This website is a classic internet phenomenon, known for its repetitive audio loop and minimalist design that proclaims "You can do anything at Zombocom." It serves as a humorous, self-referential, and somewhat nonsensical relic of early web culture.
Humorous and satirical essays, short stories, and articles, often featuring experimental and unconventional writing, making it a source of literary comedy.
A simple online tool for creating classic image-macro memes from user-uploaded templates.
Fast, browser-based meme maker with a large gallery of popular templates.
Community-driven hub to browse, rate, and share trending and user-created memes.
Early comedy forum and Photoshop contest pioneer where many meme formats were born.
Famous satirical news site whose articles are frequently turned into shareable memes.
Parody of click-bait sites producing absurd listicles, quizzes, and mash-up by the creators of The Onion
Featuring funny videos, images, and articles. It focuses on comedic content and has a long history in the humor space.
Sketch comedy site where user reactions and clips often morph into standalone memes.
Satirical music-and-punk news site with memes and shareable graphics.
Canadian satire site whose headlines and logos regularly circulate as memes.
UK-based satirical news with bite-sized headlines perfect for meme captions.
Webcomic whose panels (e.g., “What If?”) often get repurposed as educational and tech memes.
Dark-humor webcomics with a huge shareable fan base generating reaction memes.
Humorous illustrated posts—especially rant comics—that go viral as standalone images.
Single-panel science-and-philosophy humor comics frequently clipped into memes
Repetitive-art comic by Ryan North whose dialogue is often memed and remixed.
Absurdist webcomic whose punchlines regularly spawn image macros.
Curated gallery of embarrassing snapshots that users caption and share.
Minimalist e-card generator for snarky one-liners that often circulate on social media.
Meme blog and joke-of-day and puns
A comedic website that says "Graphic Design is my passion"
Features a visual presentation of a hot dog.
A curious 3D browser experience of an animated watch
A compendium of links and images of strange, absurd, bizarre, humorous, surreal, and satiric content from the web's underbelly, updated weeky for more than 25 years.
An entertainment website founded in 2001 that features comedy content such as memes, videos, images, and other forms of Internet culture.
The Hampster Dance is one of the earliest Internet memes. Created in 1997 by Canadian art student Deidre LaCarte as a GeoCities page, the dance features rows of animated GIFs of hamsters and other rodents dancing in various ways to a sped-up sample from the song "Whistle-Stop" by Roger Miller.
detailed information about an endangered arboreal cephalopod species, detailing its habitat and threat
Impressive, and extensive animated scene incorporating numerous references from popular culture, including memes, video games, movies, television series, anime, and musical artists.
Silly web experience featuring animated, bouncing cats with sound effects reminding us of a time when the internet could be wholesome.
An interactive web experience that displays images of people pointing directly at the user's mouse cursor on the screen.
A bizarre dedication to a biological taxonomy and cataloguing of bread clips, referred to as occlupanids.
user-submitted irreverent pictures, cartoons, animations, and games, alongside various community boards, in a retro aesthetic started in 2001 with the slogan "WE LOVE THE WEB!" Responsible for many early memes.
Famed parody site of a fundamentalist Baptist church with absurdist moral stances started in 1998 with updates that lasted until 2020.
Started in 2000, and dubbed as "The Lair Of The Crab Of Ineffable Wisdom" by Joel Veitch. Features animations, live action puppeteering. They've worked with many major companies but likely most known for their infamously off-putting Quizno's adverts.