Kylo Rens More More
Also known as: Kylo Ren MORE · More More Meme
Kylo Ren's "More, More!" is a reaction meme from the 2017 film *Star Wars: The Last Jedi*, where Adam Driver's character furiously screams "more, more!" while ordering his forces to fire on Luke Skywalker. The scene picked up traction as a meme format in early 2020, used both as a reaction image expressing insatiable desire and as source material for comedic video edits.
TL;DR
Kylo Ren's "More, More!" is a reaction meme from the 2017 film *Star Wars: The Last Jedi*, where Adam Driver's character furiously screams "more, more!" while ordering his forces to fire on Luke Skywalker.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Kylo Ren "More, More!" meme typically follows one of two formats:
As a reaction image: Take a screenshot of Kylo Ren mid-scream (usually with the caption "MORE!!!") and pair it with a setup describing something you want an excessive amount of. Common conventions include placing the setup text above and the Ren image below, or using a two-panel format where the first panel shows the desirable thing and the second panel shows Ren demanding more.
As a video edit: Clip the audio of Driver screaming "more, more!" and layer it over footage of something escalating. The joke often lands hardest when the audio loops multiple times, building absurd intensity. Creators sometimes pair it with other trending memes for crossover edits.
The format works best when the "more" demand is either hilariously petty (wanting more chicken nuggets) or absurdly intense (demanding more firepower against a trivial problem).
Fun Facts
The scene Ren is screaming at is actually a Force projection. Luke Skywalker isn't physically on Crait at all, making Ren's demand for more firepower completely pointless.
Adam Driver's intense delivery of two simple words gave the meme its staying power. The character was meant to be threatening, but the meme flipped him into a comedic figure expressing relatable greed.
The meme's February 2020 surge happened over two years after the film's release, a common pattern where a scene sits dormant until the right post triggers viral adoption.
*The Last Jedi* grossed $1.334 billion worldwide and was the highest-grossing film of 2017, giving the meme a massive pool of people who recognized the source material.
Derivatives & Variations
Big Chungus crossover:
Instagram user bearboob combined the format with ironic Big Chungus imagery in a multi-panel edit that earned over 27,100 likes in February 2020[2].
Ice Age Baby edit:
YouTube user HELLO THERE applied the audio clip to Ice Age Baby content, reaching 385,000 views in weeks[2].
Cookie Clicker version:
Instagram user largetrap made a Cookie Clicker-themed edit that pulled 283,700 views and 89,300 likes[2].
HighestGroundMemes loop edits:
The earliest derivative format, where the soundbite gets stacked and repeated for escalating comedic effect[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1
- 2Kylo Ren's "More, More!" - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 3Star Wars: The Last Jediencyclopedia
- 4Star Wars: The Last Jedi - Wikipediaencyclopedia