Vine Thud Boom Sound Effect
Also known as: Vine Boom · Vine Thud · The Vine Sound Effect · Dramatic Thud
The Vine Thud / Boom Sound Effect is a deep, bass-heavy impact sound that became one of the internet's most recognizable audio memes. First uploaded to YouTube around 2009 and later popularized on Vine by comedian King Bach in 2013, the sound is used to punctuate punchlines, dramatic moments, and ironic reveals in short-form video content1. It spread across every major platform after Vine's shutdown and is still a staple of meme editing on TikTok, YouTube, and Twitch2.
Overview
The Vine Boom is a short, heavy bass impact sound, like something massive hitting a hard surface. It lasts about one second and features a sharp low-frequency thud followed by a brief reverb tail. Editors drop it into videos at the exact moment something funny, shocking, or absurd happens, turning an ordinary clip into a comedic beat1.
The sound's power comes from contrast. A quiet, mundane scene suddenly interrupted by that deep boom creates an instant punchline without any words. It works the same way a drummer's rim shot punctuates a joke, except the Vine Boom hits harder and carries internet-native irony with it. The effect pairs well with zoom-ins, screen shakes, and freeze frames1.
The actual audio file originates from a royalty-free sample pack called "Cinematic Session: Industrial Samples and Impacts" by Bluezone Corporation, which contains 157 processed industrial sounds designed for post-production work2. The pack includes metal impacts, debris collisions, and heavy slams, and the license is perpetual and royalty-free after a one-time purchase2.
The earliest known upload of the Vine Boom sound traces back to 2009, when YouTube user Superbassman87 posted a version of the distinctive thud. He likely sampled it from real-world audio of a heavy object hitting a surface1. The sound sat relatively obscure for years until YouTuber ChuckySplash included it in a 2012 compilation video, giving it wider exposure1.
The real breakout came in 2013 when Vine launched and comedian King Bach discovered the ChuckySplash sound. Bach started incorporating the boom into his comedy Vines, timing it precisely at punchline moments to maximize impact1. His Vines racked up millions of likes, and other Vine creators quickly adopted the sound. Bach is widely credited with turning the Vine Boom from an obscure audio clip into a comedy staple1.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Media
How to Use This Meme
The Vine Boom typically follows a simple formula:
Set up a moment. Film or find a clip with a clear punchline beat, whether that's a fail, a dramatic reveal, an ironic statement, or someone's exaggerated facial expression.
Drop the boom. Place the sound effect at the exact frame where the funny or shocking thing happens. Timing is everything.
Add visual emphasis (optional). Many editors pair the boom with a quick zoom-in, a screen shake, or a freeze frame to amplify the effect.
Use it sparingly. One or two booms per video hits hardest. Overusing the sound in a single clip weakens the comedic impact.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The earliest known upload of the sound predates Vine by four years, posted to YouTube in 2009 by Superbassman87.
The original sound file comes from a professional sample pack by Bluezone Corporation containing 157 industrial impact sounds designed for film and game post-production.
A Discord user offered to personally mail $20 to Discord headquarters to buy the lifetime commercial license if the company couldn't afford it.
The #vineboom hashtag on TikTok has over 95 million views.
King Bach's original Vine compilation with the boom sound has over 7.3 million YouTube views years after Vine's shutdown.
Derivatives & Variations
The Rock Eyebrow Raise + Vine Boom
— A 2021 edit combining Dwayne Johnson's subtle eyebrow raise with the boom sound, accumulating over 3.5 million views[1].
Among Us Vine Boom edits
— Animations and clips from Among Us that use the boom to emphasize betrayal and "sus" moments[1].
Pitched/slowed variants
— Creators pitch the boom down for a deeper, more dramatic effect or layer multiple booms for escalating comedy[1].
Discord Soundboard copies
— The sound exists on a huge number of Discord servers as a custom soundboard clip, prompting calls for it to become a platform default[3].