Pikachu

2018Reaction image / image macro / fan art subjectsemi-active

Also known as: Surprised Pikachu · Shocked Pikachu

Surprised Pikachu is a 2018 reaction-image meme featuring the Pokémon's wide-eyed, open-mouthed face, used to mock feigned shock at predictable outcomes.

Pikachu is the electric-type Pokémon mascot that became one of the internet's most recognizable meme subjects, most famously through the "Surprised Pikachu" reaction image that took over social media in late 2018. Originally designed for the 1996 Game Boy games Pokémon Red and Green, Pikachu's wide-eyed, open-mouthed expression from a 1997 anime episode became shorthand for feigning shock at predictable outcomes. The character's near-universal name recognition made it perfect meme material, spawning fan art, reaction images, and format templates across every major platform.

TL;DR

Pikachu is a yellow, mouse-like Pokémon with a lightning bolt tail, red cheek pouches, and pointed ears with black tips.

Overview

Pikachu is a yellow, mouse-like Pokémon with a lightning bolt tail, red cheek pouches, and pointed ears with black tips2. As the franchise mascot, Pikachu appears on everything from video games to lunchboxes, making it one of the most recognized fictional characters worldwide. In meme culture, Pikachu shows up in two main ways: as a general subject for fan art, edits, and shitposts (with over 460,000 DeviantArt results alone1), and more specifically as the "Surprised Pikachu" reaction image.

The Surprised Pikachu format uses a screenshot of Pikachu with its mouth in a small "O" shape and wide eyes, conveying exaggerated shock. The joke is almost always the same: someone does something obviously stupid, faces the obvious consequence, and Pikachu reacts with surprise nobody should actually feel7. It works because the expression is simple, the character is universally known, and the format requires zero explanation5.

Pikachu was designed by Atsuko Nishida at Game Freak, with the design finalized by lead designer Ken Sugimori, for Pokémon Red and Green on the Game Boy, released February 27, 19962. Nishida modeled Pikachu after squirrels rather than mice, inspired by how squirrels store food in their cheeks. She adapted this into Pikachu storing electricity in its red cheek sacs2. Pokémon creator Satoshi Tajiri later changed the species classification to a mouse2.

The franchise originally planned for Clefairy to be its mascot, but Pikachu's popularity in the anime series made it the obvious choice1. In the show, protagonist Ash Ketchum receives Pikachu as his starter Pokémon after arriving late to Professor Oak's lab, and the two develop a bond that drove the series for over 1,000 episodes4.

The specific screenshot that became the Surprised Pikachu meme comes from Season 1, Episode 10 of the anime, "Bulbasaur and the Hidden Village," which aired in Japan in 19976. In the scene, Ash foolishly sends his Butterfree against a wild Bulbasaur and gets easily beaten. The camera cuts to the group's shocked reactions, with Pikachu visible in the lower right corner looking stunned5. On TV, it was a blink-and-miss moment6.

A Tumblr user named Angela (handle "angrypokemon") posted the screenshot on September 26, 20187. She later told Wired that she had taken the screenshot back in 2017 but sat on it for a year before posting4. Her caption paired the image with a joke about addiction, and the format clicked immediately7.

Origin & Background

Platform
Pokémon anime (source image), Tumblr (meme format)
Key People
Atsuko Nishida, Ken Sugimori, Angela / "angrypokemon" on Tumblr
Date
2018 (Surprised Pikachu meme); 1996 (character origin)
Year
2018

Pikachu was designed by Atsuko Nishida at Game Freak, with the design finalized by lead designer Ken Sugimori, for Pokémon Red and Green on the Game Boy, released February 27, 1996. Nishida modeled Pikachu after squirrels rather than mice, inspired by how squirrels store food in their cheeks. She adapted this into Pikachu storing electricity in its red cheek sacs. Pokémon creator Satoshi Tajiri later changed the species classification to a mouse.

The franchise originally planned for Clefairy to be its mascot, but Pikachu's popularity in the anime series made it the obvious choice. In the show, protagonist Ash Ketchum receives Pikachu as his starter Pokémon after arriving late to Professor Oak's lab, and the two develop a bond that drove the series for over 1,000 episodes.

The specific screenshot that became the Surprised Pikachu meme comes from Season 1, Episode 10 of the anime, "Bulbasaur and the Hidden Village," which aired in Japan in 1997. In the scene, Ash foolishly sends his Butterfree against a wild Bulbasaur and gets easily beaten. The camera cuts to the group's shocked reactions, with Pikachu visible in the lower right corner looking stunned. On TV, it was a blink-and-miss moment.

A Tumblr user named Angela (handle "angrypokemon") posted the screenshot on September 26, 2018. She later told Wired that she had taken the screenshot back in 2017 but sat on it for a year before posting. Her caption paired the image with a joke about addiction, and the format clicked immediately.

How It Spread

Within four days of Angela's Tumblr post, the image hit Reddit's r/MemeEconomy. A few days after that, it appeared on the Facebook page "Meme Extreme". The format then leaked into unrelated subreddits like r/Freefolk (Game of Thrones), r/me_irl, and spread heavily across Twitter.

By late October 2018, "Surprised Pikachu" was everywhere. The format worked for politics, gaming, relationships, and self-deprecating humor. Even corporate social media accounts started using it for engagement. Despite debuting in late September, it became the most-used meme of 2018.

The timing raised eyebrows. Pokémon's Detective Pikachu film was announced and its first trailer dropped in November 2018, right around the meme's peak. Some wondered if the meme was stealth marketing. Angela shut that down: "I WISH Pokemon hired me as a sleuth marketing coordinator. That seems like a fun job".

The official Pokémon Twitter account leaned into it, using the Surprised Pikachu format to promote the Detective Pikachu trailer with the caption: "When you star in a trailer for a new movie, but everyone's talking about Mr. Mime".

In March 2019, Twitter users discovered their accounts were being suspended for "depicting gratuitous gore" after posting the meme. The leading theory on r/OutoftheLoop was that enough users mass-reported the image to trigger Twitter's automated content removal system. In other words, the meme got so oversaturated that an organized effort by annoyed users tried to get it blanket-removed from the site.

How to Use This Meme

The Surprised Pikachu format typically follows a three-part structure:

1

Set up a bad decision or obvious cause. ("Me: eats an entire pizza at midnight")

2

State the predictable consequence. ("My stomach at 3am:")

3

Drop the Surprised Pikachu image as the reaction.

Cultural Impact

Surprised Pikachu crossed over from meme culture into mainstream awareness faster than most formats. The Pokémon Company's official Twitter account used it in November 2018, making it one of the rare cases where an IP holder embraced rather than fought a meme based on their property.

The meme's popularity overlapped with the marketing cycle for the 2019 Detective Pikachu film, starring Ryan Reynolds. While the meme was not a marketing stunt, the timing created a feedback loop where Pikachu was inescapable across both social media and traditional advertising.

Twitter's automated moderation system flagged the meme as gore in March 2019 after mass-reporting campaigns, leading to account suspensions that themselves became a story covered across social media. The incident became a case study in how platform moderation systems can be gamed by coordinated user behavior.

Beyond the Surprised face, Pikachu's meme presence is vast. The character's redesign history, from pudgy 1996 sprite to slim modern version and back again with the Gigantamax form, generated its own discourse among fans. Pikachu also appears as a fighter in every Super Smash Bros. game and as the protagonist in the Mystery Dungeon series, keeping the character in gaming conversation across decades.

Full History

Pikachu's path from video game sprite to meme icon is really two stories: a 20-year buildup of cultural saturation, followed by one perfectly timed screenshot.

When Pokémon Red and Green launched in Japan in February 1996, Pikachu was just one of 151 creatures. But the anime changed everything. Starting in 1997, the show put Pikachu front and center as Ash's partner, and the character's expressiveness made it a natural for merchandising. Nintendo capitalized quickly, releasing Pokémon Yellow in 1998, a version of the game where Pikachu followed the player on screen. Dedicated Pikachu games followed: Hey You, Pikachu! let players talk to Pikachu through a microphone, and the character appeared as a fighter in every Super Smash Bros. game.

By the 2010s, Pikachu had the kind of global recognition usually reserved for Mickey Mouse. The character appeared on DeviantArt in over 460,000 posts. Tumblr hosted thousands of fan art pieces, GIFs, and single-topic blogs dedicated to Pikachu. But there was no single dominant Pikachu meme until 2018.

The Surprised Pikachu screenshot sat in Angela's camera roll for an entire year before she posted it to Tumblr in September 2018. She thought the expression "looked a bit off" and posted it as a reaction image with no expectation of virality. The format was dead simple: set up a situation where someone does something dumb, state the obvious consequence, drop Pikachu's shocked face as the punchline. No Photoshop skills needed, no niche knowledge required.

The meme's spread was unusually fast even by 2018 standards. After r/MemeEconomy and Facebook picked it up in early October, the format crossed into communities that had nothing to do with Pokémon. Political commentators used it for election takes. Gamers used it for bad strategic decisions. The format worked for anything involving willful ignorance or predictable failure. Some fans went further: at least one TikToker got a Surprised Pikachu tattoo, and another created pixel art versions matching the original Game Boy's color palette.

The November 2018 Detective Pikachu trailer overlap was pure coincidence, but it amplified both the meme and the film's marketing. The official Pokémon account's tweet using the format was a rare case of a brand adopting a meme gracefully rather than killing it. The 2019 film, starring Ryan Reynolds as the voice of Pikachu, became its own source of meme material.

The March 2019 Twitter suspensions marked a weird chapter. Users posting Surprised Pikachu got flagged for gore, likely because mass-reporting trained the platform's automated systems to treat the image as violating content. The incident highlighted both how deeply the meme had saturated the platform and how clumsy automated moderation could be.

After the initial explosion, Surprised Pikachu settled into the permanent meme rotation. It sees seasonal revivals whenever something predictable blows up in the news cycle, making it especially popular during election seasons and corporate PR disasters. The image still works because admitting you saw something coming just is not as funny as pretending you did not.

Pikachu's broader meme footprint extends well beyond the surprised face. The character's design changes over the years, going from a pudgy round body to a slimmer build for easier animation, spawned the "Fat Pikachu" nostalgia meme when Pokémon Sword and Shield brought back the original proportions as a special Gigantamax form. Detective Pikachu gave the internet a realistic, furry Pikachu to play with. And the character's status as Japan's approximate equivalent of Mickey Mouse means it shows up in every conceivable meme context, from wholesome fan art to deeply cursed edits.

Fun Facts

Pikachu was modeled after squirrels, not mice. Designer Atsuko Nishida was "obsessed with squirrels" and based the cheek pouches on how squirrels store food. Satoshi Tajiri later reclassified it as a mouse.

Pikachu was supposed to have a third evolution called Gorochu, but it was cut due to Game Boy cartridge space limitations.

Developer Koji Nishino made Pikachu harder to find in the original games because he liked it so much, joking he wanted to "keep it for himself".

Angela, the Tumblr user who created the Surprised Pikachu meme, had the screenshot sitting unused in her camera roll for a full year before posting it.

The Pokémon originally chosen to be the franchise mascot was Clefairy, not Pikachu.

Derivatives & Variations

Detective Pikachu memes:

The 2019 live-action film gave meme creators a realistic, furry Pikachu to work with, spawning reaction images and edits of Ryan Reynolds' voiced Pikachu[1].

Fat Pikachu / Gigantamax Pikachu:

Pokémon Sword and Shield's Gigantamax form brought back Pikachu's original pudgy design, reigniting nostalgia memes about the character's body shape changes over 25 years[2].

Surprised Pikachu pixel art:

Fans recreated the meme in the style of the original Game Boy games, matching the limited color palette of the 1996 sprites[6].

Surprised Pikachu tattoos:

At least one TikToker got the Surprised Pikachu image permanently tattooed on their arm[6].

Pikachu fan art culture:

DeviantArt alone hosts over 460,000 Pikachu-related posts, ranging from wholesome illustrations to elaborate digital paintings[1].

Frequently Asked Questions

Pikachu

2018Reaction image / image macro / fan art subjectsemi-active

Also known as: Surprised Pikachu · Shocked Pikachu

Surprised Pikachu is a 2018 reaction-image meme featuring the Pokémon's wide-eyed, open-mouthed face, used to mock feigned shock at predictable outcomes.

Pikachu is the electric-type Pokémon mascot that became one of the internet's most recognizable meme subjects, most famously through the "Surprised Pikachu" reaction image that took over social media in late 2018. Originally designed for the 1996 Game Boy games Pokémon Red and Green, Pikachu's wide-eyed, open-mouthed expression from a 1997 anime episode became shorthand for feigning shock at predictable outcomes. The character's near-universal name recognition made it perfect meme material, spawning fan art, reaction images, and format templates across every major platform.

TL;DR

Pikachu is a yellow, mouse-like Pokémon with a lightning bolt tail, red cheek pouches, and pointed ears with black tips.

Overview

Pikachu is a yellow, mouse-like Pokémon with a lightning bolt tail, red cheek pouches, and pointed ears with black tips. As the franchise mascot, Pikachu appears on everything from video games to lunchboxes, making it one of the most recognized fictional characters worldwide. In meme culture, Pikachu shows up in two main ways: as a general subject for fan art, edits, and shitposts (with over 460,000 DeviantArt results alone), and more specifically as the "Surprised Pikachu" reaction image.

The Surprised Pikachu format uses a screenshot of Pikachu with its mouth in a small "O" shape and wide eyes, conveying exaggerated shock. The joke is almost always the same: someone does something obviously stupid, faces the obvious consequence, and Pikachu reacts with surprise nobody should actually feel. It works because the expression is simple, the character is universally known, and the format requires zero explanation.

Pikachu was designed by Atsuko Nishida at Game Freak, with the design finalized by lead designer Ken Sugimori, for Pokémon Red and Green on the Game Boy, released February 27, 1996. Nishida modeled Pikachu after squirrels rather than mice, inspired by how squirrels store food in their cheeks. She adapted this into Pikachu storing electricity in its red cheek sacs. Pokémon creator Satoshi Tajiri later changed the species classification to a mouse.

The franchise originally planned for Clefairy to be its mascot, but Pikachu's popularity in the anime series made it the obvious choice. In the show, protagonist Ash Ketchum receives Pikachu as his starter Pokémon after arriving late to Professor Oak's lab, and the two develop a bond that drove the series for over 1,000 episodes.

The specific screenshot that became the Surprised Pikachu meme comes from Season 1, Episode 10 of the anime, "Bulbasaur and the Hidden Village," which aired in Japan in 1997. In the scene, Ash foolishly sends his Butterfree against a wild Bulbasaur and gets easily beaten. The camera cuts to the group's shocked reactions, with Pikachu visible in the lower right corner looking stunned. On TV, it was a blink-and-miss moment.

A Tumblr user named Angela (handle "angrypokemon") posted the screenshot on September 26, 2018. She later told Wired that she had taken the screenshot back in 2017 but sat on it for a year before posting. Her caption paired the image with a joke about addiction, and the format clicked immediately.

Origin & Background

Platform
Pokémon anime (source image), Tumblr (meme format)
Key People
Atsuko Nishida, Ken Sugimori, Angela / "angrypokemon" on Tumblr
Date
2018 (Surprised Pikachu meme); 1996 (character origin)
Year
2018

Pikachu was designed by Atsuko Nishida at Game Freak, with the design finalized by lead designer Ken Sugimori, for Pokémon Red and Green on the Game Boy, released February 27, 1996. Nishida modeled Pikachu after squirrels rather than mice, inspired by how squirrels store food in their cheeks. She adapted this into Pikachu storing electricity in its red cheek sacs. Pokémon creator Satoshi Tajiri later changed the species classification to a mouse.

The franchise originally planned for Clefairy to be its mascot, but Pikachu's popularity in the anime series made it the obvious choice. In the show, protagonist Ash Ketchum receives Pikachu as his starter Pokémon after arriving late to Professor Oak's lab, and the two develop a bond that drove the series for over 1,000 episodes.

The specific screenshot that became the Surprised Pikachu meme comes from Season 1, Episode 10 of the anime, "Bulbasaur and the Hidden Village," which aired in Japan in 1997. In the scene, Ash foolishly sends his Butterfree against a wild Bulbasaur and gets easily beaten. The camera cuts to the group's shocked reactions, with Pikachu visible in the lower right corner looking stunned. On TV, it was a blink-and-miss moment.

A Tumblr user named Angela (handle "angrypokemon") posted the screenshot on September 26, 2018. She later told Wired that she had taken the screenshot back in 2017 but sat on it for a year before posting. Her caption paired the image with a joke about addiction, and the format clicked immediately.

How It Spread

Within four days of Angela's Tumblr post, the image hit Reddit's r/MemeEconomy. A few days after that, it appeared on the Facebook page "Meme Extreme". The format then leaked into unrelated subreddits like r/Freefolk (Game of Thrones), r/me_irl, and spread heavily across Twitter.

By late October 2018, "Surprised Pikachu" was everywhere. The format worked for politics, gaming, relationships, and self-deprecating humor. Even corporate social media accounts started using it for engagement. Despite debuting in late September, it became the most-used meme of 2018.

The timing raised eyebrows. Pokémon's Detective Pikachu film was announced and its first trailer dropped in November 2018, right around the meme's peak. Some wondered if the meme was stealth marketing. Angela shut that down: "I WISH Pokemon hired me as a sleuth marketing coordinator. That seems like a fun job".

The official Pokémon Twitter account leaned into it, using the Surprised Pikachu format to promote the Detective Pikachu trailer with the caption: "When you star in a trailer for a new movie, but everyone's talking about Mr. Mime".

In March 2019, Twitter users discovered their accounts were being suspended for "depicting gratuitous gore" after posting the meme. The leading theory on r/OutoftheLoop was that enough users mass-reported the image to trigger Twitter's automated content removal system. In other words, the meme got so oversaturated that an organized effort by annoyed users tried to get it blanket-removed from the site.

How to Use This Meme

The Surprised Pikachu format typically follows a three-part structure:

1

Set up a bad decision or obvious cause. ("Me: eats an entire pizza at midnight")

2

State the predictable consequence. ("My stomach at 3am:")

3

Drop the Surprised Pikachu image as the reaction.

Cultural Impact

Surprised Pikachu crossed over from meme culture into mainstream awareness faster than most formats. The Pokémon Company's official Twitter account used it in November 2018, making it one of the rare cases where an IP holder embraced rather than fought a meme based on their property.

The meme's popularity overlapped with the marketing cycle for the 2019 Detective Pikachu film, starring Ryan Reynolds. While the meme was not a marketing stunt, the timing created a feedback loop where Pikachu was inescapable across both social media and traditional advertising.

Twitter's automated moderation system flagged the meme as gore in March 2019 after mass-reporting campaigns, leading to account suspensions that themselves became a story covered across social media. The incident became a case study in how platform moderation systems can be gamed by coordinated user behavior.

Beyond the Surprised face, Pikachu's meme presence is vast. The character's redesign history, from pudgy 1996 sprite to slim modern version and back again with the Gigantamax form, generated its own discourse among fans. Pikachu also appears as a fighter in every Super Smash Bros. game and as the protagonist in the Mystery Dungeon series, keeping the character in gaming conversation across decades.

Full History

Pikachu's path from video game sprite to meme icon is really two stories: a 20-year buildup of cultural saturation, followed by one perfectly timed screenshot.

When Pokémon Red and Green launched in Japan in February 1996, Pikachu was just one of 151 creatures. But the anime changed everything. Starting in 1997, the show put Pikachu front and center as Ash's partner, and the character's expressiveness made it a natural for merchandising. Nintendo capitalized quickly, releasing Pokémon Yellow in 1998, a version of the game where Pikachu followed the player on screen. Dedicated Pikachu games followed: Hey You, Pikachu! let players talk to Pikachu through a microphone, and the character appeared as a fighter in every Super Smash Bros. game.

By the 2010s, Pikachu had the kind of global recognition usually reserved for Mickey Mouse. The character appeared on DeviantArt in over 460,000 posts. Tumblr hosted thousands of fan art pieces, GIFs, and single-topic blogs dedicated to Pikachu. But there was no single dominant Pikachu meme until 2018.

The Surprised Pikachu screenshot sat in Angela's camera roll for an entire year before she posted it to Tumblr in September 2018. She thought the expression "looked a bit off" and posted it as a reaction image with no expectation of virality. The format was dead simple: set up a situation where someone does something dumb, state the obvious consequence, drop Pikachu's shocked face as the punchline. No Photoshop skills needed, no niche knowledge required.

The meme's spread was unusually fast even by 2018 standards. After r/MemeEconomy and Facebook picked it up in early October, the format crossed into communities that had nothing to do with Pokémon. Political commentators used it for election takes. Gamers used it for bad strategic decisions. The format worked for anything involving willful ignorance or predictable failure. Some fans went further: at least one TikToker got a Surprised Pikachu tattoo, and another created pixel art versions matching the original Game Boy's color palette.

The November 2018 Detective Pikachu trailer overlap was pure coincidence, but it amplified both the meme and the film's marketing. The official Pokémon account's tweet using the format was a rare case of a brand adopting a meme gracefully rather than killing it. The 2019 film, starring Ryan Reynolds as the voice of Pikachu, became its own source of meme material.

The March 2019 Twitter suspensions marked a weird chapter. Users posting Surprised Pikachu got flagged for gore, likely because mass-reporting trained the platform's automated systems to treat the image as violating content. The incident highlighted both how deeply the meme had saturated the platform and how clumsy automated moderation could be.

After the initial explosion, Surprised Pikachu settled into the permanent meme rotation. It sees seasonal revivals whenever something predictable blows up in the news cycle, making it especially popular during election seasons and corporate PR disasters. The image still works because admitting you saw something coming just is not as funny as pretending you did not.

Pikachu's broader meme footprint extends well beyond the surprised face. The character's design changes over the years, going from a pudgy round body to a slimmer build for easier animation, spawned the "Fat Pikachu" nostalgia meme when Pokémon Sword and Shield brought back the original proportions as a special Gigantamax form. Detective Pikachu gave the internet a realistic, furry Pikachu to play with. And the character's status as Japan's approximate equivalent of Mickey Mouse means it shows up in every conceivable meme context, from wholesome fan art to deeply cursed edits.

Fun Facts

Pikachu was modeled after squirrels, not mice. Designer Atsuko Nishida was "obsessed with squirrels" and based the cheek pouches on how squirrels store food. Satoshi Tajiri later reclassified it as a mouse.

Pikachu was supposed to have a third evolution called Gorochu, but it was cut due to Game Boy cartridge space limitations.

Developer Koji Nishino made Pikachu harder to find in the original games because he liked it so much, joking he wanted to "keep it for himself".

Angela, the Tumblr user who created the Surprised Pikachu meme, had the screenshot sitting unused in her camera roll for a full year before posting it.

The Pokémon originally chosen to be the franchise mascot was Clefairy, not Pikachu.

Derivatives & Variations

Detective Pikachu memes:

The 2019 live-action film gave meme creators a realistic, furry Pikachu to work with, spawning reaction images and edits of Ryan Reynolds' voiced Pikachu[1].

Fat Pikachu / Gigantamax Pikachu:

Pokémon Sword and Shield's Gigantamax form brought back Pikachu's original pudgy design, reigniting nostalgia memes about the character's body shape changes over 25 years[2].

Surprised Pikachu pixel art:

Fans recreated the meme in the style of the original Game Boy games, matching the limited color palette of the 1996 sprites[6].

Surprised Pikachu tattoos:

At least one TikToker got the Surprised Pikachu image permanently tattooed on their arm[6].

Pikachu fan art culture:

DeviantArt alone hosts over 460,000 Pikachu-related posts, ranging from wholesome illustrations to elaborate digital paintings[1].

Frequently Asked Questions