit of the scene, playing up how awkwardly Brian Drummond phrased the English line to match Vegeta's mouth animation. Kajetokun made it as a throwaway joke for his friends. His friend Patrick then posted it on 4chan's /b/ board, and by the next morning the video had 20,000 views. Shortly after, webcomic VG Cats linked it from their front page, and Kajetokun woke up to 200,000 views.

How It Spread

The meme moved fast across the platforms that mattered in 2006. On 4chan, users turned the phrase into image macros and demotivational posters, while YTMND hosted parody sites built around it. The first Urban Dictionary entry for "over 9000" was submitted on November 21, 2006, defining it as a reference to Vegeta's scouter reading.

By 2007, the phrase had become so embedded in 4chan's culture that moderators set up a word filter converting every instance of the number 7 into "over 9000". Dragon Ball fans on YouTube pumped out remix after remix of the original scene. The most-viewed version eventually crossed 15 million views.

The biggest mainstream moment came in September 2008, when an anonymous troll posted a message on Oprah Winfrey's official show message board claiming to represent "an organized network of over 9,000 pedophiles". Oprah read the bait on air, telling her audience about a group with "over 9,000 penises" that were "all raping children". The Anonymous community celebrated the prank, and clips of Oprah's reaction spread across YouTube before Harpo, Inc. filed copyright takedowns. Remix videos of the Oprah clip kept resurfacing despite the takedowns.

Google Trends data showed that searches for the meme phrase "Over 9000" eventually overtook searches for "HAL 9000," the computer from Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Platforms

YouTubeRedditTwitter

Timeline

2007-01-01

Meme still see steady use

2008-01-01

It's Over 9000 reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The phrase works as a drop-in response whenever someone asks about a number or quantity. Common approaches:

1

Quantity response: Someone asks "how many hours did you study?" You answer "It's over 9000!"

2

Image macro format: Take the four-panel exploitable comic of Vegeta reading his scouter and label the panels with a setup question and the "over 9000" punchline.

3

Video remix: Edit the original Kajetokun clip or the raw anime footage into new contexts, typically layering it over footage where someone is measuring, counting, or powering up.

4

Trolling bait: Drop the number 9000 into serious discussions to derail them, following in the tradition of the Oprah prank.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

The meme crossed from internet subculture to mainstream pop culture through several notable moments. Oprah Winfrey's on-air reading of the troll post in 2008 brought the phrase to a television audience of millions, though she clearly didn't understand the reference.

In professional wrestling, Xavier Woods disclosed in 2013 that "It's Over 9000" is printed on his attire, and Ronda Rousey's WrestleMania 31 appearance featured a Vegeta-themed tank top with the phrase. Video game developers have included it as easter eggs: Doom Eternal (2020) and DuckTales Season 2 both worked in references.

The meme's influence on Dragon Ball's own English-language identity is significant. Funimation retained the "9000" number in all subsequent dubs and games rather than correcting it to the original "8000," effectively letting the meme rewrite the franchise's canon for English-speaking audiences. The meme's absence from Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot (2020) was treated as a notable omission by gaming press.

Google search data confirmed the meme's reach: the phrase "Over 9000" outpaced searches for "HAL 9000" from 2001: A Space Odyssey, a far older and more established cultural reference.

Full History

The Dragon Ball franchise has always treated power levels as a key narrative device. Characters use scouters, wearable devices that quantify a fighter's strength as a number. The concept created a natural setup for memes: any time someone mentions a quantity, you can slap "over 9000" on it. But the meme didn't happen organically from the show's 1997 airing. It took nine years and one bored video editor to make it click.

Kajetokun's October 2006 edit was a YouTube Poop, a genre of remix videos that cuts, loops, and distorts existing footage for comedic effect. In a 2008 interview with Japanator, Kajetokun explained that his comedy style wasn't planned out: "It all starts with one joke," he said. For the Over 9000 clip, the joke was simply how ridiculous Drummond's delivery sounded when isolated and exaggerated. He didn't consider himself a meme pioneer. "Over 9000 is the only one, I think, that became ingrained into Internet culture," he told Japanator. "I mean hell, if my college counselor knew about it before I said anything, that's got to mean something".

The phrase's utility as a universal number joke made it sticky. Urban Dictionary entries from late 2006 show users already applying it beyond Dragon Ball contexts, using it as a response to any question about quantity. On 4chan, it became a staple of the trolling toolkit. The 2007 word filter prank, where mods replaced all instances of the number 7 with "over 9000," was both a nod to the meme's dominance on the board and a way to annoy users who didn't get the reference.

The Oprah incident in September 2008 marked the meme's crossover from internet inside joke to mainstream news oddity. The troll post was a deliberate bait aimed at Winfrey's unfamiliarity with internet culture. When she read the claim about "9,000 penises" with complete sincerity, it validated what 4chan users had long believed: normies didn't understand the internet. The clip became its own meme, generating dozens of remixes and edits even after Harpo's legal team tried to scrub it from YouTube.

The phrase also embedded itself into the Dragon Ball franchise's English-language identity. When Funimation re-dubbed DBZ with Christopher Sabat voicing Vegeta, they kept the "over 9000" line rather than correcting it to 8000. Video games based on the franchise have referenced it repeatedly. Craig Elvy of Screen Rant noted that the absence of the "It's Over 9000" line from the 2020 game Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot was considered conspicuous, given how iconic the phrase had become.

Beyond Dragon Ball media, the phrase has shown up across pop culture. Gamezone referenced it in PlayStation 3 coverage of Final Fantasy XIII, DuckTales Season 2 Episode 17 included a nod to it, and the 2020 game Doom Eternal hid it as an easter egg. Professional wrestler Xavier Woods told interviewers in 2013 that he always has the phrase printed on his wrestling attire, and Ronda Rousey wore a Vegeta-referencing tank top at WrestleMania 31.

Kajetokun himself remained grounded about his accidental fame. When asked about meeting fans at anime conventions, he described a mix of genuinely cool people and others who just shouted memes at him. "I'm just a normal guy and I like it when people approach me as a normal person and talk to me," he said. He went on to make other videos, including edits of Mega Man cartoons and fighting game footage, but none reached the same level of cultural penetration.

Fun Facts

Goku's power level is actually "over 8000" in the original Japanese manga and anime. The English dub changed it to 9000 because the word better matched Vegeta's animated lip movements.

The highest power level ever read from a scouter in Dragon Ball Z is Captain Ginyu's reading of 180,000 for Goku. The highest mentioned number is Frieza's self-reported 530,000.

Kajetokun said his video editing process is unplanned: "The rest of the ideas for the movie really come about as I'm making the movie".

Kajetokun's college counselor knew about the meme before Kajetokun mentioned it, which surprised him enough to cite it as proof of the meme's reach.

The Dragon Ball publisher V-Jump listed the highest power level ever as 2,500,000,000 for Super Saiyan Gogeta.

Derivatives & Variations

It's Over 9000 Variations

Different takes on the It's Over 9000 format with modified content

(2006)

It's Over 9000 Mashups

Combinations of It's Over 9000 with other popular memes

(2007)

It's Over 9000 Remixes

Updated versions with current events and references

(2007)

Frequently Asked Questions