Pot Of Greed
Also known as: "But What Does Pot of Greed Do?"
Pot of Greed is a Yu-Gi-Oh! meme built on the absurdity of the anime series explaining the same simple card effect over and over again in nearly every episode it appears. The card lets a player draw two cards from their deck, one of the most basic effects in the game, yet characters in *Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters* treat it like a revelation every single time1. The running joke online centers on the question "But what does Pot of Greed do?" delivered with mock confusion, as if the answer hasn't already been explained a hundred times2.
TL;DR
Pot of Greed is a Yu-Gi-Oh! meme built on the absurdity of the anime series explaining the same simple card effect over and over again in nearly every episode it appears.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Pot of Greed meme works in a few common formats:
The mock question: When someone mentions Pot of Greed or Yu-Gi-Oh!, you respond with some version of "But what does Pot of Greed do?" as if genuinely baffled. The key is total commitment to the bit. You've heard the explanation fifty times and still don't get it.
The over-explanation: You describe the card's effect with maximum drama and verbosity. Something like: "I activate the spell card Pot of Greed! Now listen carefully because this is complex. It allows me to take the top two cards from my deck and place them directly into my hand, increasing my total card count by exactly two." The more breathless and serious you sound, the better.
The copypasta: Drop the full copypasta in comment sections or forums. The format typically involves an extended, overly detailed breakdown of the draw-two effect written as if it's the most complicated concept ever devised.
Image edits: Take the Pot of Greed artwork (that green jar face) and paste it onto politicians, celebrities, or other characters. The face conveys a specific energy of pure, unrestrained avarice that works in all sorts of contexts.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Pot of Greed is what competitive players call a "plus one." You spend one card to get two back, meaning it's mathematically impossible for it to be a bad play. There is zero risk and zero cost.
If Pot of Greed were legal today, every competitive deck would run three copies. It effectively turns a 40-card deck into a 37-card deck, making it easier to find win conditions.
The card's artwork features a bright green jar with bloodshot eyes and a wide, yellowish grin. The face has been described as looking "like it just won the lottery and is about to spend it all on something illegal".
Urban Dictionary entries for Pot of Greed play along with the meme, defining it as "a mystic Yu-Gi-Oh card which no one has a clue upon what it actually does".
The card was limited to one copy per deck for years before Konami moved it to the Forbidden list in 2005, where it has stayed ever since.
Derivatives & Variations
Wheeler's compilation video
(2014): The original YouTube supercut of every Pot of Greed explanation in the anime, with over 1 million views[3].
RANK10YGO's over-explanation video
(2016): A 12-minute comedy video dedicated to explaining the card's effect in excruciating detail, 220,000+ views[3].
Pot of Greed copypasta
A lengthy, dramatic text block explaining the card's effect, posted to r/copypasta on April 1, 2016 and spread across Reddit[3].
r/hearthstone April Fools' crossover
(2016): The Hearthstone subreddit went Yu-Gi-Oh! themed for April Fools' Day, flooding the sub with Pot of Greed references[3].
Pot archetype cards
Konami's official card variants (Pot of Extravagance, Pot of Desires) that function as "balanced" versions of the original[2].
Image macro edits
The card's artwork (green jar with a maniacal grin) edited onto other characters, politicians, and celebrities[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1
- 2Pot of Greed - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 3Characters of the Metal Gear seriesencyclopedia
- 4Pot of Greed - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 5