Nerf Miner

2016Catchphrase / spam comment memesemi-active

Also known as: Remove Miner

Nerf Miner is a 2016 Clash Royale meme that became a 2021 TikTok spam comment trend, with players ironically flooding unrelated videos with demands to 'nerf' the Miner card.

"Nerf Miner" is a catchphrase and spam comment meme originating from the Clash Royale gaming community, where players repeatedly demanded that developer Supercell weaken (or "nerf") the Miner troop card. What started as genuine balance complaints on Reddit in 2016 turned into an ironic in-joke, then exploded onto TikTok in late 2021 as users flooded completely unrelated videos with "nerf miner" comments. The meme peaked in early 2022 when it became one of TikTok's most recognizable comment spam trends, eventually prompting an official response from Clash Royale's Twitter account.

TL;DR

"Nerf Miner" is a catchphrase and spam comment meme originating from the Clash Royale gaming community, where players repeatedly demanded that developer Supercell weaken (or "nerf") the Miner troop card.

Overview

Nerf Miner started as a straightforward player request in the Clash Royale community. The Miner is a legendary troop card that can be deployed anywhere on the battlefield, making it uniquely powerful for surprise attacks on enemy towers1. Players who felt the card was overpowered flooded Reddit and other forums demanding Supercell nerf it. Over the years, the Miner actually received multiple nerfs, which split the community: some thought it still needed more nerfs, others thought it had been nerfed into uselessness3. This disagreement fueled the joke.

The phrase "nerf miner" evolved from a genuine game balance complaint into an ironic catchphrase. By late 2021, TikTok users started posting "nerf miner" as comments on videos that had absolutely nothing to do with Clash Royale, gaming, or the Miner card. The humor came from the absurd disconnect between serious or emotional video content and a random demand to nerf a mobile game character1.

On May 3, 2016, Supercell added the Miner troop card to Clash Royale3. The Miner's unique ability to be placed anywhere on the field made it immediately controversial among players. Within weeks, users on r/ClashRoyale began posting threads demanding nerfs. One notable post from July 7, 2016, titled "Please for the love of all things good, nerf Miner. Nerf, nerf, nerf, Miner," picked up over 70 upvotes and 180 comments, with many agreeing the card was overpowered3.

Supercell responded with a series of balance changes. On May 18, 2016, they actually buffed the Miner with more hitpoints, which only made complaints louder. On July 4, 2016, they accidentally decreased the Miner's deploy time, correcting it the following month while also rolling back the hitpoint buff. Further nerfs followed: a range decrease on July 1, 2019, a Crown Tower damage reduction on March 2, 2020, and an additional 5% Crown Tower damage cut in August 20203.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit r/ClashRoyale (original complaints), TikTok (viral spam)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2016 (origin), 2021-2022 (viral spread)
Year
2016

On May 3, 2016, Supercell added the Miner troop card to Clash Royale. The Miner's unique ability to be placed anywhere on the field made it immediately controversial among players. Within weeks, users on r/ClashRoyale began posting threads demanding nerfs. One notable post from July 7, 2016, titled "Please for the love of all things good, nerf Miner. Nerf, nerf, nerf, Miner," picked up over 70 upvotes and 180 comments, with many agreeing the card was overpowered.

Supercell responded with a series of balance changes. On May 18, 2016, they actually buffed the Miner with more hitpoints, which only made complaints louder. On July 4, 2016, they accidentally decreased the Miner's deploy time, correcting it the following month while also rolling back the hitpoint buff. Further nerfs followed: a range decrease on July 1, 2019, a Crown Tower damage reduction on March 2, 2020, and an additional 5% Crown Tower damage cut in August 2020.

How It Spread

On August 1, 2020, YouTuber B-rad posted a video complaining that the latest 5% Crown Tower damage nerf wasn't enough, pulling in over 469,000 views. This kept the conversation alive in the Clash Royale content creator space.

The meme made the jump to TikTok in late 2021. TikTokers began making ironic videos listing reasons to nerf the Miner, while others simply dropped "nerf miner" as comments on random, unrelated videos as a form of trolling. On December 5, 2021, TikToker @_matt_cr posted a meme about the need to nerf the Miner that racked up over 1.6 million views in two months.

January 2022 saw a massive spike in the trend. On January 16, YouTuber Kull Royale posted a Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny edit about the Miner's strength, earning 788,000 views in under a month. On January 22, TikToker @bobaslap posted a video showing "nerf miner" commented on a completely unrelated video where a girl discussed her personal trauma, and that clip hit 1.5 million views in three weeks. The dark comedy of dropping gaming complaints under heavy emotional content became the meme's signature move.

Not everyone was amused. On January 29, 2022, a Redditor posted the Miner's image to r/ClashRoyale with the title "Unpopular opinion: The 'Nerf Miner' meme isn't funny," earning over 4,100 upvotes and 22 awards. On February 4, TikToker @nerf_miner767 posted a video showing a "nerf miner" comment on a video celebrating a girl beating cancer, pulling 1.1 million views in five days.

The climax came on March 23, 2022, when the official Clash Royale Twitter account posted a video showing off the flood of "nerf miner" spam comments, then jokingly showed the Miner getting killed in one hit repeatedly, captioned "you can stop spamming us now". The post earned over 38,000 likes in a day.

After the official response, TikTokers pivoted to commenting "remove Miner" instead, ironically suggesting the troop should be deleted from the game entirely. This ran alongside the "Anyway, Here's The Recipe For Brownies" spam trend that was also dominating TikTok comment sections at the time, frustrating users who wanted comment sections to return to normal.

How to Use This Meme

The meme works in a few ways:

As a comment spam: Drop "nerf miner" or "remove miner" in the comments of any video, post, or livestream. The more unrelated the content, the funnier it's supposed to be. People typically target videos dealing with serious, emotional, or completely random subjects for maximum absurdity.

As an ironic Clash Royale take: Within the gaming community, post earnest-sounding arguments for why the Miner needs to be nerfed, often using exaggerated logic or listing the Miner's abilities as if they're game-breaking. The Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny format was commonly used for this.

As a response to anything: In conversation or online discourse, "nerf miner" can function as a non-sequitur punchline, similar to other gaming catchphrases used out of context.

Cultural Impact

The Nerf Miner meme is a clear example of how gaming community inside jokes can break containment and flood mainstream social media. What began as a legitimate game balance discussion on a niche subreddit became one of TikTok's most recognizable comment spam trends in early 2022.

Supercell's official acknowledgment on March 23, 2022, was notable because game developers rarely engage directly with meme culture around their titles. The tongue-in-cheek video showing the Miner being obliterated was widely praised as a solid corporate response to community trolling.

The meme also fed into broader conversations about TikTok comment culture and spam. Multiple TikTokers made videos calling out both the "nerf miner" and brownie recipe spam trends as annoying. Urban Dictionary entries for "Nerf Miner" reflect the meme's dual identity: both a genuine Clash Royale grievance and an absurdist comment trend dropped on videos about illness and death for shock humor.

Fun Facts

The Miner was nerfed at least four separate times between 2016 and 2020, yet players still demanded more nerfs.

Supercell accidentally buffed the Miner in July 2016 by decreasing its deploy time, which they had to walk back the following month.

The phrase "nerf miner" picked up 22 Reddit awards on a single post arguing it wasn't funny.

Urban Dictionary has multiple definitions for "Nerf Miner," including one that describes it as a euphemism for something entirely unrelated to gaming.

Derivatives & Variations

"Remove Miner":

After Supercell's official Twitter response in March 2022, the community escalated from "nerf" to "remove," demanding the card be deleted entirely. This became the dominant variant on TikTok going forward[1].

Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny edits:

YouTuber Kull Royale's January 2022 video applied the popular format to showcase the Miner's perceived power level, spawning similar edits[3].

Ironic TikTok compilations:

Multiple TikTokers compiled screenshots of "nerf miner" comments appearing under serious or emotional videos, turning the spam itself into content[3].

Frequently Asked Questions

Nerf Miner

2016Catchphrase / spam comment memesemi-active

Also known as: Remove Miner

Nerf Miner is a 2016 Clash Royale meme that became a 2021 TikTok spam comment trend, with players ironically flooding unrelated videos with demands to 'nerf' the Miner card.

"Nerf Miner" is a catchphrase and spam comment meme originating from the Clash Royale gaming community, where players repeatedly demanded that developer Supercell weaken (or "nerf") the Miner troop card. What started as genuine balance complaints on Reddit in 2016 turned into an ironic in-joke, then exploded onto TikTok in late 2021 as users flooded completely unrelated videos with "nerf miner" comments. The meme peaked in early 2022 when it became one of TikTok's most recognizable comment spam trends, eventually prompting an official response from Clash Royale's Twitter account.

TL;DR

"Nerf Miner" is a catchphrase and spam comment meme originating from the Clash Royale gaming community, where players repeatedly demanded that developer Supercell weaken (or "nerf") the Miner troop card.

Overview

Nerf Miner started as a straightforward player request in the Clash Royale community. The Miner is a legendary troop card that can be deployed anywhere on the battlefield, making it uniquely powerful for surprise attacks on enemy towers. Players who felt the card was overpowered flooded Reddit and other forums demanding Supercell nerf it. Over the years, the Miner actually received multiple nerfs, which split the community: some thought it still needed more nerfs, others thought it had been nerfed into uselessness. This disagreement fueled the joke.

The phrase "nerf miner" evolved from a genuine game balance complaint into an ironic catchphrase. By late 2021, TikTok users started posting "nerf miner" as comments on videos that had absolutely nothing to do with Clash Royale, gaming, or the Miner card. The humor came from the absurd disconnect between serious or emotional video content and a random demand to nerf a mobile game character.

On May 3, 2016, Supercell added the Miner troop card to Clash Royale. The Miner's unique ability to be placed anywhere on the field made it immediately controversial among players. Within weeks, users on r/ClashRoyale began posting threads demanding nerfs. One notable post from July 7, 2016, titled "Please for the love of all things good, nerf Miner. Nerf, nerf, nerf, Miner," picked up over 70 upvotes and 180 comments, with many agreeing the card was overpowered.

Supercell responded with a series of balance changes. On May 18, 2016, they actually buffed the Miner with more hitpoints, which only made complaints louder. On July 4, 2016, they accidentally decreased the Miner's deploy time, correcting it the following month while also rolling back the hitpoint buff. Further nerfs followed: a range decrease on July 1, 2019, a Crown Tower damage reduction on March 2, 2020, and an additional 5% Crown Tower damage cut in August 2020.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit r/ClashRoyale (original complaints), TikTok (viral spam)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2016 (origin), 2021-2022 (viral spread)
Year
2016

On May 3, 2016, Supercell added the Miner troop card to Clash Royale. The Miner's unique ability to be placed anywhere on the field made it immediately controversial among players. Within weeks, users on r/ClashRoyale began posting threads demanding nerfs. One notable post from July 7, 2016, titled "Please for the love of all things good, nerf Miner. Nerf, nerf, nerf, Miner," picked up over 70 upvotes and 180 comments, with many agreeing the card was overpowered.

Supercell responded with a series of balance changes. On May 18, 2016, they actually buffed the Miner with more hitpoints, which only made complaints louder. On July 4, 2016, they accidentally decreased the Miner's deploy time, correcting it the following month while also rolling back the hitpoint buff. Further nerfs followed: a range decrease on July 1, 2019, a Crown Tower damage reduction on March 2, 2020, and an additional 5% Crown Tower damage cut in August 2020.

How It Spread

On August 1, 2020, YouTuber B-rad posted a video complaining that the latest 5% Crown Tower damage nerf wasn't enough, pulling in over 469,000 views. This kept the conversation alive in the Clash Royale content creator space.

The meme made the jump to TikTok in late 2021. TikTokers began making ironic videos listing reasons to nerf the Miner, while others simply dropped "nerf miner" as comments on random, unrelated videos as a form of trolling. On December 5, 2021, TikToker @_matt_cr posted a meme about the need to nerf the Miner that racked up over 1.6 million views in two months.

January 2022 saw a massive spike in the trend. On January 16, YouTuber Kull Royale posted a Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny edit about the Miner's strength, earning 788,000 views in under a month. On January 22, TikToker @bobaslap posted a video showing "nerf miner" commented on a completely unrelated video where a girl discussed her personal trauma, and that clip hit 1.5 million views in three weeks. The dark comedy of dropping gaming complaints under heavy emotional content became the meme's signature move.

Not everyone was amused. On January 29, 2022, a Redditor posted the Miner's image to r/ClashRoyale with the title "Unpopular opinion: The 'Nerf Miner' meme isn't funny," earning over 4,100 upvotes and 22 awards. On February 4, TikToker @nerf_miner767 posted a video showing a "nerf miner" comment on a video celebrating a girl beating cancer, pulling 1.1 million views in five days.

The climax came on March 23, 2022, when the official Clash Royale Twitter account posted a video showing off the flood of "nerf miner" spam comments, then jokingly showed the Miner getting killed in one hit repeatedly, captioned "you can stop spamming us now". The post earned over 38,000 likes in a day.

After the official response, TikTokers pivoted to commenting "remove Miner" instead, ironically suggesting the troop should be deleted from the game entirely. This ran alongside the "Anyway, Here's The Recipe For Brownies" spam trend that was also dominating TikTok comment sections at the time, frustrating users who wanted comment sections to return to normal.

How to Use This Meme

The meme works in a few ways:

As a comment spam: Drop "nerf miner" or "remove miner" in the comments of any video, post, or livestream. The more unrelated the content, the funnier it's supposed to be. People typically target videos dealing with serious, emotional, or completely random subjects for maximum absurdity.

As an ironic Clash Royale take: Within the gaming community, post earnest-sounding arguments for why the Miner needs to be nerfed, often using exaggerated logic or listing the Miner's abilities as if they're game-breaking. The Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny format was commonly used for this.

As a response to anything: In conversation or online discourse, "nerf miner" can function as a non-sequitur punchline, similar to other gaming catchphrases used out of context.

Cultural Impact

The Nerf Miner meme is a clear example of how gaming community inside jokes can break containment and flood mainstream social media. What began as a legitimate game balance discussion on a niche subreddit became one of TikTok's most recognizable comment spam trends in early 2022.

Supercell's official acknowledgment on March 23, 2022, was notable because game developers rarely engage directly with meme culture around their titles. The tongue-in-cheek video showing the Miner being obliterated was widely praised as a solid corporate response to community trolling.

The meme also fed into broader conversations about TikTok comment culture and spam. Multiple TikTokers made videos calling out both the "nerf miner" and brownie recipe spam trends as annoying. Urban Dictionary entries for "Nerf Miner" reflect the meme's dual identity: both a genuine Clash Royale grievance and an absurdist comment trend dropped on videos about illness and death for shock humor.

Fun Facts

The Miner was nerfed at least four separate times between 2016 and 2020, yet players still demanded more nerfs.

Supercell accidentally buffed the Miner in July 2016 by decreasing its deploy time, which they had to walk back the following month.

The phrase "nerf miner" picked up 22 Reddit awards on a single post arguing it wasn't funny.

Urban Dictionary has multiple definitions for "Nerf Miner," including one that describes it as a euphemism for something entirely unrelated to gaming.

Derivatives & Variations

"Remove Miner":

After Supercell's official Twitter response in March 2022, the community escalated from "nerf" to "remove," demanding the card be deleted entirely. This became the dominant variant on TikTok going forward[1].

Mr. Incredible Becoming Uncanny edits:

YouTuber Kull Royale's January 2022 video applied the popular format to showcase the Miner's perceived power level, spawning similar edits[3].

Ironic TikTok compilations:

Multiple TikTokers compiled screenshots of "nerf miner" comments appearing under serious or emotional videos, turning the spam itself into content[3].

Frequently Asked Questions