Fortnite’s meme potential is endless. I screenshot accidental team kills with captions like 'Friendly fire: now with 100% more betrayal.' Or edit victory royales to show the loser’s POV with 'Congrats! You watched someone else win!' thrown in.
Voice chat’s perfect for improv too. Narrate a teammate’s struggle like a nature documentary: 'And here we see the wild default skin, unaware of the trap ahead.' Just keep it light—no one likes salt with their laughs. Bonus points for referencing old seasons nostalgically: 'Remember when tilted towers was a thing? sigh Pepperidge Farm remembers.'
Sharing Fortnite jokes is all about timing and relatability. Drop a line like 'Did you hear about the player who won by hiding in a bush? Yeah, that’s called ‘strategic foliage integration’' right after a tense match. my friends lose it over exaggerated 'news headlines'—'Local Player Forgets to Build, Dies Immediately: More at 11.'
Inside jokes work wonders too. If someone always dies falling off cliffs, make it their persona: 'Dave’s Guide to Gravity: Spoiler—It Wins.' Even TikTok trends help; remix the 'Oh no' song with clips of failed snipes. The humor’s in the shared frustration and absurd victories—no one’s safe from being roasted for panic-building a single wall while getting shotgunned.
Fortnite's always been this weird mix of chaos and hilarity, and honestly, the best jokes come from those 'only in Fortnite' moments. Like when your friend gets eliminated by a random llama or when the storm circles force everyone into a ridiculous build-off on a tiny island. I love sending clips of those absurd physics glitches—players ragdolling into the sunset never get old. Memes about default dances mid-battle or 'John Wick skins hiding in bushes' are instant gold in group chats.
Another trick? Poke fun at the meta. Remember when everyone was obsessed with the 'peely' banana skin? I’d photoshop it into random historical paintings and caption stuff like 'Peely at the Last Supper.' If your squad’s into creative mode, build something intentionally janky—a floating toilet shrine, maybe—and label it 'Season 12 leak.' The key’s leaning into how gloriously silly the game already is.
2025-12-19 03:01:25
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Asking for a Friend
Ali Parker
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I always get what I want. Every time.
But not with her.
The beautiful woman my father forced on me through our billion-dollar firm has curves that make me ache.
Never in my short life did I imagine falling for her.
Office romances are forbidden in my company. But she’s a rule breaker.
I guess I am too, but no one knows that side of me.
This single mother with brilliant business sense has a side hustle and still kicks ass at my firm daily.
There’s no way in hell she’s giving in. No matter what I try.
Not even when Valentine’s rolls around. And I pull out all the stops.
Her denial has me needing her like I’ve never needed anyone else.
Where this girl is concerned, I’m not asking for a friend.
I’m asking for me. For today. Tomorrow. Forever.
My best friend loved playing 'jokes.'
On my birthday, she projected my worst photos in front of everyone, saying she just wanted to 'liven up the mood.'
When I was on my period, she deliberately gave me a defective pad. Even when she saw the stain on my clothes, she said nothing–claiming she was helping me 'get more attention.'
After I started dating, she edited my photos into suggestive images and spread them across social media groups, pricing them like a product.
When I finally snapped and confronted her, she just laughed.
"I'm just helping you test your boyfriend," she said.
"If he doubts you, then he doesn't really love you. How can you blame me?"
Later, a man used the information from those posts to track me down and harm me.
I did not survive what followed.
However, when I opened my eyes again, I was back to the day she first shared those images.
For as long as I can remember, my family and I have been living in an underground basement that's completely shut off from the outside world.
My parents have told me that the zombie apocalypse is terrorizing the outside world. The air is completely plagued with the zombie virus, and we'll die if we ever leave the basement.
In order to save the supplies—which are already dwindling, to begin with—I've starved myself to the point I'm all skin and bones despite being only 18 years old.
When I realize that there's only one last can of food left, I leave behind a suicide note.
"Mom, Dad, now there's one less mouth to feed. You'll last a few more days."
After that, I slit my wrist right away.
Once I'm dead, my soul phases through the thick and heavy metal door.
Bright sunlight illuminates the entire world. It's a beautiful, peaceful world filled with greenery. I can even hear birds chirping in the distance.
Mom, Dad, and a bunch of people are throwing a barbecue party on the lawn. The mouth-watering smell of food being grilled permeates the air.
So, it turns out that the zombie apocalypse is just a lie that's designated to trap me inside the fortress. I'm the only one who has died in this sunny, peaceful world.
The news of Jared Foley and me breaking up completely stuns our social groups.
After all, we've been together for ten whole years. Even the invitations to our wedding are printed.
When faced against our friends' doubts and questions, I merely reply, "We broke up over a joke."
At a classmates' reunion on the day before, the drunken Chuck Garner, the class president, suddenly asks Jared a question.
"Heather's your fiancee, whereas Paige is your first love. Who would you rescue if both of them fall into the sea at the same time?"
Jared doesn't even bother glancing at me as he answers immediately, "Paige, of course!"
For a moment, the atmosphere in the private room becomes awkward. Soon, someone quickly eases the tension.
"Have you all forgotten that Heather used to be the swimming champion back then? She doesn't need Jared to save her!"
Jared shoots it down immediately. "Nah. It's because Heather talks too much."
A pause later, Chuck bursts out laughing.
"It's been ten years! To think that the top scorer has picked up a sense of humor!"
Everyone else joins in on the laughter except for me. After all, I know that Jared is speaking the truth.
He's already sick and tired of me rambling on and on when I share every little detail that happens in my life with him every day. That's why he mutes my chatbox on WhatsApp.
I've always thought that this is a part of Jared's personality. That is, until I accidentally stumble upon the chat history between Jared and Paige.
He even makes sure to take photos of what he has for breakfast and sends them to Paige every morning.
Only then do I realize that Jared isn't cold and aloof by nature. He's just cold and aloof toward me.
In that case, why should I stubbornly cling to the ray of light that has never illuminated my life?
On Christmas Eve, my uncle, Garrett Wayne, takes a sip from the fancy whiskey I bought. Then, he points at me while grinning.
"Well well well… I've been watching you since you were a kid, Flint. You were a bed-wetter when you were a little boy, and now that you're all grown up, you stay cooped in your parents' shop while running that social media account of yours. You don't have any skills at all.
"My Ronnie, on the other hand, has an amazing job that will continue paying him and keeping him around no matter how hard times get. Small businesses like your family's will definitely crumble as soon as the tiniest change happens in the global economy!"
All of my relatives roar in laughter at Garrett's quip. My cousin, Ronnie Wayne, pretends to be playing on his phone, though his grin has already become ear-splitting.
Mom and Dad can only laugh along as well even though deep down they are very uneasy and anxious.
I just gaze at Garrett coldly.
In six hours, the blizzard apocalypse will descend onto this world. At the same time, a zombie outbreak will occur across the globe.
In my previous life, Garrett, who had looked down on my family and me, didn't hesitate to push us into the upcoming zombie horde just to take over my parents' grocery store.
In this lifetime, I swear that I will never let him off the hook!
I'm about to pick up a plate of food and smash it onto Garrett's head when I hear a mechanical voice chiming in my head.
"Ding! You have been bound with the Rage System! You may talk back and retort to others to your liking in exchange for supplies. The more arrogant you sound, the better supplies you'll receive!"
As I look at Garrett's insufferable face, I let out a chuckle.
"Oh yeah, I'm not skilled at all. But I suddenly remember this funny little thing. Uncle Garrett, you claimed that you had gone on a business trip to Brimstone eight years ago. But the truth is, you got arrested by the vice squad, right?
"Does Aunt Cassia know about this?"
My wife, Nova Quill, has grown addicted to the thrill and the fresh excitement of immersive horror games. She spends almost all of her time in the gaming room fighting with the game's boss every day.
Sometimes, she even screams things like, "No!" and "Come at me if you dare!". Every time she's done playing, she'll slump on the couch with flushed cheeks, looking very exhausted.
But Nova has crossed a line by skipping out on my birthday banquet just so she can fight the boss. Unable to take it anymore, I bring up divorce in front of her.
Nova thinks I'm just making a molehill out of a tiny thing.
"I'm helping you test out a project that your company has invested in! You should be elated that the game is super fun!"
I just sneer at her in return.
"Who knows if you love the game or the boss himself? Anyway, I'm definitely divorcing you, no questions asked!"
That book's a goldmine for gamers who love a good laugh! One joke that stuck with me goes like, 'Why did the Fortnite banana get arrested? For peeling someone else’s loot!' It’s such a dumb pun, but it works because it ties into the game’s absurdity—like, who even thought of a banana skin as a cosmetic? The book’s full of these meta-humor bits that poke fun at the game’s quirks, like players building entire mansions mid-fight or default dances replacing actual communication. My favorite running gag is the 'medkit instructions' bit: 'Step 1: Find cover. Step 2: Realize you forgot shields again.' It’s relatable chaos.
What I appreciate is how the jokes balance insider references with universal silliness. There’s one about the storm: 'The only thing faster than the storm closing in? Your squad’s WiFi when you’re about to win.' Ouch, too real. It’s not just about the punchlines—it captures the shared frustration and camaraderie of playing. The book feels like hanging out with that one friend who always cracks jokes after getting sniped from nowhere.