Ugandan Knuckles
Also known as: Ugandan Knuckles Meme · UGANDAN KNUCKLES · UK · Ugandan Knuckles
Ugandan Knuckles is a VRChat meme built around a distorted 3D model of Knuckles the Echidna from the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise. Players swarmed virtual lobbies using the avatar while repeating "Do you know de wey?" in a mock African accent, creating one of the most viral and controversial gaming memes of early 2018. The meme sparked a major debate about racial stereotyping in online spaces and drew comparisons to Pepe the Frog's trajectory from harmless joke to co-opted symbol.
Overview
The meme centers on a squat, low-polygon 3D rendering of Knuckles the Echidna that looks nothing like the original Sega character. Players would equip this avatar in VRChat and roam servers in large groups, clicking their tongues, making spitting noises, and asking other players "Do you know de wey?" in a heavily exaggerated accent inspired by the Ugandan film *Who Killed Captain Alex?*1. The swarms operated with a mock tribal hierarchy, searching for a "queen" to worship and "spitting on" anyone deemed a non-believer7.
What set Ugandan Knuckles apart from typical image macros or video memes was its interactive, participatory nature. VRChat gave anyone the ability to *become* the meme in real time, turning passive consumption into active performance3. The result was chaotic mob behavior that could overtake entire virtual lobbies within seconds.
The visual DNA of Ugandan Knuckles traces back to February 20, 2017, when YouTuber Gregzilla uploaded a comedic review of the 2013 game *Sonic Lost World*. The video featured a brief, deliberately ugly parody animation of Knuckles that was shorter, fatter, and far more grotesque than the original character9. This one-second clip would become the template for one of the internet's messiest memes.
Before Gregzilla's video, YouTuber VirtuallyVain had uploaded footage on August 7, 2016, of himself roleplaying as an African gangster in *Call of Duty: Black Ops*, delivering lines like "Follow me, I know the way." That video pulled in 10.5 million views within two years4.
On September 15, 2017, DeviantArt user tidiestflyer built a VRChat-compatible 3D model based on Gregzilla's parody design4. This was the technical bridge that made everything possible. Without a downloadable avatar, the meme would have stayed a YouTube joke. With one, it became a weapon of mass trolling3.
The accent and catchphrases came from a separate stream of internet culture entirely. Fans of Twitch streamer Forsen had been referencing the 2010 Ugandan low-budget action film *Who Killed Captain Alex?*, produced by Wakaliwood studios, while stream-sniping him in *PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds*5. The line "He knows the way of using a gun" from the film morphed into "Do you know de wey" through layers of community repetition4.
On December 22, 2017, YouTuber Stahlsby uploaded "You Do Not Know the Way," the first major video showing a swarm of Ugandan Knuckles avatars trolling other VRChat players with clicking noises and the signature catchphrase4. This was the spark that set off the explosion.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The "classic" Ugandan Knuckles experience requires VRChat, though the meme's phrases and imagery circulate independently as image macros and reaction images. In its original participatory format:
Download the distorted Knuckles avatar model in VRChat
Join a public lobby, ideally with several other Knuckles players
Approach other users and ask "Do you know de wey?" in an exaggerated accent
If a player engages, the group typically declares them "the queen" and follows them
Players who reject the bit get "spit on" (audio effect) and told they "do not know de wey"
Cultural Impact
Full History
Fun Facts
Wakaliwood, the Ugandan studio behind *Who Killed Captain Alex?*, actively embraced the meme, retweeting Ugandan Knuckles content and even creating their own posts.
VRChat's active player base more than doubled over the 2017 holiday weekend, with the Ugandan Knuckles craze acting as a significant driver of new signups.
tidiestflyer, who created the 3D model, was a college student who originally made it just to show off to friends and "mess with users." He never anticipated it would reshape the entire platform.
The official Sonic the Hedgehog Twitter account responded to the meme by encouraging players to be respectful and linking to a Ugandan charity.
Roblox was one of the first platforms to explicitly ban Ugandan Knuckles imagery from its game.
Derivatives & Variations
Other distorted character models used for harassment
A variation of Ugandan Knuckles
(2018)VR Chat toxicity discussions
A variation of Ugandan Knuckles
(2018)Gaming community moderation developments
A variation of Ugandan Knuckles
(2018)Frequently Asked Questions
References (13)
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- 4Ugandan Knuckles - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
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- 8queen city writersarticle
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