Vine Boom Sound Effect
Also known as: Vine Thud · Vine Boom · Boom Sound Effect · The Vine Sound
The Vine Boom sound effect is a deep, reverberating bass impact that became one of the most recognizable audio memes on the internet. Originally created by Bluezone Corporation as part of a cinematic sound library released in November 20123, the sound was popularized on the short-form video platform Vine starting in 2014 when creator King Bach began using it to punctuate jokes4. It survived Vine's shutdown and spread across YouTube, TikTok, and every major social media platform, becoming the go-to comedic punchline sound for an entire generation of video editors.
TL;DR
Vine Boom Sound Effect a distinctive bass-heavy 'boom' sound effect that became iconic through Vine videos and is now unavoidablely used across internet content.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Vine Boom works best as a punctuation mark, not a soundtrack. Here's how creators typically use it:
The Punchline Drop — Set up a joke or situation, then cut to a close-up or zoom at the exact moment the boom plays. The dramatic weight of the sound sells the comedy.
The Awkward Pause — After someone says something embarrassing or outrageous, let a beat of silence pass, then hit the boom. Works especially well with a slow zoom into someone's face.
The Ironic Overreaction — Apply the boom to something completely mundane. Someone picks up a pencil? Boom. A dog looks at the camera? Boom. The humor comes from treating nothing like everything.
Stacking — Repeat the boom multiple times in quick succession for escalating absurdity. Popular in TikTok edits where each new detail gets its own boom.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The original sound file is named "Bluezone-Cimpact-sound-001.wav" and lives in a pack of 157 industrial impacts.
The recording sessions involved throwing bricks onto metal plates, dragging steel across concrete floors, and smashing rusty containers in abandoned hangars.
Despite the name "Vine Boom," the sound was created two years before it ever appeared on Vine.
The sound was processed using the PSP N2O multi-effects plugin to enhance its resonant metallic quality.
Bluezone Corporation's original YouTube preview video, posted November 7, 2012, opens with the exact sound that would become the meme. It took over two years for anyone to notice.
Derivatives & Variations
Multiple-boom layered versions for intensified effect
A variation of Vine Boom Sound Effect
(2020)Remixed versions with different bass levels and speeds
A variation of Vine Boom Sound Effect
(2020)Variations with added effects like echoes or distortion
A variation of Vine Boom Sound Effect
(2020)Deepfried versions for extreme comedic effect
A variation of Vine Boom Sound Effect
(2020)Regional and language-specific variations
A variation of Vine Boom Sound Effect
(2020)Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
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- 4Vine Boom Sound Effect - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
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