Little French Fish

2025Animated music video / character memeactive

Also known as: Le Poisson Steve · Steve the Fish · Steve le Poisson

Little French Fish is a 2025 animated TikTok meme featuring Le Poisson Steve, an orange fish with human limbs confidently strutting to a catchy French chiptune created by Victoria Ronat and Thomas Ename.

Le Poisson Steve, also known as the Little French Fish, is an animated orange fish with human arms and legs set to a catchy French chiptune song that took over TikTok in April 2025. Created by Parisian animator Victoria Ronat (Vigz) and composer Thomas Ename (Tomo) as a playful tribute to France's Poisson d'Avril tradition, the video racked up over 12 million views in its first two weeks1. The meme's absurd charm, a confidently strutting fish and an impossibly catchy tune, crossed language barriers and spawned thousands of fan animations, remixes, and handmade plushies.

TL;DR

Le Poisson Steve, also known as the Little French Fish, is an animated orange fish with human arms and legs set to a catchy French chiptune song that took over TikTok in April 2025.

Overview

Le Poisson Steve is a short animated music video featuring a simple orange fish character with stick-like human arms and legs. Steve walks with a jaunty, confident strut while a chiptune song in French plays, describing him in absurdly literal terms: he is orange, he is a fish, he has arms and legs, and he smells bad. The animation style is deliberately minimalist, with Steve rendered as a flat orange fish body, dot eyes, and a neutral expression that fans have described as oddly endearing1.

The song, composed by Tomo, runs about one minute and twelve seconds. Despite being entirely in French, the melody is so infectious that non-French-speaking viewers found themselves singing along within hours of encountering it. Fans quickly labeled the tune a "vocal stim," the kind of sound you can't stop repeating once it gets in your head1.

Steve was born out of creative burnout. Victoria Ronat, a 26-year-old animation production assistant in Paris, had been struggling with an art block after finishing her animation studies. For April Fools' Day 2025, she proposed a creative challenge to her longtime friend Thomas Ename, a 25-year-old composer and sound engineer, to celebrate the French tradition of Poisson d'Avril, where people stick paper fish on each other's backs as a prank.

Ronat and Ename had been friends for ten years, connected originally through Twitter. When Ronat suggested the fish-themed project, Tomo surprised her by composing a full chiptune song instead of just drawing a fish. Vigz animated the character to match, and on April 2, 2025, she posted the result to TikTok under her handle @vigzvigz. It was the first video she had ever posted on the platform1.

Origin & Background

Platform
TikTok (original post), Instagram (cross-post)
Key People
Victoria Ronat, Thomas Ename
Date
2025
Year
2025

Steve was born out of creative burnout. Victoria Ronat, a 26-year-old animation production assistant in Paris, had been struggling with an art block after finishing her animation studies. For April Fools' Day 2025, she proposed a creative challenge to her longtime friend Thomas Ename, a 25-year-old composer and sound engineer, to celebrate the French tradition of Poisson d'Avril, where people stick paper fish on each other's backs as a prank.

Ronat and Ename had been friends for ten years, connected originally through Twitter. When Ronat suggested the fish-themed project, Tomo surprised her by composing a full chiptune song instead of just drawing a fish. Vigz animated the character to match, and on April 2, 2025, she posted the result to TikTok under her handle @vigzvigz. It was the first video she had ever posted on the platform.

How It Spread

The video's spread was immediate and explosive. Within its first week, Vigz's TikTok had pulled in over 8.5 million views and 1.1 million likes on TikTok, with an additional 495,900 likes on the Instagram cross-post. By mid-April, the view count had climbed past 12 million.

TikTok users began flooding the platform with their own Steve content within days. Fan animations appeared in every style: pixel art, 3D renders, frame-by-frame hand-drawn tributes, and even stop-motion versions. The creativity spread beyond animation into physical crafts. People crocheted Steve plushies, carved him from wood, and built him out of clay. Vigz's own mother began hand-crocheting official Steve plushies, which were listed for sale on Etsy.

Musicians jumped in too. The original chiptune got remixed into jazz, bossa nova, techno, and even Erik Satie-inspired piano arrangements. Tomo released the song on Spotify, where it spawned a minor ecosystem of cover versions and remixes by other artists.

On April 14, 2025, The New York Times published a feature by Madison Malone Kircher titled "An Orange Fish With Arms and Legs, and a Song You Can't Escape," which tracked how Steve charmed millions despite, or because of, his total absurdity. The Daily Dot covered the meme the same week, noting that Steve's appeal worked as a "vocal stim" for many viewers. MetaFilter's community also picked up the video, with users calling it a perfect example of the internet's ability to rally around the simplest possible concept.

The meme's timing placed it alongside the broader wave of "brainrot" content that had been dominated by Italian Brainrot memes like Tralalero Tralala and Bombardiro Crocodilo. French users embraced Steve as their own entry in the genre, tagging posts with #frenchbrainrot alongside #lepoissonsteve.

How to Use This Meme

The Le Poisson Steve format typically works in a few ways:

1

Fan animation: Draw or animate your own version of Steve walking to the original song. Style choices range from hyper-detailed to deliberately crude. The key elements are the orange body, stick limbs, and the confident walk cycle.

2

Remix/cover: Take Tomo's original chiptune and rearrange it in a different genre. Popular choices include lo-fi, orchestral, metal, and jazz.

3

Physical craft: Create Steve as a plushie, sculpture, keychain, or other physical object. TikTok users often film the making process as a satisfying craft video.

4

Context swap: Place Steve's walk animation over unrelated footage, or insert Steve into other memes and media as a non-sequitur. The humor comes from his completely unbothered energy.

Cultural Impact

Le Poisson Steve broke through the language barrier in a way that surprised even its creators. Despite lyrics entirely in French, the meme attracted a massive English-speaking audience who couldn't understand the words but couldn't stop humming the tune. This cross-cultural spread highlighted a growing pattern on TikTok where catchy audio and simple visuals override the need for linguistic comprehension.

The New York Times feature brought Steve to mainstream attention beyond TikTok's algorithmic bubble. Merchandise appeared almost immediately on Etsy and Redbubble, with fan-made and semi-official products including t-shirts, stickers, posters, and crochet plushies. The official plushies, handmade by Vigz's mother, became particularly sought after as collectors' items.

Steve's emergence also positioned France within the international brainrot meme landscape. While Italian brainrot characters like Tralalero Tralala had dominated the genre, Steve gave French internet culture a comparable mascot. The meme demonstrated that the brainrot format, catchy nonsense audio paired with a memorable character, wasn't limited to any single language or culture.

Fun Facts

Le Poisson Steve was literally Vigz's first-ever TikTok post. She went from zero followers to millions of views overnight.

The name "Steve" has no particular significance. It's just a funny, mundane human name for a fish, which adds to the absurdity.

"Poisson d'Avril" (April Fish) is France's version of April Fools' Day. The tradition involves sticking paper fish on people's backs without them noticing, making a fish character the perfect tribute.

Vigz and Tomo had been online friends for a decade before creating Steve, having first connected on Twitter when they were teenagers.

The song's most quoted line, "il est oraaaaaaaange" (he is oraaaaaange), became a standalone catchphrase on TikTok, with users stretching the word to comedic lengths.

Derivatives & Variations

Steve si ikan:

An Indonesian-language derivative character inspired by Steve, created by @ZahirtheblueblockyOfficial and debuting May 1, 2025.

Techno Steve:

A hard techno remix of the original song by producers BASSTON and STRØBE, released on Spotify.

Slowed + reverb Steve:

A lo-fi edit of the song following the popular "slowed and reverb" TikTok audio trend.

English Version Steve:

Multiple TikTok creators produced English-language translations of the song, with @kati.goes and @thedailymaplesyrup gaining traction for their versions.

3D Steve:

Several 3D modelers created printable Steve models on platforms like Cults3D, turning the 2D character into a physical figurine.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1

Little French Fish

2025Animated music video / character memeactive

Also known as: Le Poisson Steve · Steve the Fish · Steve le Poisson

Little French Fish is a 2025 animated TikTok meme featuring Le Poisson Steve, an orange fish with human limbs confidently strutting to a catchy French chiptune created by Victoria Ronat and Thomas Ename.

Le Poisson Steve, also known as the Little French Fish, is an animated orange fish with human arms and legs set to a catchy French chiptune song that took over TikTok in April 2025. Created by Parisian animator Victoria Ronat (Vigz) and composer Thomas Ename (Tomo) as a playful tribute to France's Poisson d'Avril tradition, the video racked up over 12 million views in its first two weeks. The meme's absurd charm, a confidently strutting fish and an impossibly catchy tune, crossed language barriers and spawned thousands of fan animations, remixes, and handmade plushies.

TL;DR

Le Poisson Steve, also known as the Little French Fish, is an animated orange fish with human arms and legs set to a catchy French chiptune song that took over TikTok in April 2025.

Overview

Le Poisson Steve is a short animated music video featuring a simple orange fish character with stick-like human arms and legs. Steve walks with a jaunty, confident strut while a chiptune song in French plays, describing him in absurdly literal terms: he is orange, he is a fish, he has arms and legs, and he smells bad. The animation style is deliberately minimalist, with Steve rendered as a flat orange fish body, dot eyes, and a neutral expression that fans have described as oddly endearing.

The song, composed by Tomo, runs about one minute and twelve seconds. Despite being entirely in French, the melody is so infectious that non-French-speaking viewers found themselves singing along within hours of encountering it. Fans quickly labeled the tune a "vocal stim," the kind of sound you can't stop repeating once it gets in your head.

Steve was born out of creative burnout. Victoria Ronat, a 26-year-old animation production assistant in Paris, had been struggling with an art block after finishing her animation studies. For April Fools' Day 2025, she proposed a creative challenge to her longtime friend Thomas Ename, a 25-year-old composer and sound engineer, to celebrate the French tradition of Poisson d'Avril, where people stick paper fish on each other's backs as a prank.

Ronat and Ename had been friends for ten years, connected originally through Twitter. When Ronat suggested the fish-themed project, Tomo surprised her by composing a full chiptune song instead of just drawing a fish. Vigz animated the character to match, and on April 2, 2025, she posted the result to TikTok under her handle @vigzvigz. It was the first video she had ever posted on the platform.

Origin & Background

Platform
TikTok (original post), Instagram (cross-post)
Key People
Victoria Ronat, Thomas Ename
Date
2025
Year
2025

Steve was born out of creative burnout. Victoria Ronat, a 26-year-old animation production assistant in Paris, had been struggling with an art block after finishing her animation studies. For April Fools' Day 2025, she proposed a creative challenge to her longtime friend Thomas Ename, a 25-year-old composer and sound engineer, to celebrate the French tradition of Poisson d'Avril, where people stick paper fish on each other's backs as a prank.

Ronat and Ename had been friends for ten years, connected originally through Twitter. When Ronat suggested the fish-themed project, Tomo surprised her by composing a full chiptune song instead of just drawing a fish. Vigz animated the character to match, and on April 2, 2025, she posted the result to TikTok under her handle @vigzvigz. It was the first video she had ever posted on the platform.

How It Spread

The video's spread was immediate and explosive. Within its first week, Vigz's TikTok had pulled in over 8.5 million views and 1.1 million likes on TikTok, with an additional 495,900 likes on the Instagram cross-post. By mid-April, the view count had climbed past 12 million.

TikTok users began flooding the platform with their own Steve content within days. Fan animations appeared in every style: pixel art, 3D renders, frame-by-frame hand-drawn tributes, and even stop-motion versions. The creativity spread beyond animation into physical crafts. People crocheted Steve plushies, carved him from wood, and built him out of clay. Vigz's own mother began hand-crocheting official Steve plushies, which were listed for sale on Etsy.

Musicians jumped in too. The original chiptune got remixed into jazz, bossa nova, techno, and even Erik Satie-inspired piano arrangements. Tomo released the song on Spotify, where it spawned a minor ecosystem of cover versions and remixes by other artists.

On April 14, 2025, The New York Times published a feature by Madison Malone Kircher titled "An Orange Fish With Arms and Legs, and a Song You Can't Escape," which tracked how Steve charmed millions despite, or because of, his total absurdity. The Daily Dot covered the meme the same week, noting that Steve's appeal worked as a "vocal stim" for many viewers. MetaFilter's community also picked up the video, with users calling it a perfect example of the internet's ability to rally around the simplest possible concept.

The meme's timing placed it alongside the broader wave of "brainrot" content that had been dominated by Italian Brainrot memes like Tralalero Tralala and Bombardiro Crocodilo. French users embraced Steve as their own entry in the genre, tagging posts with #frenchbrainrot alongside #lepoissonsteve.

How to Use This Meme

The Le Poisson Steve format typically works in a few ways:

1

Fan animation: Draw or animate your own version of Steve walking to the original song. Style choices range from hyper-detailed to deliberately crude. The key elements are the orange body, stick limbs, and the confident walk cycle.

2

Remix/cover: Take Tomo's original chiptune and rearrange it in a different genre. Popular choices include lo-fi, orchestral, metal, and jazz.

3

Physical craft: Create Steve as a plushie, sculpture, keychain, or other physical object. TikTok users often film the making process as a satisfying craft video.

4

Context swap: Place Steve's walk animation over unrelated footage, or insert Steve into other memes and media as a non-sequitur. The humor comes from his completely unbothered energy.

Cultural Impact

Le Poisson Steve broke through the language barrier in a way that surprised even its creators. Despite lyrics entirely in French, the meme attracted a massive English-speaking audience who couldn't understand the words but couldn't stop humming the tune. This cross-cultural spread highlighted a growing pattern on TikTok where catchy audio and simple visuals override the need for linguistic comprehension.

The New York Times feature brought Steve to mainstream attention beyond TikTok's algorithmic bubble. Merchandise appeared almost immediately on Etsy and Redbubble, with fan-made and semi-official products including t-shirts, stickers, posters, and crochet plushies. The official plushies, handmade by Vigz's mother, became particularly sought after as collectors' items.

Steve's emergence also positioned France within the international brainrot meme landscape. While Italian brainrot characters like Tralalero Tralala had dominated the genre, Steve gave French internet culture a comparable mascot. The meme demonstrated that the brainrot format, catchy nonsense audio paired with a memorable character, wasn't limited to any single language or culture.

Fun Facts

Le Poisson Steve was literally Vigz's first-ever TikTok post. She went from zero followers to millions of views overnight.

The name "Steve" has no particular significance. It's just a funny, mundane human name for a fish, which adds to the absurdity.

"Poisson d'Avril" (April Fish) is France's version of April Fools' Day. The tradition involves sticking paper fish on people's backs without them noticing, making a fish character the perfect tribute.

Vigz and Tomo had been online friends for a decade before creating Steve, having first connected on Twitter when they were teenagers.

The song's most quoted line, "il est oraaaaaaaange" (he is oraaaaaange), became a standalone catchphrase on TikTok, with users stretching the word to comedic lengths.

Derivatives & Variations

Steve si ikan:

An Indonesian-language derivative character inspired by Steve, created by @ZahirtheblueblockyOfficial and debuting May 1, 2025.

Techno Steve:

A hard techno remix of the original song by producers BASSTON and STRØBE, released on Spotify.

Slowed + reverb Steve:

A lo-fi edit of the song following the popular "slowed and reverb" TikTok audio trend.

English Version Steve:

Multiple TikTok creators produced English-language translations of the song, with @kati.goes and @thedailymaplesyrup gaining traction for their versions.

3D Steve:

Several 3D modelers created printable Steve models on platforms like Cults3D, turning the 2D character into a physical figurine.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1