Navy Seal Copypasta
A classic internet copypasta in which the poster claims to be an elite Navy SEAL with "300 confirmed kills" and threatens catastrophic violence — filled with absurd hyperbole and typos like "Gorilla Warfare."
More about this meme
Navy Seal Copypasta, also known as the Gorilla Warfare Copypasta or Internet Tough Guy Copypasta, originated on the military imageboard Operator Chan circa 2010 and was first archived on 4chan's /jp/ board on November 11th, 2010. It became a viral Reddit thread in April 2012 with 20,000+ upvotes on r/funny and spawned hundreds of spin-off variants, substituting the Navy SEAL persona for everything from pirates and World of Warcraft mages to hackers and social justice warriors. The copypasta gained additional notoriety in February 2013 when 10-year-old Richi Phelps posted an adapted version to Facebook believing it to be genuine, which spread virally and was covered by Mexican news outlets. With over 16 million confirmed KYM views, it is one of the internet's most recognized aggressive parody texts.
How to use this meme on a site
Domains like gorillawrfr.com and navysealrant.com are strongest when they feel like purposeful destinations instead of simple parking pages. Make the website self-aware: explain the internet behavior the meme is mocking, then offer tools, examples, or editorial angles that let visitors riff on the same online pattern. A classic internet copypasta in which the poster claims to be an elite Navy SEAL with "300 confirmed kills" and threatens catastrophic violence — filled with absurd hyperbole and typos like "Gorilla Warfare."
For the suggested domains, the best hook is often an editorial or gallery format that documents the meme, highlights great variants, and gives visitors prompt ideas for making their own version.
That gives the domains a clearer product story, which helps visitors move from “funny name” to “I can actually picture the website behind this.”
Check domain availability
- gorillawrfr.com
- navysealrant.com
- 300confirmed.com