Explore the internet’s most recognizable jokes, formats, and catchphrases with our Memes quizzes. You’ll test your recall of iconic templates, viral moments, and how meme meanings change across platforms and time.

Think you know your internet classics? In this quiz you’ll finish iconic meme catchphrases one line at a time, from vintage image macros to newer viral hits. Pick the missing words from four options and see how many you can nail in a row—no timer, just pure recall.
Can you spot the meme template just from the caption style? In this quiz you’ll match text to the correct meme format, from classic image macros to newer panel layouts. Pick your preferred question count and difficulty, then see how many templates you truly recognize.

Trace the internet’s greatest inside jokes back to where they began. This mixed-difficulty quiz tests how well you know the origin stories, first contexts, and early spread of iconic memes. Pick your preferred question count and difficulty, then see how many you can nail without a timer.
There are 3 quizzes with 366 questions total.
No. Each question has 4 options and there is no timer, so you can answer at your own pace.
Expect a mix of classic image macros, reaction images, viral catchphrases, and widely shared internet moments.
Difficulty and length vary by quiz, so you can pick easier sets for basics or tougher ones for deeper meme knowledge.
Make your best guess, then use the result to learn the correct format and meaning for next time.
These Memes quizzes focus on recognizing popular meme templates, matching captions to formats, and recalling where a meme came from. You’ll also practice separating similar-looking reaction images and understanding how context changes the punchline.
Each quiz is multiple-choice with 4 options per question and no timer, so you can think through references and details at your own pace. Quizzes vary in difficulty and length, letting you choose a quick run for familiar classics or a longer set that digs into deeper internet lore.
The word “meme” was coined by Richard Dawkins in 1976 to describe how ideas spread, long before social media existed. Today’s image macros, reaction GIFs, and short-form video trends evolve fast, and the same template can take on new meanings as it moves between communities and platforms.