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If there's anything that demonstrates the unpredictable power of the internet, it's definitely the story of Pepe. What started as a laid-back character in a comic in 2005 evolved into something much bigger and more complex.
Matt Furie created Pepe the Frog as part of his 'Boy's Club' series, and the character was basically a chill guy saying "Feels good, man." Nothing special. But when the image started circulating on MySpace, 4chan, and Tumblr around 2008, something changed. The online community began creating emotional variants of the meme: Sad Pepe, Satisfied Pepe, Angry Pepe. Each version captured a different feeling, and people just couldn't stop remixing it.
By 2015, Pepe was already a cultural phenomenon. Here's where it gets interesting: some collectors started trading rare versions of Pepe as digital assets, which was one of the earliest signs of internet-driven scarcity, very similar to what would later happen with NFTs. So basically, Pepe was one of the first memes to demonstrate that the internet could create real value around digital content.
But of course, the story isn't that simple. Between 2015 and 2016, extremist groups co-opted the meme and turned it into a hate symbol. It even made it into the Anti-Defamation League's hate symbol database. Matt Furie was devastated. That wasn't what he had created. So he fought legally and publicly to restore his character's positive image.
What’s fascinating is what happened afterward. In 2019, during the protests in Hong Kong, Pepe reemerged with a completely different meaning. Protesters adopted it as a symbol of resistance against authoritarianism. Suddenly, the same meme that had been distorted for hate now represented hope, unity, and defiance. Matt Furie fully supported this, demonstrating how a single symbol can mean radically different things depending on cultural and political context.
Today, Pepe still lives on in internet subcultures, especially in cryptocurrency spaces. The meme even inspired coins like PEPE, which took the name and essence of the original character. Its legacy is complicated: it’s both a tool for emotional expression and a case study on how symbols can be hijacked and reclaimed.
In conclusion, Pepe’s journey reflects something fundamental about how the internet works. From a humble comic character to a global symbol with meanings that shift depending on who uses it, Pepe proved that memes can transcend their origins and influence art, politics, and technology. It’s a reminder that on the internet, nothing is permanent, and everything can be reinterpreted.