Copium
Also known as: Copium · Copium Meme
Copium is a portmanteau of "cope" and "opium" that describes a fictional drug people supposedly inhale when refusing to accept a loss or defeat. The term first appeared as a rap album title in 2003 before being adopted by 4chan users in 2018 and going viral in 2020 as a Pepe the Frog reaction image showing the character hooked up to a tank labeled "Copium"1. The meme became a go-to reaction across politics, sports, gaming, and online arguments whenever someone is rationalizing an obvious L.
Overview
Copium works on two levels. As slang, it's used to call out someone who is clearly rationalizing a loss or clinging to false hope. As an image macro, it shows Pepe the Frog connected to an oxygen tank or gas mask with "Copium" written on it, implying the subject is literally huffing a drug to cope with reality3.
The humor comes from the drug metaphor. Just like an actual opiate numbs pain, "copium" numbs the sting of being wrong. The image of Pepe desperately inhaling from a tank makes the denial look pathetic and funny at the same time. Urban Dictionary defines it as "a metaphorical opiate inhaled when faced with loss, failure or defeat, especially in sports, politics and other tribal settings"2.
Rapper Keak da Sneak released an album titled *Copium* on June 17, 2003, marking the earliest known use of the word3. The album had nothing to do with internet culture or memes, but it put the portmanteau into existence.
The word sat dormant for 15 years before an anonymous 4chan user posted it on the /int/ (International) board on March 30, 20183. This was just the text, no image attached.
The iconic Pepe image came later. On July 5, 2019, an anonymous user on 4chan's /pol/ board posted a meme showing Pepe the Frog huffing copium from a tank3. This was the birth of the visual format that would eventually go viral.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
Copium works in two main ways:
As a reply image: When someone posts a bad take, excuse, or rationalization online, drop the Pepe-huffing-copium image as a response. No caption needed. The image says everything.
As slang in text: Call out denial by saying someone is "on copium," "huffing copium," or "high on copium." Common patterns include:
- "That's pure copium" (dismissing someone's excuse) - "Pass the copium" (sarcastically asking for some after your own team loses) - "Copium levels are off the charts" (describing mass denial in a fan community)
The meme typically gets deployed after elections, sports losses, game nerfs, crypto crashes, and any situation where one side lost and the other side is watching them melt down. The tone is always mocking but usually playful rather than mean-spirited.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The word "copium" existed for 15 years as just a rap album title before anyone on the internet used it as slang.
There's an unrelated genus of lace bugs in the family Tingidae that is also named *Copium*, which makes Googling the scientific term a unique experience.
The Urban Dictionary definition posted in October 2020 reads like a prophecy of the post-election discourse that followed just one month later.
The gap between the word's first 4chan appearance (March 2018) and the iconic Pepe image (July 2019) was over a year, showing the meme needed a visual component to take off.
Derivatives & Variations
Hopium (unrealistic hope/optimism)
A variation of Copium
(2021)Doomium (excessive pessimism or despair)
A variation of Copium
(2021)Copium Huffing (acting as if consuming copium)
A variation of Copium
(2021)Copium Dealer (someone promoting false hope)
A variation of Copium
(2021)Pure Copium (obviously unrealistic coping)
A variation of Copium
(2021)Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1Copiumencyclopedia
- 2Copium - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 3Copium - Know Your Memeencyclopedia