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You know, I recently delved back into the history of this little green frog and realized that Pepe the meme is not just a sad emoji. It’s a whole cultural evolution that started way earlier than anyone might have guessed.
It all began in 2005 when artist Matt Furie drew the character in his comic Boy's Club. But here’s an interesting point — Pepe first became a meme thanks to a completely random scene where the character says "Feels good, man" at a pretty delicate moment. That image seemed to be waiting for its moment.
Then, in 2008, everything changed. The frog appeared on 4chan, and a real chaos began—in a good way. Users started modifying facial expressions, adding new phrases, creating Sad Pepe, Smug Pepe, Feels Bad Man — variations multiplied. Each Pepe meme became a reflection of a certain emotional state: sadness, anger, happiness, despair.
Then something happened that no one expected. In 2015-2016, certain political movements in the U.S. took over the image and started using it for their purposes. Even the Anti-Defamation League added some versions to the hate symbols list, although Furie himself constantly opposed such distortions of his creation. What a paradox — one meme, different interpretations.
But the crypto community didn’t give up. 'Rare Pepe' emerged — rare, unique versions that people started collecting and even selling as digital assets. Then it transitioned into NFTs and tokens based on Counterparty. The frog was reborn, but now in the blockchain space.
Honestly, the story of this meme shows how a simple picture can become something much bigger. I wonder what other memes are waiting for their crypto incarnation?