Rumi Sniffing Kimbap

2025Reaction GIF / exploitableactive

Also known as: Rumi Eating Kimbap · Rumi Kimbap GIF

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap is a 2025 reaction GIF from Netflix's *K-Pop Demon Hunters* where purple-haired character Rumi takes an absurdly long sniff of a kimbap roll with an exaggerated blissful expression.

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap is a reaction GIF from the 2025 Netflix animated film *K-Pop Demon Hunters* in which the purple-haired character Rumi takes an absurdly long sniff of a kimbap roll before making an exaggerated, blissful face. The GIF blew up on Twitter/X and TikTok in late June 2025, quickly becoming a go-to reaction image for suggestive jokes and general absurdity. It also kicked off a wider debate about whether modern animators deliberately design scenes to farm memes.

TL;DR

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap is a reaction GIF from the 2025 Netflix animated film *K-Pop Demon Hunters* in which the purple-haired character Rumi takes an absurdly long sniff of a kimbap roll before making an exaggerated, blissful face.

Overview

The meme comes from an early scene in *K-Pop Demon Hunters* where the fictional girl group HUNTR/X eats a buffet of Korean food on a plane. Rumi, the group's purple-haired lead vocalist, picks up a roll of kimbap (a Korean rice roll sometimes mistaken for sushi), takes a long, theatrical sniff, then swallows the entire thing with an over-the-top expression of satisfaction4. The animation style leans heavily into exaggerated facial expressions, which made the moment instantly GIF-able. People use the GIF as a reaction to anything indulgent, satisfying, or suggestive, and it's frequently edited to replace the kimbap with other objects for comedic effect3.

*K-Pop Demon Hunters* was developed at Sony Pictures Animation, the studio behind *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse*, and directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans1. Kang described the project as "my love letter to K-Pop and my Korean roots"1. The film follows HUNTR/X, a world-renowned girl group that secretly battles demons between performances.

Netflix released the film on June 20, 2025. That same day, the YouTube channel Netflix Family posted a clip of the eating scene, where Rumi's kimbap sniff is visible at the 10-second mark. The video pulled in over 2.3 million views and 14,000 likes within 12 days4.

The next day, June 21, Tumblr user @sunflower-of-versace posted what appears to be the earliest GIF version of the scene, collecting over 400 notes in its first week2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Netflix (source film), Tumblr (first GIF), Twitter/X (viral spread)
Key People
Maggie Kang, Chris Appelhans, @sunflower-of-versace
Date
2025
Year
2025

*K-Pop Demon Hunters* was developed at Sony Pictures Animation, the studio behind *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse*, and directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans. Kang described the project as "my love letter to K-Pop and my Korean roots". The film follows HUNTR/X, a world-renowned girl group that secretly battles demons between performances.

Netflix released the film on June 20, 2025. That same day, the YouTube channel Netflix Family posted a clip of the eating scene, where Rumi's kimbap sniff is visible at the 10-second mark. The video pulled in over 2.3 million views and 14,000 likes within 12 days.

The next day, June 21, Tumblr user @sunflower-of-versace posted what appears to be the earliest GIF version of the scene, collecting over 400 notes in its first week.

How It Spread

The GIF sat relatively quiet for about a week before Twitter/X picked it up. On June 28, X user @banzoinhakka reposted it to celebrate the movie's release, earning over 1,000 likes in four days. The real breakout came a day later when @hoezayburger tweeted "bro this gif is fucking crazy lmfao" on June 29, marking the first truly viral use of the clip.

From there, things escalated fast. On June 30, @GOREJ1RA paired the GIF with the caption "Springtrap unwasheddih," pulling 6,000 likes in two days. That same day, @ArtofSpongebob posted it with "Why is this movie trying so hard to make the next big meme face?" and racked up roughly 95,000 likes in two days. The tweet crystallized what many people were already thinking and set off a parallel conversation about intentional meme-baiting in animation.

By July 1, the debate was in full swing. @SKULLYtwtt wrote "This movie looks so overly animated as if they're trying to make a bunch of memes and that's what's stopping me from watching it," getting 3,000 likes. On the other side, @heyimcrib pushed back: "Normal people in real life: 'oh this animator wanted to have fun with their scene and make something expressive' / The critically online: 'broooo they tryin to meme brooo.'" That defense post hit 71,000 likes in a single day.

The meme crossed into celebrity territory on July 6 when musician Bbno$ posted a video recreating the kimbap sniff in real life, which exploded to over 6 million views and 80,000 likes in two days.

How to Use This Meme

The Rumi kimbap GIF is typically used in two ways:

As a straight reaction: Post the unedited GIF in response to something satisfying, indulgent, or dramatic. Works well for food posts, good news, or anything that deserves an exaggerated "mmm."

As an exploitable edit: Replace the kimbap with a different object to change the joke's meaning. Common edits include swapping in suggestive items for innuendo humor, or inserting a gun so Rumi appears to be sticking it in her mouth as a reaction to something cringe-worthy or unbearable. Some creators also apply the sniffing animation to other characters entirely. One well-known example puts the animation on IRyS from Hololive, who sniffs a soda can instead of kimbap.

Cultural Impact

The Rumi GIF sparked a genuine critical conversation about animation and meme culture. The core question: did the animators at Sony Pictures Imageworks intentionally design exaggerated expressions to go viral? The film's animation style draws from the same team that made *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse*, known for highly expressive character work, so the over-the-top faces weren't unusual for their approach. But the speed at which specific frames became GIFs made some viewers suspicious that the scenes were engineered for meme potential rather than storytelling.

The debate split roughly into two camps. Critics argued the expressions felt forced and calculated, designed to generate social media engagement rather than serve the narrative. Defenders pointed out that expressive animation has always been part of the medium and that reading corporate strategy into an animator having fun was cynical.

Beyond the animation discourse, the GIF also fit into a broader pattern of *K-Pop Demon Hunters* memes. The film generated multiple viral moments from its exaggerated character faces, with Rumi's kimbap sniff being the biggest breakout.

Fun Facts

Kimbap is frequently mistaken for sushi by Western viewers, and many early tweets about the meme called it a "sushi roll" before being corrected.

The film was first announced in development at Sony in 2021, with producer Aron Warner (*Shrek*) attached.

Netflix Philippines' official account joined the meme wave by creating a fake Dispatch tabloid report about Rumi and Jinu's secret meetings from the film.

Fans joked that the amount of food the HUNTR/X members eat in the film is wildly unrealistic given K-Pop's notorious dieting culture, though girl groups like TWICE and Viviz said the carb-loading scene was actually pretty accurate.

Derivatives & Variations

Gun edit:

The kimbap is replaced with a firearm, turning Rumi's sniffing motion into a dark humor reaction to cringe content or extreme discomfort[3].

Object swap edits:

Various items replace the kimbap for innuendo or absurdist humor, following the standard exploitable format[3].

Character swaps:

The sniffing animation is applied to other pop culture characters. A notable example features IRyS from Hololive sniffing a soda can[3].

Rumi Smiling:

A separate but related meme from the same film where Rumi pops up behind a couch with a creepy Cheshire Cat grin, used as a horror-comedy reaction image[3].

Bbno$ live-action recreation:

The musician's real-life version of the kimbap sniff became a meme in its own right with 6 million views[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap

2025Reaction GIF / exploitableactive

Also known as: Rumi Eating Kimbap · Rumi Kimbap GIF

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap is a 2025 reaction GIF from Netflix's *K-Pop Demon Hunters* where purple-haired character Rumi takes an absurdly long sniff of a kimbap roll with an exaggerated blissful expression.

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap is a reaction GIF from the 2025 Netflix animated film *K-Pop Demon Hunters* in which the purple-haired character Rumi takes an absurdly long sniff of a kimbap roll before making an exaggerated, blissful face. The GIF blew up on Twitter/X and TikTok in late June 2025, quickly becoming a go-to reaction image for suggestive jokes and general absurdity. It also kicked off a wider debate about whether modern animators deliberately design scenes to farm memes.

TL;DR

Rumi Sniffing Kimbap is a reaction GIF from the 2025 Netflix animated film *K-Pop Demon Hunters* in which the purple-haired character Rumi takes an absurdly long sniff of a kimbap roll before making an exaggerated, blissful face.

Overview

The meme comes from an early scene in *K-Pop Demon Hunters* where the fictional girl group HUNTR/X eats a buffet of Korean food on a plane. Rumi, the group's purple-haired lead vocalist, picks up a roll of kimbap (a Korean rice roll sometimes mistaken for sushi), takes a long, theatrical sniff, then swallows the entire thing with an over-the-top expression of satisfaction. The animation style leans heavily into exaggerated facial expressions, which made the moment instantly GIF-able. People use the GIF as a reaction to anything indulgent, satisfying, or suggestive, and it's frequently edited to replace the kimbap with other objects for comedic effect.

*K-Pop Demon Hunters* was developed at Sony Pictures Animation, the studio behind *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse*, and directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans. Kang described the project as "my love letter to K-Pop and my Korean roots". The film follows HUNTR/X, a world-renowned girl group that secretly battles demons between performances.

Netflix released the film on June 20, 2025. That same day, the YouTube channel Netflix Family posted a clip of the eating scene, where Rumi's kimbap sniff is visible at the 10-second mark. The video pulled in over 2.3 million views and 14,000 likes within 12 days.

The next day, June 21, Tumblr user @sunflower-of-versace posted what appears to be the earliest GIF version of the scene, collecting over 400 notes in its first week.

Origin & Background

Platform
Netflix (source film), Tumblr (first GIF), Twitter/X (viral spread)
Key People
Maggie Kang, Chris Appelhans, @sunflower-of-versace
Date
2025
Year
2025

*K-Pop Demon Hunters* was developed at Sony Pictures Animation, the studio behind *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse*, and directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans. Kang described the project as "my love letter to K-Pop and my Korean roots". The film follows HUNTR/X, a world-renowned girl group that secretly battles demons between performances.

Netflix released the film on June 20, 2025. That same day, the YouTube channel Netflix Family posted a clip of the eating scene, where Rumi's kimbap sniff is visible at the 10-second mark. The video pulled in over 2.3 million views and 14,000 likes within 12 days.

The next day, June 21, Tumblr user @sunflower-of-versace posted what appears to be the earliest GIF version of the scene, collecting over 400 notes in its first week.

How It Spread

The GIF sat relatively quiet for about a week before Twitter/X picked it up. On June 28, X user @banzoinhakka reposted it to celebrate the movie's release, earning over 1,000 likes in four days. The real breakout came a day later when @hoezayburger tweeted "bro this gif is fucking crazy lmfao" on June 29, marking the first truly viral use of the clip.

From there, things escalated fast. On June 30, @GOREJ1RA paired the GIF with the caption "Springtrap unwasheddih," pulling 6,000 likes in two days. That same day, @ArtofSpongebob posted it with "Why is this movie trying so hard to make the next big meme face?" and racked up roughly 95,000 likes in two days. The tweet crystallized what many people were already thinking and set off a parallel conversation about intentional meme-baiting in animation.

By July 1, the debate was in full swing. @SKULLYtwtt wrote "This movie looks so overly animated as if they're trying to make a bunch of memes and that's what's stopping me from watching it," getting 3,000 likes. On the other side, @heyimcrib pushed back: "Normal people in real life: 'oh this animator wanted to have fun with their scene and make something expressive' / The critically online: 'broooo they tryin to meme brooo.'" That defense post hit 71,000 likes in a single day.

The meme crossed into celebrity territory on July 6 when musician Bbno$ posted a video recreating the kimbap sniff in real life, which exploded to over 6 million views and 80,000 likes in two days.

How to Use This Meme

The Rumi kimbap GIF is typically used in two ways:

As a straight reaction: Post the unedited GIF in response to something satisfying, indulgent, or dramatic. Works well for food posts, good news, or anything that deserves an exaggerated "mmm."

As an exploitable edit: Replace the kimbap with a different object to change the joke's meaning. Common edits include swapping in suggestive items for innuendo humor, or inserting a gun so Rumi appears to be sticking it in her mouth as a reaction to something cringe-worthy or unbearable. Some creators also apply the sniffing animation to other characters entirely. One well-known example puts the animation on IRyS from Hololive, who sniffs a soda can instead of kimbap.

Cultural Impact

The Rumi GIF sparked a genuine critical conversation about animation and meme culture. The core question: did the animators at Sony Pictures Imageworks intentionally design exaggerated expressions to go viral? The film's animation style draws from the same team that made *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse*, known for highly expressive character work, so the over-the-top faces weren't unusual for their approach. But the speed at which specific frames became GIFs made some viewers suspicious that the scenes were engineered for meme potential rather than storytelling.

The debate split roughly into two camps. Critics argued the expressions felt forced and calculated, designed to generate social media engagement rather than serve the narrative. Defenders pointed out that expressive animation has always been part of the medium and that reading corporate strategy into an animator having fun was cynical.

Beyond the animation discourse, the GIF also fit into a broader pattern of *K-Pop Demon Hunters* memes. The film generated multiple viral moments from its exaggerated character faces, with Rumi's kimbap sniff being the biggest breakout.

Fun Facts

Kimbap is frequently mistaken for sushi by Western viewers, and many early tweets about the meme called it a "sushi roll" before being corrected.

The film was first announced in development at Sony in 2021, with producer Aron Warner (*Shrek*) attached.

Netflix Philippines' official account joined the meme wave by creating a fake Dispatch tabloid report about Rumi and Jinu's secret meetings from the film.

Fans joked that the amount of food the HUNTR/X members eat in the film is wildly unrealistic given K-Pop's notorious dieting culture, though girl groups like TWICE and Viviz said the carb-loading scene was actually pretty accurate.

Derivatives & Variations

Gun edit:

The kimbap is replaced with a firearm, turning Rumi's sniffing motion into a dark humor reaction to cringe content or extreme discomfort[3].

Object swap edits:

Various items replace the kimbap for innuendo or absurdist humor, following the standard exploitable format[3].

Character swaps:

The sniffing animation is applied to other pop culture characters. A notable example features IRyS from Hololive sniffing a soda can[3].

Rumi Smiling:

A separate but related meme from the same film where Rumi pops up behind a couch with a creepy Cheshire Cat grin, used as a horror-comedy reaction image[3].

Bbno$ live-action recreation:

The musician's real-life version of the kimbap sniff became a meme in its own right with 6 million views[4].

Frequently Asked Questions