You Tried

2012Reaction imageclassic

Also known as: Gold Star · At Least You Tried · Participation Award

You Tried is a 2012 reaction image meme featuring a gold star clip art with the phrase "You Tried," used to sarcastically mock someone's failed attempts at humor or tasks on Tumblr.

"You Tried" is a sarcastic reaction image featuring a clip art gold star paired with the phrase "You Tried," used to mock someone's failed attempt at humor, an insult, or a task. The format emerged on Tumblr around May 2012 as a weaponized version of the elementary school motivational sticker, and quickly spread as a go-to response for calling out weak efforts3. It drew on earlier "at least you tried" caption traditions dating back to 20083.

TL;DR

"You Tried" is a sarcastic reaction image featuring a clip art gold star paired with the phrase "You Tried," used to mock someone's failed attempt at humor, an insult, or a task.

Overview

The core of the meme is dead simple: a low-resolution clip art image of a shiny gold star, the kind you'd get slapped on a spelling test in second grade, with "You Tried" written across or beneath it. The humor comes from the gap between the genuine encouragement the star represents and the sarcastic way it's deployed. When someone posts a bad joke, a weak comeback, or a swing-and-a-miss insult, dropping the Gold Star image says everything without saying anything3.

The format works because everyone instinctively understands what a gold star means. It's a participation trophy in image form. The phrase "You Tried" strips away any pretense of real achievement and replaces it with pitying condescension1.

Gold star stickers and stamps have been used in elementary schools for decades to reward students for completed assignments or good behavior3. Online, clip art gold stars appeared as genuine compliments toward quality user submissions as early as January 20113.

The broader "at least you tried" sentiment predates the Tumblr-specific format by several years. The phrase was paired with FAIL image macros and cute animal photos on humor communities like eBaumsWorld, Threadbombing, and Reddit starting around July 20083. Early examples included a capsized military tank and a photo of two wolf pups3.

The specific sarcastic Gold Star reaction image, the version most people recognize today, reportedly began circulating on Tumblr around May 20123.

Origin & Background

Platform
Various humor sites (precursor), Tumblr (viral sarcastic format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2012
Year
2012

Gold star stickers and stamps have been used in elementary schools for decades to reward students for completed assignments or good behavior. Online, clip art gold stars appeared as genuine compliments toward quality user submissions as early as January 2011.

The broader "at least you tried" sentiment predates the Tumblr-specific format by several years. The phrase was paired with FAIL image macros and cute animal photos on humor communities like eBaumsWorld, Threadbombing, and Reddit starting around July 2008. Early examples included a capsized military tank and a photo of two wolf pups.

The specific sarcastic Gold Star reaction image, the version most people recognize today, reportedly began circulating on Tumblr around May 2012.

How It Spread

On Tumblr, users adopted the Gold Star as a standard punctuation mark for underwhelming posts. The image would get tacked onto the end of a reblog chain to highlight a post's shortcomings, functioning as a visual eye-roll. Its popularity on the platform generated both widespread adoption and backlash, with some Tumblr users complaining about overuse.

The meme picked up a notable association with Tumblr's Homestuck webcomic fandom on June 12, 2012, when the Gold Star was paired with a poorly drawn image of Homestuck characters. This crossover helped push the format deeper into Tumblr's reblog culture.

As the format spread, users created dozens of derivatives. Variations swapped the message on the star to phrases like "You Didn't Try" and "You Died," expanding the template's range from gentle mockery to outright roasting.

By November 2015, the meme had crossed into the physical world. A website called Awards Against Humanity began selling actual "Participation Award" trophies engraved with "You Tried" on the brass plate for $14.95, shipped with a "Certificate of Participation". The product was pitched as a practical joke gift, similar in spirit to the Ship Your Enemies Glitter project.

The phrase "You Tried" also entered casual slang usage, applied when someone attempts something and fails, or when someone tries to make themselves look good at another person's expense and it backfires.

How to Use This Meme

The You Tried meme is typically deployed as a reaction in comment threads, group chats, or reblog chains. Common usage patterns include:

1

Response to a bad joke or pun: Someone drops a joke that doesn't land. Reply with the Gold Star image.

2

After a failed insult: When someone tries to roast another person and the insult falls flat, the star says it all.

3

Acknowledging minimal effort: A half-hearted attempt at anything, from cooking to art to comebacks, gets the star treatment.

4

Standalone text: The phrase "you tried" or "at least you tried" works on its own without the image, often in lowercase for maximum deadpan effect.

Cultural Impact

The You Tried gold star became one of Tumblr's signature reaction images during the platform's peak years in the early-to-mid 2010s. Its simplicity made it endlessly portable. Unlike memes requiring specific cultural knowledge, anyone who went to elementary school understood the gold star reference immediately.

The Awards Against Humanity physical trophy brought the joke into real-world gift culture. Sending someone an actual engraved trophy reading "You Tried" took the online gag and turned it into a tangible prank, blurring the line between internet humor and physical comedy.

Fun Facts

The earliest known online pairing of "at least you tried" with failure images goes back to July 2008, four years before the Tumblr gold star took off.

The Awards Against Humanity trophy cost $14.95 and came with its own "Certificate of Participation".

The meme drew negative reactions from some Tumblr users who felt it was being overused as a dismissal tool on the platform.

The sarcastic Gold Star operates in a similar vein to the "Seems Legit" meme, both offering faux-validation of obviously flawed content.

Derivatives & Variations

"You Didn't Try"

— An inverted version for situations where the person clearly put in zero effort[3].

"You Died"

— A darker twist on the format, sometimes crossing over with Dark Souls "YOU DIED" screen humor[3].

Poorly drawn Homestuck variant

— A Gold Star paired with crude Homestuck character art that circulated from June 2012 onward within the fandom[3].

Participation Award trophies

— Physical trophies sold by Awards Against Humanity starting November 2015, complete with engraved brass plate and certificate[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

You Tried

2012Reaction imageclassic

Also known as: Gold Star · At Least You Tried · Participation Award

You Tried is a 2012 reaction image meme featuring a gold star clip art with the phrase "You Tried," used to sarcastically mock someone's failed attempts at humor or tasks on Tumblr.

"You Tried" is a sarcastic reaction image featuring a clip art gold star paired with the phrase "You Tried," used to mock someone's failed attempt at humor, an insult, or a task. The format emerged on Tumblr around May 2012 as a weaponized version of the elementary school motivational sticker, and quickly spread as a go-to response for calling out weak efforts. It drew on earlier "at least you tried" caption traditions dating back to 2008.

TL;DR

"You Tried" is a sarcastic reaction image featuring a clip art gold star paired with the phrase "You Tried," used to mock someone's failed attempt at humor, an insult, or a task.

Overview

The core of the meme is dead simple: a low-resolution clip art image of a shiny gold star, the kind you'd get slapped on a spelling test in second grade, with "You Tried" written across or beneath it. The humor comes from the gap between the genuine encouragement the star represents and the sarcastic way it's deployed. When someone posts a bad joke, a weak comeback, or a swing-and-a-miss insult, dropping the Gold Star image says everything without saying anything.

The format works because everyone instinctively understands what a gold star means. It's a participation trophy in image form. The phrase "You Tried" strips away any pretense of real achievement and replaces it with pitying condescension.

Gold star stickers and stamps have been used in elementary schools for decades to reward students for completed assignments or good behavior. Online, clip art gold stars appeared as genuine compliments toward quality user submissions as early as January 2011.

The broader "at least you tried" sentiment predates the Tumblr-specific format by several years. The phrase was paired with FAIL image macros and cute animal photos on humor communities like eBaumsWorld, Threadbombing, and Reddit starting around July 2008. Early examples included a capsized military tank and a photo of two wolf pups.

The specific sarcastic Gold Star reaction image, the version most people recognize today, reportedly began circulating on Tumblr around May 2012.

Origin & Background

Platform
Various humor sites (precursor), Tumblr (viral sarcastic format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2012
Year
2012

Gold star stickers and stamps have been used in elementary schools for decades to reward students for completed assignments or good behavior. Online, clip art gold stars appeared as genuine compliments toward quality user submissions as early as January 2011.

The broader "at least you tried" sentiment predates the Tumblr-specific format by several years. The phrase was paired with FAIL image macros and cute animal photos on humor communities like eBaumsWorld, Threadbombing, and Reddit starting around July 2008. Early examples included a capsized military tank and a photo of two wolf pups.

The specific sarcastic Gold Star reaction image, the version most people recognize today, reportedly began circulating on Tumblr around May 2012.

How It Spread

On Tumblr, users adopted the Gold Star as a standard punctuation mark for underwhelming posts. The image would get tacked onto the end of a reblog chain to highlight a post's shortcomings, functioning as a visual eye-roll. Its popularity on the platform generated both widespread adoption and backlash, with some Tumblr users complaining about overuse.

The meme picked up a notable association with Tumblr's Homestuck webcomic fandom on June 12, 2012, when the Gold Star was paired with a poorly drawn image of Homestuck characters. This crossover helped push the format deeper into Tumblr's reblog culture.

As the format spread, users created dozens of derivatives. Variations swapped the message on the star to phrases like "You Didn't Try" and "You Died," expanding the template's range from gentle mockery to outright roasting.

By November 2015, the meme had crossed into the physical world. A website called Awards Against Humanity began selling actual "Participation Award" trophies engraved with "You Tried" on the brass plate for $14.95, shipped with a "Certificate of Participation". The product was pitched as a practical joke gift, similar in spirit to the Ship Your Enemies Glitter project.

The phrase "You Tried" also entered casual slang usage, applied when someone attempts something and fails, or when someone tries to make themselves look good at another person's expense and it backfires.

How to Use This Meme

The You Tried meme is typically deployed as a reaction in comment threads, group chats, or reblog chains. Common usage patterns include:

1

Response to a bad joke or pun: Someone drops a joke that doesn't land. Reply with the Gold Star image.

2

After a failed insult: When someone tries to roast another person and the insult falls flat, the star says it all.

3

Acknowledging minimal effort: A half-hearted attempt at anything, from cooking to art to comebacks, gets the star treatment.

4

Standalone text: The phrase "you tried" or "at least you tried" works on its own without the image, often in lowercase for maximum deadpan effect.

Cultural Impact

The You Tried gold star became one of Tumblr's signature reaction images during the platform's peak years in the early-to-mid 2010s. Its simplicity made it endlessly portable. Unlike memes requiring specific cultural knowledge, anyone who went to elementary school understood the gold star reference immediately.

The Awards Against Humanity physical trophy brought the joke into real-world gift culture. Sending someone an actual engraved trophy reading "You Tried" took the online gag and turned it into a tangible prank, blurring the line between internet humor and physical comedy.

Fun Facts

The earliest known online pairing of "at least you tried" with failure images goes back to July 2008, four years before the Tumblr gold star took off.

The Awards Against Humanity trophy cost $14.95 and came with its own "Certificate of Participation".

The meme drew negative reactions from some Tumblr users who felt it was being overused as a dismissal tool on the platform.

The sarcastic Gold Star operates in a similar vein to the "Seems Legit" meme, both offering faux-validation of obviously flawed content.

Derivatives & Variations

"You Didn't Try"

— An inverted version for situations where the person clearly put in zero effort[3].

"You Died"

— A darker twist on the format, sometimes crossing over with Dark Souls "YOU DIED" screen humor[3].

Poorly drawn Homestuck variant

— A Gold Star paired with crude Homestuck character art that circulated from June 2012 onward within the fandom[3].

Participation Award trophies

— Physical trophies sold by Awards Against Humanity starting November 2015, complete with engraved brass plate and certificate[2].

Frequently Asked Questions