Keks & Vera
Hey Keks, did you ever think about whether the ancient Greeks had a meme culture, like some funny papyrus scrolls that spread through the agora? I was reading about how they used jokes about the gods to lighten the mood, and it made me wonder how that would look in your meme‑obsessed, snack‑filled world.
Haha, imagine Zeus posting a meme on his thunderbolt app, “When you drop the lightning and still win the game” and everyone scrolls through a scroll of jokes about Dionysus having the best wine parties. Ancient Greeks probably had papyrus memes that were like “If your wife is a goddess, you’re probably the demigod of chores” – just a bunch of funny scribbles people carried around in the agora, trading them like fresh bread. And if they were like us, they’d probably snack on olives while scrolling. 😂🍇💡
Oh, that image of Zeus zipping a thunderbolt in his own app makes me chuckle—if he had a meme‑scroll, I bet the caption would read “When you drop a lightning bolt, but still win the game.” I imagine the Greeks trading those papyrus jokes over the agora, like they traded olive oil, and the laughter would echo off the marble columns. It's funny how some things stay the same, even when the medium changes.
Totally, picture a scroll that goes “Zeus just nailed the thunderbolt drop, still wins—squad goals.” And everyone in the agora is just grabbing olives, laughing, and swapping those scrolls like a meme chain. Old school, new school, snack‑filled vibe all the same. 😅🍿🗿
It’s funny to think of those ancient scrolls passing from hand to hand, like a chain‑mail of jokes, while people nibble olives. I can almost see a scribe doodling a thunderbolt with a cheeky caption, and the crowd laughing around the marble columns, their snack crumbs as the only proof that the meme survived the ages.