Repo I Love
Also known as: R.E.P.O. Chest Pain · I Love R.E.P.O.
R.E.P.O. "I Love" is a viral video meme from March 2025 built around a clip of a player named Just_CSmallz singing "Chest Pain (I Love)" by Malcolm Todd while rolling on the ground during a multiplayer session of the co-op horror game R.E.P.O. The clip, captured during a Twitch stream hosted by PresidentLloyd, spread rapidly across Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, racking up tens of millions of views and inspiring a wave of original animations and edits that mix the in-game singing with the actual song.
TL;DR
R.E.P.O.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme typically follows one of a few formats:
Straight repost or react: Share the original clip or a trimmed version, often with a caption about how unexpectedly good the singing is in a horror game context.
Song transition edit: Start with the in-game audio of CSmallz singing, then smoothly cut to Malcolm Todd's studio version of "Chest Pain (I Love)" at the right beat. The comedy comes from the seamless shift from goofy to polished.
Animation: Draw or animate a character (often the yellow R.E.P.O. player model) performing the song in a similar rolling-on-the-ground pose. Many animators add their own visual flair while keeping the audio mix of game clip and real song.
Soundboard use: The "i love (r.e.p.o)" sound can be played in Discord calls, streams, or other voice channels as a quick bit.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The original Instagram post from PresidentLloyd hit 2.4 million combined likes and views in just two weeks.
@codaanim's animation was the single biggest viral hit from the trend, pulling 28.1 million views in only four days.
The meme effectively served as free advertising for both the indie game R.E.P.O. and Malcolm Todd's music.
PresidentLloyd tried to get Just_CSmallz to keep singing after he stopped, suggesting even the streamer knew the moment was special.
Derivatives & Variations
Original animations:
Multiple creators produced fully animated versions of the scene, with @codaanim's TikTok animation (28.1 million views) and @dragonsync's version (11.2 million views) being the biggest[2].
Song transition edits:
A format popularized by @c00lerdude that cuts from the in-game singing to the Malcolm Todd studio recording, reaching 17.9 million views[2].
Soundboard clips:
The audio was isolated and uploaded to platforms like Voicemod Tuna for use as a meme sound effect button[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2R.E.P.O. "I Love" - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 3List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia