Truck Kun

2015Personified trope / fandom in-jokeclassic

Also known as: Truck-sama · Truck-chan

Truck-kun is a 2015 Reddit meme personifying the recurring truck across anime that kills characters and transports them to isekai worlds.

Truck-kun is the fan-given name for the recurring truck that kills characters in anime and manga, most famously as the gateway to isekai (other-world) reincarnation stories. The joke treats every deadly truck across Japanese fiction as a single, sentient entity on a mission to send people to fantasy worlds. Originating from Reddit's r/manga community around 2015, the name stuck because the trope appeared with absurd frequency across dozens of series1.

TL;DR

Truck-kun is the fan-given name for the recurring truck that kills characters in anime and manga, most famously as the gateway to isekai (other-world) reincarnation stories.

Overview

In Japanese anime, manga, and light novels, characters die by getting hit by trucks at a staggering rate. The isekai genre, where protagonists are transported to fantasy worlds after dying, made the truck the weapon of choice for killing off main characters so they could be reborn as overpowered heroes1. Fans noticed this pattern and started treating the truck not as a narrative device but as a character in its own right, dubbing it "Truck-kun" using the Japanese honorific suffix "-kun."

The joke works on multiple levels. Truck-kun is simultaneously a running gag about lazy writing, a beloved mascot of the isekai genre, and a darkly comic personification of fate. Fans describe it as everything from "the most prolific serial killer in Japanese popculture" to a benevolent god sending chosen ones to better lives25.

On April 14, 2015, Reddit user poloport posted a thread titled "Trucks in Manga" to r/manga, featuring a page from the manga *Re: Marina* showing a truck barreling toward a character crossing the street4. In the comments, user shwag945 replied "Oh truck-kun you are my favorite plot device," coining what would become the standard name for the trope4.

The name caught on because it gave fans a shorthand for something they'd all noticed independently: Japanese fiction had a weird obsession with using trucks to kill people. The "-kun" honorific added a layer of absurd affection, treating a blunt narrative device like a familiar friend1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (r/manga)
Key People
poloport, shwag945
Date
2015
Year
2015

On April 14, 2015, Reddit user poloport posted a thread titled "Trucks in Manga" to r/manga, featuring a page from the manga *Re: Marina* showing a truck barreling toward a character crossing the street. In the comments, user shwag945 replied "Oh truck-kun you are my favorite plot device," coining what would become the standard name for the trope.

The name caught on because it gave fans a shorthand for something they'd all noticed independently: Japanese fiction had a weird obsession with using trucks to kill people. The "-kun" honorific added a layer of absurd affection, treating a blunt narrative device like a familiar friend.

How It Spread

By May 2015, the term was already in casual use on r/manga, with user Draaly-Throwaway posting a thread asking which fictional character others would "introduce Truck-kun to". The joke had moved from observation to interactive community bit.

On February 1, 2016, the meme crossed to 4chan when an anonymous user started a thread titled "Japanese Truck," encouraging others to post manga pages featuring characters getting hit by trucks. Six days later, Redditor Xx255q asked "How many deaths has Truck-kun Cost?" on r/manga, framing the truck as a serial offender with a body count worth tallying.

The TV Tropes community picked it up in January 2017 when forum user TendouMan started a thread titled "Truck-kun: The most prolific serial killer in Japanese popculture," arguing the character deserved its own trope page separate from the existing "Look Both Ways" entry. The thread sparked debate about whether Truck-kun was a sub-trope or its own thing entirely. One user joked "Truck-kun isn't a killer! Truck-kun is a god, sending you to a fantasy world to be reincarnated as a hero".

By February 2017, the name had spread far enough that newcomers needed it explained. Redditor 316KO posted "What's Truck-kun?" to r/manga, and commenters pointed them to TV Tropes' "Look Both Ways" page as background.

A fan-compiled study from 2017, updated in 2018, counted causes of death among isekai protagonists. "Traffic accident by truck" ranked third with 37 cases, just behind general traffic accidents at 38 and unknown causes at 102. The fact that truck-specific deaths needed their own category, separate from other traffic accidents, proved the community's point about the trope's overuse.

How to Use This Meme

Truck-kun isn't a visual meme template so much as a running joke applied across contexts:

- When a truck appears in any anime or manga, fans comment "Truck-kun strikes again" or "another victim for Truck-kun" - In discussions about isekai series, Truck-kun is referenced as the method of transport to the new world, often with mock reverence - Fan art frequently depicts Truck-kun as a sentient vehicle with glowing headlight eyes, sometimes wearing the "-kun" honorific on its license plate - The joke extends to real life: someone narrowly avoiding a vehicle might get told "Truck-kun missed you, no isekai for you today"

The humor comes from treating a lazy plot device with the same affection and lore-building fans give to actual characters. Truck-kun has backstory discussions, kill count debates, and power-scaling arguments, all played for laughs.

Cultural Impact

Truck-kun went from fandom in-joke to a recognized part of anime literacy. TV Tropes' "Look Both Ways" page explicitly acknowledges the meme, noting that "calling the vehicle in question 'Truck-kun' (or its local vehicular equivalent) has become a meme" in its description of the trope.

Several anime and manga series have directly referenced or parodied the meme. *KonoSuba* subverts it: protagonist Kazuma Satou dies from shock after trying to save someone from what he thinks is a truck, only for it to be revealed as a slow-moving tractor that posed no danger. *Isekai Transporter* goes even further, essentially starring Truck-kun as the main character.

The meme also prompted retrospective analysis of older series. Fans traced the truck-death lineage back to Osamu Tezuka's *Astro Boy*, where Tobio Tenma's death in a car accident drives the entire plot. *Magical Princess Minky Momo* (1980s) features a truck killing the protagonist late in the series before she's reincarnated as a baby, and the 1984 mecha series *Aura Battler Dunbine* has its protagonist killed in a vehicular incident before being transported to another world. These predate the isekai boom by decades but fit the Truck-kun pattern perfectly.

Wikipedia gave the meme its own standalone article, a rare distinction for an anime fandom in-joke and a sign of how deeply the concept penetrated pop culture awareness beyond the otaku community.

Fun Facts

The original "Oh truck-kun you are my favorite plot device" comment that coined the name was a casual Reddit reply, not an attempt to start a meme.

In the 2017-2018 isekai death study, "unknown causes" topped the list at 102 cases, meaning truck deaths are actually outnumbered by writers who couldn't even be bothered to explain how the character died.

TV Tropes forum users debated whether Truck-kun should get its own trope page or stay under "Look Both Ways," with one user arguing its frequency made it distinct from the general "hit by a vehicle" trope.

One forum commenter identified the truck driver from *Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie* as M. Bison, joking that this explained Truck-kun's "bloodthirsty" nature.

*Full Metal Panic!* features a scene where Sousuke saves Kaname from a near-miss with Truck-kun, prompting fans to call Sousuke one of the few characters to defeat it in combat.

Derivatives & Variations

Truck-sama / Truck-chan:

Alternate honorific versions of the name, using the more respectful "-sama" or the cute "-chan" suffix depending on the fan's attitude toward the truck[4]

KonoSuba tractor parody:

The series' subversion where the "truck" is actually a harmless tractor became its own widely referenced joke within the fandom[1]

Isekai Transporter manga:

A manga that essentially stars Truck-kun as the protagonist, making the meta-joke into an actual published series[1]

Kill count compilations:

Fan-maintained lists tracking every truck death across anime and manga, with the 2017-2018 study documenting 37 truck-specific deaths among isekai protagonists[1]

Truck-kun fan art:

Community-created artwork personifying the truck as a character, often depicted with menacing headlight eyes or wearing anime-style accessories[2]

Frequently Asked Questions

Truck Kun

2015Personified trope / fandom in-jokeclassic

Also known as: Truck-sama · Truck-chan

Truck-kun is a 2015 Reddit meme personifying the recurring truck across anime that kills characters and transports them to isekai worlds.

Truck-kun is the fan-given name for the recurring truck that kills characters in anime and manga, most famously as the gateway to isekai (other-world) reincarnation stories. The joke treats every deadly truck across Japanese fiction as a single, sentient entity on a mission to send people to fantasy worlds. Originating from Reddit's r/manga community around 2015, the name stuck because the trope appeared with absurd frequency across dozens of series.

TL;DR

Truck-kun is the fan-given name for the recurring truck that kills characters in anime and manga, most famously as the gateway to isekai (other-world) reincarnation stories.

Overview

In Japanese anime, manga, and light novels, characters die by getting hit by trucks at a staggering rate. The isekai genre, where protagonists are transported to fantasy worlds after dying, made the truck the weapon of choice for killing off main characters so they could be reborn as overpowered heroes. Fans noticed this pattern and started treating the truck not as a narrative device but as a character in its own right, dubbing it "Truck-kun" using the Japanese honorific suffix "-kun."

The joke works on multiple levels. Truck-kun is simultaneously a running gag about lazy writing, a beloved mascot of the isekai genre, and a darkly comic personification of fate. Fans describe it as everything from "the most prolific serial killer in Japanese popculture" to a benevolent god sending chosen ones to better lives.

On April 14, 2015, Reddit user poloport posted a thread titled "Trucks in Manga" to r/manga, featuring a page from the manga *Re: Marina* showing a truck barreling toward a character crossing the street. In the comments, user shwag945 replied "Oh truck-kun you are my favorite plot device," coining what would become the standard name for the trope.

The name caught on because it gave fans a shorthand for something they'd all noticed independently: Japanese fiction had a weird obsession with using trucks to kill people. The "-kun" honorific added a layer of absurd affection, treating a blunt narrative device like a familiar friend.

Origin & Background

Platform
Reddit (r/manga)
Key People
poloport, shwag945
Date
2015
Year
2015

On April 14, 2015, Reddit user poloport posted a thread titled "Trucks in Manga" to r/manga, featuring a page from the manga *Re: Marina* showing a truck barreling toward a character crossing the street. In the comments, user shwag945 replied "Oh truck-kun you are my favorite plot device," coining what would become the standard name for the trope.

The name caught on because it gave fans a shorthand for something they'd all noticed independently: Japanese fiction had a weird obsession with using trucks to kill people. The "-kun" honorific added a layer of absurd affection, treating a blunt narrative device like a familiar friend.

How It Spread

By May 2015, the term was already in casual use on r/manga, with user Draaly-Throwaway posting a thread asking which fictional character others would "introduce Truck-kun to". The joke had moved from observation to interactive community bit.

On February 1, 2016, the meme crossed to 4chan when an anonymous user started a thread titled "Japanese Truck," encouraging others to post manga pages featuring characters getting hit by trucks. Six days later, Redditor Xx255q asked "How many deaths has Truck-kun Cost?" on r/manga, framing the truck as a serial offender with a body count worth tallying.

The TV Tropes community picked it up in January 2017 when forum user TendouMan started a thread titled "Truck-kun: The most prolific serial killer in Japanese popculture," arguing the character deserved its own trope page separate from the existing "Look Both Ways" entry. The thread sparked debate about whether Truck-kun was a sub-trope or its own thing entirely. One user joked "Truck-kun isn't a killer! Truck-kun is a god, sending you to a fantasy world to be reincarnated as a hero".

By February 2017, the name had spread far enough that newcomers needed it explained. Redditor 316KO posted "What's Truck-kun?" to r/manga, and commenters pointed them to TV Tropes' "Look Both Ways" page as background.

A fan-compiled study from 2017, updated in 2018, counted causes of death among isekai protagonists. "Traffic accident by truck" ranked third with 37 cases, just behind general traffic accidents at 38 and unknown causes at 102. The fact that truck-specific deaths needed their own category, separate from other traffic accidents, proved the community's point about the trope's overuse.

How to Use This Meme

Truck-kun isn't a visual meme template so much as a running joke applied across contexts:

- When a truck appears in any anime or manga, fans comment "Truck-kun strikes again" or "another victim for Truck-kun" - In discussions about isekai series, Truck-kun is referenced as the method of transport to the new world, often with mock reverence - Fan art frequently depicts Truck-kun as a sentient vehicle with glowing headlight eyes, sometimes wearing the "-kun" honorific on its license plate - The joke extends to real life: someone narrowly avoiding a vehicle might get told "Truck-kun missed you, no isekai for you today"

The humor comes from treating a lazy plot device with the same affection and lore-building fans give to actual characters. Truck-kun has backstory discussions, kill count debates, and power-scaling arguments, all played for laughs.

Cultural Impact

Truck-kun went from fandom in-joke to a recognized part of anime literacy. TV Tropes' "Look Both Ways" page explicitly acknowledges the meme, noting that "calling the vehicle in question 'Truck-kun' (or its local vehicular equivalent) has become a meme" in its description of the trope.

Several anime and manga series have directly referenced or parodied the meme. *KonoSuba* subverts it: protagonist Kazuma Satou dies from shock after trying to save someone from what he thinks is a truck, only for it to be revealed as a slow-moving tractor that posed no danger. *Isekai Transporter* goes even further, essentially starring Truck-kun as the main character.

The meme also prompted retrospective analysis of older series. Fans traced the truck-death lineage back to Osamu Tezuka's *Astro Boy*, where Tobio Tenma's death in a car accident drives the entire plot. *Magical Princess Minky Momo* (1980s) features a truck killing the protagonist late in the series before she's reincarnated as a baby, and the 1984 mecha series *Aura Battler Dunbine* has its protagonist killed in a vehicular incident before being transported to another world. These predate the isekai boom by decades but fit the Truck-kun pattern perfectly.

Wikipedia gave the meme its own standalone article, a rare distinction for an anime fandom in-joke and a sign of how deeply the concept penetrated pop culture awareness beyond the otaku community.

Fun Facts

The original "Oh truck-kun you are my favorite plot device" comment that coined the name was a casual Reddit reply, not an attempt to start a meme.

In the 2017-2018 isekai death study, "unknown causes" topped the list at 102 cases, meaning truck deaths are actually outnumbered by writers who couldn't even be bothered to explain how the character died.

TV Tropes forum users debated whether Truck-kun should get its own trope page or stay under "Look Both Ways," with one user arguing its frequency made it distinct from the general "hit by a vehicle" trope.

One forum commenter identified the truck driver from *Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie* as M. Bison, joking that this explained Truck-kun's "bloodthirsty" nature.

*Full Metal Panic!* features a scene where Sousuke saves Kaname from a near-miss with Truck-kun, prompting fans to call Sousuke one of the few characters to defeat it in combat.

Derivatives & Variations

Truck-sama / Truck-chan:

Alternate honorific versions of the name, using the more respectful "-sama" or the cute "-chan" suffix depending on the fan's attitude toward the truck[4]

KonoSuba tractor parody:

The series' subversion where the "truck" is actually a harmless tractor became its own widely referenced joke within the fandom[1]

Isekai Transporter manga:

A manga that essentially stars Truck-kun as the protagonist, making the meta-joke into an actual published series[1]

Kill count compilations:

Fan-maintained lists tracking every truck death across anime and manga, with the 2017-2018 study documenting 37 truck-specific deaths among isekai protagonists[1]

Truck-kun fan art:

Community-created artwork personifying the truck as a character, often depicted with menacing headlight eyes or wearing anime-style accessories[2]

Frequently Asked Questions