Twas I Who Fucked The Dragon

2015Image macro / exploitablesemi-active

Also known as: Kickapoo Meme · And If You Try to Fuck With Me

Twas I Who Fucked the Dragon is a 2015 image-macro meme of young Jack Black shouting profanities at his horrified family from Tenacious D's Kickapoo, exploited for D&D and fantasy gaming bard jokes.

"Twas I Who Fucked the Dragon" is an exploitable image macro built around a line from the Tenacious D song "Kickapoo," where a young Jack Black character shouts profane lyrics at his horrified family. The meme first appeared on iFunny in October 2015 and saw a major revival on Reddit in June 2021, finding a permanent home in fantasy gaming communities, especially Dungeons & Dragons players who use it to joke about bard stereotypes2.

TL;DR

"Twas I Who Fucked the Dragon" is an exploitable image macro built around a line from the Tenacious D song "Kickapoo," where a young Jack Black character shouts profane lyrics at his horrified family.

Overview

The meme uses a screenshot from the music video for "Kickapoo" by Tenacious D, the comedy rock duo of Jack Black and Kyle Glass. In the scene, a young version of Black's character (called J.B.) interrupts his family's dinner prayer by launching into an aggressive rock song with the lyrics "and if you try to fuck with me, then I shall fuck you too." The key detail that makes the meme work is context collapse. In the original song, "fuck" is a combative threat directed at J.B.'s disapproving parents. But when the screenshot and quote are pulled out and dropped into memes about dragons, fantasy settings, or fictional creatures, the word takes on a very different, sexual meaning2.

The source material comes from the 2006 film *Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny* and its accompanying music video for "Kickapoo," uploaded to YouTube on November 30, 20062. The scene shows young J.B. at a dinner table with his devoutly religious family. He derails their prayer by performing an original rock song that builds to the line the meme is named after. As of June 2021, the "Kickapoo" video had over 63 million YouTube views, making it the second-most-watched Tenacious D music video2.

The first known use of the scene as a meme was posted by iFunny user UltimateCringeVine_2016 on October 17, 20152. That image picked up 469 likes and 54 comments over the following six years. It was a quiet start. The format sat mostly dormant for years, circulating in small numbers without breaking into the mainstream meme ecosystem1.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (source video, 2006), iFunny (first meme use, 2015)
Key People
Jack Black, Kyle Glass, UltimateCringeVine_2016
Date
2015
Year
2015

The source material comes from the 2006 film *Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny* and its accompanying music video for "Kickapoo," uploaded to YouTube on November 30, 2006. The scene shows young J.B. at a dinner table with his devoutly religious family. He derails their prayer by performing an original rock song that builds to the line the meme is named after. As of June 2021, the "Kickapoo" video had over 63 million YouTube views, making it the second-most-watched Tenacious D music video.

The first known use of the scene as a meme was posted by iFunny user UltimateCringeVine_2016 on October 17, 2015. That image picked up 469 likes and 54 comments over the following six years. It was a quiet start. The format sat mostly dormant for years, circulating in small numbers without breaking into the mainstream meme ecosystem.

How It Spread

The meme's real breakout came in June 2021 on Reddit. On June 11th, u/boogersaremyfriend posted a meme titled "The Morals of Shrek" to r/memes, pairing the Kickapoo screenshot with a joke about the Shrek franchise. It exploded. The post became one of the top-awarded posts on the subreddit that month, pulling in over 114,000 upvotes and 529 comments in just four days.

Three days later, on June 14th, u/spokwalker brought the format to r/dndmemes with a caption referencing another line from "Kickapoo". That post earned over 1,300 upvotes and 11 comments in two days. More importantly, it opened the floodgates for the Dungeons & Dragons community to adopt the template. The D&D angle stuck hard because the bard class in tabletop RPGs is stereotyped as a character who tries to seduce everything, including dragons. The phrase "twas I who fucked the dragon" fit bard memes like a glove.

The format spread through fantasy gaming communities on Reddit and elsewhere, with users applying the screenshot and quote to any scenario involving dragons, monsters, or absurd seduction attempts in fictional settings. An iFunny thread around the same period saw users quoting extended lyrics from "Kickapoo" in the comments, with one user calling it "the best comment thread I have ever seen on ifunny".

How to Use This Meme

The typical format pairs the screenshot of young J.B. at the dinner table (or a close-up of his face mid-song) with a setup that involves a dragon or fantasy creature. The top text usually establishes a scenario where someone questions who did something outrageous to a dragon. The bottom text (or caption) delivers the punchline with "Twas I who fucked the dragon" or a variation.

Common setups include:

1

A fantasy scenario where a dragon has been "tamed" or defeated in an unusual way

2

A D&D session where the bard character does something absurd

3

Any situation from film, TV, or games involving dragons where the quote can be dropped in for shock comedy

Cultural Impact

The meme's strongest cultural footprint is inside the D&D and tabletop RPG community. The bard-seduces-the-dragon trope was already a long-running joke among tabletop players, and the Tenacious D screenshot gave it a perfect visual punchline. The format reinforced and popularized the "horny bard" stereotype that dominates D&D meme culture on Reddit and social media.

Beyond D&D, the meme fed back into renewed interest in Tenacious D's music. The "Kickapoo" video's view count climbed past 63 million partly thanks to meme-driven traffic. For many younger internet users, the meme was their first exposure to Tenacious D's comedy rock catalog.

Fun Facts

The word "fuck" in the original Tenacious D song is meant as a threat, not a sexual act. The entire meme is built on deliberately misinterpreting that context.

"Kickapoo" is the second-most-viewed Tenacious D music video on YouTube, trailing only "Tribute".

The meme sat nearly dormant for almost six years between its first iFunny post in 2015 and its Reddit explosion in 2021.

The original iFunny post by UltimateCringeVine_2016 accumulated only 469 likes over roughly six years, while the Reddit revival post hit 114,000 upvotes in four days.

Derivatives & Variations

Bard-specific edits:

D&D players created versions specifically referencing bard class abilities, charisma checks, and seduction rolls, often swapping the dragon for other monsters from the game's bestiary[2].

Extended lyric chains:

Comment sections on iFunny and Reddit saw users collaboratively posting the full lyrics to "Kickapoo" line by line, turning threads into singalongs[1].

Shrek crossover:

The viral June 2021 post by u/boogersaremyfriend specifically recontextualized the quote through Shrek's plot (Shrek married a princess who was guarded by a dragon), creating a crossover variant[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Twas I Who Fucked The Dragon

2015Image macro / exploitablesemi-active

Also known as: Kickapoo Meme · And If You Try to Fuck With Me

Twas I Who Fucked the Dragon is a 2015 image-macro meme of young Jack Black shouting profanities at his horrified family from Tenacious D's Kickapoo, exploited for D&D and fantasy gaming bard jokes.

"Twas I Who Fucked the Dragon" is an exploitable image macro built around a line from the Tenacious D song "Kickapoo," where a young Jack Black character shouts profane lyrics at his horrified family. The meme first appeared on iFunny in October 2015 and saw a major revival on Reddit in June 2021, finding a permanent home in fantasy gaming communities, especially Dungeons & Dragons players who use it to joke about bard stereotypes.

TL;DR

"Twas I Who Fucked the Dragon" is an exploitable image macro built around a line from the Tenacious D song "Kickapoo," where a young Jack Black character shouts profane lyrics at his horrified family.

Overview

The meme uses a screenshot from the music video for "Kickapoo" by Tenacious D, the comedy rock duo of Jack Black and Kyle Glass. In the scene, a young version of Black's character (called J.B.) interrupts his family's dinner prayer by launching into an aggressive rock song with the lyrics "and if you try to fuck with me, then I shall fuck you too." The key detail that makes the meme work is context collapse. In the original song, "fuck" is a combative threat directed at J.B.'s disapproving parents. But when the screenshot and quote are pulled out and dropped into memes about dragons, fantasy settings, or fictional creatures, the word takes on a very different, sexual meaning.

The source material comes from the 2006 film *Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny* and its accompanying music video for "Kickapoo," uploaded to YouTube on November 30, 2006. The scene shows young J.B. at a dinner table with his devoutly religious family. He derails their prayer by performing an original rock song that builds to the line the meme is named after. As of June 2021, the "Kickapoo" video had over 63 million YouTube views, making it the second-most-watched Tenacious D music video.

The first known use of the scene as a meme was posted by iFunny user UltimateCringeVine_2016 on October 17, 2015. That image picked up 469 likes and 54 comments over the following six years. It was a quiet start. The format sat mostly dormant for years, circulating in small numbers without breaking into the mainstream meme ecosystem.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (source video, 2006), iFunny (first meme use, 2015)
Key People
Jack Black, Kyle Glass, UltimateCringeVine_2016
Date
2015
Year
2015

The source material comes from the 2006 film *Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny* and its accompanying music video for "Kickapoo," uploaded to YouTube on November 30, 2006. The scene shows young J.B. at a dinner table with his devoutly religious family. He derails their prayer by performing an original rock song that builds to the line the meme is named after. As of June 2021, the "Kickapoo" video had over 63 million YouTube views, making it the second-most-watched Tenacious D music video.

The first known use of the scene as a meme was posted by iFunny user UltimateCringeVine_2016 on October 17, 2015. That image picked up 469 likes and 54 comments over the following six years. It was a quiet start. The format sat mostly dormant for years, circulating in small numbers without breaking into the mainstream meme ecosystem.

How It Spread

The meme's real breakout came in June 2021 on Reddit. On June 11th, u/boogersaremyfriend posted a meme titled "The Morals of Shrek" to r/memes, pairing the Kickapoo screenshot with a joke about the Shrek franchise. It exploded. The post became one of the top-awarded posts on the subreddit that month, pulling in over 114,000 upvotes and 529 comments in just four days.

Three days later, on June 14th, u/spokwalker brought the format to r/dndmemes with a caption referencing another line from "Kickapoo". That post earned over 1,300 upvotes and 11 comments in two days. More importantly, it opened the floodgates for the Dungeons & Dragons community to adopt the template. The D&D angle stuck hard because the bard class in tabletop RPGs is stereotyped as a character who tries to seduce everything, including dragons. The phrase "twas I who fucked the dragon" fit bard memes like a glove.

The format spread through fantasy gaming communities on Reddit and elsewhere, with users applying the screenshot and quote to any scenario involving dragons, monsters, or absurd seduction attempts in fictional settings. An iFunny thread around the same period saw users quoting extended lyrics from "Kickapoo" in the comments, with one user calling it "the best comment thread I have ever seen on ifunny".

How to Use This Meme

The typical format pairs the screenshot of young J.B. at the dinner table (or a close-up of his face mid-song) with a setup that involves a dragon or fantasy creature. The top text usually establishes a scenario where someone questions who did something outrageous to a dragon. The bottom text (or caption) delivers the punchline with "Twas I who fucked the dragon" or a variation.

Common setups include:

1

A fantasy scenario where a dragon has been "tamed" or defeated in an unusual way

2

A D&D session where the bard character does something absurd

3

Any situation from film, TV, or games involving dragons where the quote can be dropped in for shock comedy

Cultural Impact

The meme's strongest cultural footprint is inside the D&D and tabletop RPG community. The bard-seduces-the-dragon trope was already a long-running joke among tabletop players, and the Tenacious D screenshot gave it a perfect visual punchline. The format reinforced and popularized the "horny bard" stereotype that dominates D&D meme culture on Reddit and social media.

Beyond D&D, the meme fed back into renewed interest in Tenacious D's music. The "Kickapoo" video's view count climbed past 63 million partly thanks to meme-driven traffic. For many younger internet users, the meme was their first exposure to Tenacious D's comedy rock catalog.

Fun Facts

The word "fuck" in the original Tenacious D song is meant as a threat, not a sexual act. The entire meme is built on deliberately misinterpreting that context.

"Kickapoo" is the second-most-viewed Tenacious D music video on YouTube, trailing only "Tribute".

The meme sat nearly dormant for almost six years between its first iFunny post in 2015 and its Reddit explosion in 2021.

The original iFunny post by UltimateCringeVine_2016 accumulated only 469 likes over roughly six years, while the Reddit revival post hit 114,000 upvotes in four days.

Derivatives & Variations

Bard-specific edits:

D&D players created versions specifically referencing bard class abilities, charisma checks, and seduction rolls, often swapping the dragon for other monsters from the game's bestiary[2].

Extended lyric chains:

Comment sections on iFunny and Reddit saw users collaboratively posting the full lyrics to "Kickapoo" line by line, turning threads into singalongs[1].

Shrek crossover:

The viral June 2021 post by u/boogersaremyfriend specifically recontextualized the quote through Shrek's plot (Shrek married a princess who was guarded by a dragon), creating a crossover variant[2].

Frequently Asked Questions