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You know, the history of the Pepe meme is much more interesting than it seems at first glance. Many think it's just a sad face, but in reality, there's a whole cultural evolution behind it.
It all started in 2005 — artist Matt Fury drew the character Pepe in his comic Boy's Club. The first viral moment was quite funny: Pepe with his pants down saying "Feels good, man." That phrase marked the beginning of everything.
But the real meme explosion happened when it appeared on 4chan in 2008. People started modifying it wildly — Sad Pepe, Smug Pepe, Feels Bad Man, and hundreds of other variations appeared. Each version conveyed different emotions: sadness, loneliness, anger, even happiness.
Then something strange happened. In 2015-2016, the Pepe meme was co-opted by political movements in the U.S. and used in campaigns, including support for Trump. This caused a scandal — the Anti-Defamation League even listed some versions as hate symbols, although Fury himself was strongly opposed to this usage.
And then the crypto community noticed Pepe and said: "Stop, this is perfect for NFTs." 'Rare Pepe' emerged — unique versions that people started collecting and even selling. Entire tokens and projects around this character were created on the Counterparty platform.
In the end, Pepe's meme showed how internet culture can transform, move from one community to another, change meaning and significance. From a comic to a meme, from a meme to politics, from politics to crypto assets. A wild story for a simple frog, right?