Dancing Toothless
Also known as: Toothless Dancing · Toothless Dance Meme
Dancing Toothless is a viral video meme featuring a 2D animated version of Toothless from *How to Train Your Dragon* dancing to "Driftveil City" from *Pokémon: Black & White*. The clip originated from YouTuber Cas van de Pol's recap cartoon posted in December 2023 and quickly spread across TikTok and YouTube as a green screen exploitable, with users placing the dancing dragon in every setting imaginable1.
Overview
The meme centers on an eight-second animation loop of Toothless bouncing energetically to "Driftveil City," a jazz-funk track from the *Pokémon: Black & White* soundtrack1. The animation style is deliberately crude and exaggerated, with choppy movements that give the dragon an almost rubber-like quality. Toothless dances with his whole body, bobbing up and down in a rhythmic bounce that syncs perfectly with the music's upbeat tempo3.
What makes the meme work as an exploitable is its simplicity. Creators isolated Toothless against transparent backgrounds, making it trivial to drop him into any scene1. The character dances in Target aisles, office cubicles, living rooms, battlefields, and anywhere else someone felt like putting a happy dragon. The format requires zero context to understand: it's a dragon dancing, and it's funny2.
The Dancing Toothless meme traces its lineage back to 2018's Dancing Lizard meme, where a 3D animated gecko grooved to various songs on YouTube and X (then Twitter)3. On April 22, 2019, YouTuber it's me jb posted a version of the dancing lizard set to "Driftveil City" from *Pokémon: Black & White*, which picked up over 1.4 million views across four years1.
On December 9, 2023, YouTuber Cas van de Pol uploaded "The Ultimate 'How To Train Your Dragon' Recap Cartoon"3. Around the 1:30 mark, Hiccup snaps his fingers and Toothless launches into the same dance, set to the same "Driftveil City" track, directly mimicking the lizard's moves2. The callback was intentional. By grafting the established dancing lizard format onto one of animation's most beloved characters, Cas van de Pol created something that hit multiple fanbases at once1.
That same day, YouTuber A.Z. Clubs clipped the dance scene into its own standalone video titled "Toothless dance meme," which pulled in 30,000 views within two weeks3. Two days later on December 11, The Meek Guy posted a one-hour loop version that racked up 300,000 views in the same timeframe1.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Media
How to Use This Meme
The standard Dancing Toothless format works like any green screen exploitable:
Grab the isolated Toothless animation (transparent background versions are widely available as GIFs and video files)
Place Toothless into a new setting, whether a photo, video, or another meme
Keep the "Driftveil City" audio playing underneath, though some creators swap in different tracks
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The "Driftveil City" track that powers the meme was composed for *Pokémon: Black & White* in 2010, meaning the song is over a decade older than the meme it spawned.
Cas van de Pol's original recap video wasn't designed to create a meme. The Toothless dance was just one gag in a full-length animated recap, but it was the moment the internet latched onto.
The meme is essentially a meme-of-a-meme: a 2023 dragon dancing to a 2019 lizard dancing to a 2010 song, with each layer adding new audiences.
Dancing Toothless GIF sticker packs saw over 14,000 downloads on the SigStick platform alone by October 2024.
Derivatives & Variations
Green screen edits
— The dominant format. TikTokers placed Toothless dancing in countless locations and scenarios using the green screen version posted by @igreenscreenthings[3].
Animal dance edits
— Creators applied the same animation style and music to cats, dogs, and other creatures. TikTok user ho_salt.Studio made "toothless dance but cat," which showed the template's adaptability beyond the original character[1].
Real-life recreations
— TikTokers like yuyu020206 filmed themselves attempting to replicate the exaggerated bouncing dance in person[1].
Side-by-side comparisons
— Edits placing Toothless next to the original dancing lizard, most notably @uwaa.w's viral 2.6-million-view version[2].
Extended loops
— YouTube became home to hour-long and even ten-hour loop compilations used as background entertainment or study videos[1].
Brand adaptations
— The League of Legends UK account traced over the animation with their own dragon character, sparking an attribution controversy[3].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1
- 2
- 3Dancing Toothless - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 4List of Mad episodesencyclopedia