You know the line. You've seen it in reels, on X, in TikToks, probably in a group chat. An animated character pulls out an iPhone and says:

"Aye boy, I just got that new iPhone. It even got an app to destroy all opps."

Then he taps the screen and — boom — the opps get obliterated. The clip lasts about 15 seconds. But those 15 seconds did something nobody expected: they made millions of people actually search for the app.

Not as a joke. Not ironically. People opened Google and typed variations of that exact line:

They were searching for something that didn't exist. Now it does.

Why That Line Hit Different

There are thousands of memes. Most of them get a laugh and disappear. This one made people take action — literal Google searches for a product that was fictional.

Why?

Because the line tapped into something real. Behind the humor, there's a universal fantasy: what if there was a button — or an app — that just... handled your problems? Debt? Destroyed. Bad habits? Gone. That thing you've been avoiding for six months? Obliterated.

The meme gave that fantasy a name. And a format. And suddenly it felt possible.

The meme didn't create the desire. It revealed it. Millions of people were already looking for a way to destroy their opps — they just didn't have the language for it until a cartoon character said it out loud.

Where the Quote Comes From

The line is from "The Black OddParents" — a parody of The Fairly OddParents animated show, uploaded to YouTube in January 2020 by creator Zae Bae. In the parody, the main character shows off his new iPhone and its most important app: one that destroys all opps.

For years, the video had modest views. Then in late 2025, the clip resurfaced. Someone extracted the "aye boy" segment, and it spread across every platform simultaneously — X, Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts. The 15-second clip became one of the most remixed, quoted, and referenced memes of early 2026.

People weren't just sharing it. They were searching for it. Google Trends data from December 2025 onward shows the search term "destroy all opps app" spiking in 22+ countries. The demand was global.

From Meme Quote to Real Search Query

Here's what makes this different from every other viral moment: people searched for the product from the meme.

Think about that. When someone sees a funny clip about a car, they don't go search for that specific car. When someone sees a meme about a restaurant, they don't try to book a table there. But when people saw the "destroy all opps" clip, thousands of them — across dozens of countries — went to Google and searched for the app. As if it should exist. As if it needed to exist.

The search queries tell the story. People typed the exact meme quote into Google:

These aren't standard search queries. These are people quoting the meme at Google and hoping something comes back. That's not how search usually works — but it tells you how badly people wanted this to be real.

Then Someone Built It

When search data from 120+ countries tells you people want something, you build it.

Blitz is the app that the meme described. Not a joke app. Not a soundboard. A real tool that takes your obstacles — your opps — and turns them into quests you can actually complete.

The animated character said "it even got an app to destroy all opps." He was right. It just took a little while to catch up.

The Best Meme Is the One That Becomes Real

Most memes are disposable. They trend, they peak, they fade. But sometimes a meme captures something so fundamental that it outlasts the joke. The "destroy all opps" meme did that. It named a universal human need in five words, delivered by a cartoon character.

And now there's an actual app for it.

If you searched for "it even got an app to destroy all opps" and landed here — you found it. The meme is the marketing. The app is real.

THE APP FROM THE MEME. IT'S REAL.

Join the waitlist for Blitz — the app to destroy all opps. Launching on iPhone.