What's Your Type
Also known as: What's Your Type Meme · WHAT'S YOUR TYPE · What'S Your Type · WYT
"What's Your Type?" is a three-panel exploitable webcomic meme where a woman asks a man about his type, the second panel reveals his secret preference (usually a fictional character or absurd image), and the third panel shows him deflecting with "don't have one." Created by Tumblr artist K009 in July 2014, the format became a popular template for fans to insert their favorite characters or guilty pleasures into the middle panel1.
Overview
The meme follows a simple three-panel structure. In the first panel, a woman asks a man "What's your type?" In the second panel, the man's inner thoughts are revealed, showing what he's really into. In the third panel, he plays it cool and responds "don't have one." The humor comes from the contrast between what the man secretly desires and his nonchalant public answer2.
The format works because nearly everyone has a guilty-pleasure "type" they'd rather not admit to in casual conversation. The original comic by K009 drew from the artist's experience working at an English conversation school in Japan, where students would ask personal questions like this1. The exploitable nature of the second panel made it easy for anyone to swap in their own obsession.
Tumblr artist K009, who ran a webcomic blog, published the original three-panel comic on July 6th, 20142. K009 had worked at an English conversation school in Japan and based the comic on the kinds of personal questions students would ask1. In the original version, the second panel listed names of different fictional characters, representing the man's secret "type." By May 2017, the original post had picked up more than 9,300 notes on Tumblr2.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Platforms
Timeline
2024
What's Your Type first appears online
2024
Gains traction on social media
2025
Reaches peak popularity
How to Use This Meme
The format is straightforward. Take the three-panel template and replace the second panel with whatever represents a "type" the character wouldn't want to admit to publicly. Common approaches include:
- Swapping the second panel image with a fictional character (anime, video game, cartoon) - Listing specific traits or preferences that would be embarrassing to say out loud - Replacing both the second panel and the male character with a celebrity for added context - Using a completely absurd or non-sequitur image for surreal humor
The joke typically lands hardest when the second panel reveals something hyper-specific or unexpected. The third panel stays the same: a deadpan "don't have one."
Cultural Impact
What's Your Type became a recognizable part of the internet since 2024. The meme has been shared millions of times and has contributed to the evolving language of online communication.
Fun Facts
K009's comic was inspired by real interactions at an English conversation school in Japan, where the artist's job was to encourage casual English speaking.
The meme found a natural home in anime fandoms, where "What's your type?" doubles as shorthand for favorite character archetypes.
The original Tumblr post accumulated over 9,300 notes across two and a half years.
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2What's Your Type? - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 3Know Your Memeencyclopedia