Prayge

2020Twitch emote / slang termactive
Prayge is a 2020 Twitch emote from FrankerFaceZ and BetterTTV showing a flattened Pepe the Frog with clasped hands, spammed during high-stakes gaming streams as a collective digital prayer.

Prayge is a Twitch and Discord emote showing a flattened Pepe the Frog with eyes closed and hands clasped in prayer. Created in 2020 on FrankerFaceZ and BetterTTV, one version alone now sits in over 29,000 channel emote sets2. Viewers spam it during high-stakes stream moments as a collective "please let this work out," and the word works as standalone slang across gaming communities3.

TL;DR

Prayge is a Twitch and Discord emote showing a flattened Pepe the Frog with eyes closed and hands clasped in prayer.

Overview

Prayge is part of the Pepe-based emote family with the "-ge" suffix, alongside Sadge, Pepega, and others popular in Twitch culture3. The image shows a simplified, flat Pepe with shut eyes and the 🙏 Prayer Hands emoji standing in for clasped arms. Whenever a stream hits a moment of tension, viewers flood the chat with Prayge to express collective hope that things will work out.

The word also functions as text-only slang3. People type "Prayge" even on channels where the emote isn't enabled, and it has spread into Discord servers where users say it out loud in voice chat like a regular word3.

The first Prayge emote was uploaded to FrankerFaceZ on March 17, 2020, by user Kipp20, showing a Pepe praying with open eyes and a smile. Five months later, on August 20, 2020, BetterTTV user Czharu posted the version that took off: a flattened Pepe with closed eyes and the Prayer Hands emoji as arms4. The visual shift from cheerful to earnest gave the emote its signature tone of desperate hope.

Kipp20's original reached around 70 FrankerFaceZ channels over two years1. Czharu's redesign spread much faster, with over 5,700 channels adding it within roughly a year. On FrankerFaceZ, a variant uploaded by user prayge_boi eventually landed in over 29,000 channel sets2.

Origin & Background

Platform
FrankerFaceZ (first emote), BetterTTV (popular version)
Key People
Kipp20, Czharu
Date
2020
Year
2020

The first Prayge emote was uploaded to FrankerFaceZ on March 17, 2020, by user Kipp20, showing a Pepe praying with open eyes and a smile. Five months later, on August 20, 2020, BetterTTV user Czharu posted the version that took off: a flattened Pepe with closed eyes and the Prayer Hands emoji as arms. The visual shift from cheerful to earnest gave the emote its signature tone of desperate hope.

Kipp20's original reached around 70 FrankerFaceZ channels over two years. Czharu's redesign spread much faster, with over 5,700 channels adding it within roughly a year. On FrankerFaceZ, a variant uploaded by user prayge_boi eventually landed in over 29,000 channel sets.

How It Spread

Prayge picked up speed through late 2020 as Twitch communities adopted it for clutch plays, boss fights, and any moment where the outcome hung in the balance. YouTube remixes and streamer clips helped it reach audiences beyond Twitch. By spring 2021, prominent creators like Ludwig were using "prayge" as a spoken word during broadcasts, and Reddit communities such as r/atrioc posted requests asking streamers to enable the emote.

The emote also crossed linguistic borders. French-speaking Twitch and Discord users adopted Prayge with the same usage patterns as anglophone viewers, typing it during uncertain stream moments to signal hope.

Prayge sits in a direct emotional pairing with Sadge: Prayge is the hopeful moment before the outcome, while Sadge kicks in when things go wrong. Together they form quick shorthand for the emotional arc of watching someone play a tense game.

How to Use This Meme

Prayge shows up in two forms: as a visual emote (through BetterTTV or FrankerFaceZ browser extensions) or as plain text typed into chat.

Typical situations where viewers drop a Prayge: - A streamer is one hit away from beating a tough boss - The last round of a competitive match is underway - A gacha pull or loot box opening is about to happen - An important announcement or reveal is seconds away - Any moment where the outcome is uncertain and the stakes feel high

The word works like "fingers crossed" or "please let this go well" but carries the shared visual language of Twitch chat culture. When hundreds of viewers spam Prayge simultaneously, it creates a visible wave of collective hope that the streamer can read at a glance.

Some viewers also deploy it ironically for low-stakes situations, like hoping a streamer picks the "right" dialogue option in a story game.

Fun Facts

The "-ge" suffix in Prayge follows the naming convention of other Pepe emotes like Sadge and Pepega, where the ending riffs on the last syllable of "Pepe".

One FrankerFaceZ upload of the emote spread to over 29,000 channel sets, making it one of the more widely-adopted third-party Twitch emotes.

Prayge and Sadge form an emotional pair in chat: hope before the outcome, sadness after it goes wrong. Viewers cycle between them in real time as a game plays out.

People regularly say "Prayge" out loud in Discord voice chats, treating it as a real word rather than just an emote name.

Derivatives & Variations

Holiday and cultural remixes:

A Santa-outfit photoshop appeared in December 2020, and a turban-wearing GIF variant was posted to Tenor in May 2021, alongside multiple other community remixes uploaded to BetterTTV[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

Prayge

2020Twitch emote / slang termactive
Prayge is a 2020 Twitch emote from FrankerFaceZ and BetterTTV showing a flattened Pepe the Frog with clasped hands, spammed during high-stakes gaming streams as a collective digital prayer.

Prayge is a Twitch and Discord emote showing a flattened Pepe the Frog with eyes closed and hands clasped in prayer. Created in 2020 on FrankerFaceZ and BetterTTV, one version alone now sits in over 29,000 channel emote sets. Viewers spam it during high-stakes stream moments as a collective "please let this work out," and the word works as standalone slang across gaming communities.

TL;DR

Prayge is a Twitch and Discord emote showing a flattened Pepe the Frog with eyes closed and hands clasped in prayer.

Overview

Prayge is part of the Pepe-based emote family with the "-ge" suffix, alongside Sadge, Pepega, and others popular in Twitch culture. The image shows a simplified, flat Pepe with shut eyes and the 🙏 Prayer Hands emoji standing in for clasped arms. Whenever a stream hits a moment of tension, viewers flood the chat with Prayge to express collective hope that things will work out.

The word also functions as text-only slang. People type "Prayge" even on channels where the emote isn't enabled, and it has spread into Discord servers where users say it out loud in voice chat like a regular word.

The first Prayge emote was uploaded to FrankerFaceZ on March 17, 2020, by user Kipp20, showing a Pepe praying with open eyes and a smile. Five months later, on August 20, 2020, BetterTTV user Czharu posted the version that took off: a flattened Pepe with closed eyes and the Prayer Hands emoji as arms. The visual shift from cheerful to earnest gave the emote its signature tone of desperate hope.

Kipp20's original reached around 70 FrankerFaceZ channels over two years. Czharu's redesign spread much faster, with over 5,700 channels adding it within roughly a year. On FrankerFaceZ, a variant uploaded by user prayge_boi eventually landed in over 29,000 channel sets.

Origin & Background

Platform
FrankerFaceZ (first emote), BetterTTV (popular version)
Key People
Kipp20, Czharu
Date
2020
Year
2020

The first Prayge emote was uploaded to FrankerFaceZ on March 17, 2020, by user Kipp20, showing a Pepe praying with open eyes and a smile. Five months later, on August 20, 2020, BetterTTV user Czharu posted the version that took off: a flattened Pepe with closed eyes and the Prayer Hands emoji as arms. The visual shift from cheerful to earnest gave the emote its signature tone of desperate hope.

Kipp20's original reached around 70 FrankerFaceZ channels over two years. Czharu's redesign spread much faster, with over 5,700 channels adding it within roughly a year. On FrankerFaceZ, a variant uploaded by user prayge_boi eventually landed in over 29,000 channel sets.

How It Spread

Prayge picked up speed through late 2020 as Twitch communities adopted it for clutch plays, boss fights, and any moment where the outcome hung in the balance. YouTube remixes and streamer clips helped it reach audiences beyond Twitch. By spring 2021, prominent creators like Ludwig were using "prayge" as a spoken word during broadcasts, and Reddit communities such as r/atrioc posted requests asking streamers to enable the emote.

The emote also crossed linguistic borders. French-speaking Twitch and Discord users adopted Prayge with the same usage patterns as anglophone viewers, typing it during uncertain stream moments to signal hope.

Prayge sits in a direct emotional pairing with Sadge: Prayge is the hopeful moment before the outcome, while Sadge kicks in when things go wrong. Together they form quick shorthand for the emotional arc of watching someone play a tense game.

How to Use This Meme

Prayge shows up in two forms: as a visual emote (through BetterTTV or FrankerFaceZ browser extensions) or as plain text typed into chat.

Typical situations where viewers drop a Prayge: - A streamer is one hit away from beating a tough boss - The last round of a competitive match is underway - A gacha pull or loot box opening is about to happen - An important announcement or reveal is seconds away - Any moment where the outcome is uncertain and the stakes feel high

The word works like "fingers crossed" or "please let this go well" but carries the shared visual language of Twitch chat culture. When hundreds of viewers spam Prayge simultaneously, it creates a visible wave of collective hope that the streamer can read at a glance.

Some viewers also deploy it ironically for low-stakes situations, like hoping a streamer picks the "right" dialogue option in a story game.

Fun Facts

The "-ge" suffix in Prayge follows the naming convention of other Pepe emotes like Sadge and Pepega, where the ending riffs on the last syllable of "Pepe".

One FrankerFaceZ upload of the emote spread to over 29,000 channel sets, making it one of the more widely-adopted third-party Twitch emotes.

Prayge and Sadge form an emotional pair in chat: hope before the outcome, sadness after it goes wrong. Viewers cycle between them in real time as a game plays out.

People regularly say "Prayge" out loud in Discord voice chats, treating it as a real word rather than just an emote name.

Derivatives & Variations

Holiday and cultural remixes:

A Santa-outfit photoshop appeared in December 2020, and a turban-wearing GIF variant was posted to Tenor in May 2021, alongside multiple other community remixes uploaded to BetterTTV[4].

Frequently Asked Questions