From memes to public mishaps, 2025 was a yr of nonstop viral moments.
Nonetheless, probably the most viral moments of the yr didn’t simply rack up views on-line — they drove public discourse, sparked debates and highlighted simply how a lot on-line moments can form real-world tendencies.
Labubus
A toy known as Labubu is displayed in Dundalk, Eire, December 10, 2025.
Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters
Arguably probably the most well-known viral pattern of 2025, Chinese language Labubu dolls took the world by storm.
The plush toys have been created by Hong Kong-born Belgian artist Kasing Lung primarily based on figures from Nordic mythology.
The collectables made toy firm Pop Mart a billion-dollar enterprise, as Labubus bought for as much as thousands of dollars on the resale market, fuled by the various celebrities toting the keychains round in public.
Emily Brough, the pinnacle of licensing at Pop Mart advised ABC Information that “current Labubu drops have bought out inside minutes — each on-line and in-store,” as long lines wrapping around malls.
Markus Maciel, affiliate professor of toy design at Otis School, advised ABC Information that the vitality of the toy is mainly attributable to blind nature of which Labubu clients obtain.
“You’ve lots of people on TikTok do blind field opening occasions,” he mentioned. “It is type of like Pokemon the place you get your playing cards, you are undecided the place you are gonna get. These blind field motions assist encourage individuals to maintain wanting to gather and accumulate and accumulate.”
Burglars have been even stealing thousands of dollars price of Labubus in 2025.
67 meme

On this Oct. 30, 2025, file photograph, 67, topped phrase of the yr by Dictionary.com, is displayed on a smartphone display screen in Los Angeles.
Chris Delmas/AFP through Getty Photographs, FILE
The largest menace of 2025? The quantity 67, apparently.
However what, precisely, does 67 imply?
Based on Dictionary.com, which chosen “67” as its 2025 Word of the Year, “the time period is basically nonsensical” however “some argue it means ‘so-so,’ or ‘possibly this, possibly that,’ particularly when paired with a hand gesture the place each palms face up and transfer alternately up and down.”
It is also pronounced “six-seven” and by no means “sixty-seven,” Dictionary.com notes.
No matter its that means or its origin, Technology Alpha – that means children born within the digital era of the 2010s via the current – have embraced it, partly as a result of it is “purposefully nonsensical and all about being in on the absurdity.”
Because the viral meme unfold all year long, companies, academics and others tried cracking down on its use.
Even Vice President JD Vance made a tongue-in-cheek name for the time period to be banned.
“Yesterday at church the Bible readings began on web page 66-67 of the missal, and my 5-year-old went completely nuts repeating ‘six seven’ like 10 occasions. And now I feel we have to make this slim exception to the primary modification and ban these numbers perpetually,” Vance posted on X.
“The place did this even come from? I do not perceive it. Once we have been children all of our viral tendencies at the least had an origin story,” he added.
In Indiana, the Tippecanoe County Sheriff’s Workplace went to one school handy out faux tickets to scholar caught utilizing the phrase, joking that there was a brand new legislation towards the time period.
“Breaking Information: These courageous Faculty Useful resource Officers entered an area elementary college to close down the utilization of the phrase “6 7.” Tickets (faux) have been handed to as many college students utilizing the phrase as doable,” according to the Facebook post.
Coldplay ‘kiss cam’

A “kiss cam” second at a Coldplay live performance in Boston exhibiting a person and girl collectively has gone viral.
Grace Springer through Storyful
In what grew to become 16 notorious seconds of 2025, two company executives have been caught on digicam intimately dancing collectively on a video board at a Coldplay live performance in July.
On the time, Coldplay lead singer Chris Martin could possibly be heard joking in regards to the couple within the viral video.
“Oh, have a look at these two. All proper, come on, you are OK. Uh oh, what?” Martin mentioned. “Both they’re having an affair, or they’re simply very shy. I am not fairly positive.”
The viral video prompted an internal investigation of the tech firm Astronomer that led CEO Andy Byron and chief individuals officer Kristin Cabot to resign.
Cabot spoke with The New York Times in an interview, saying she had acquired between 50 and 60 death threats because of the viral second.
“I made a foul determination and had a few Excessive Noons and danced and acted inappropriately with my boss. And it isn’t nothing,” she mentioned. “I took accountability and I gave up my profession for that. That is the worth I selected to pay.”
Louvre theft

French cops stand subsequent to a furnishings elevator utilized by robbers to enter the Louvre Museum, on Quai Francois Mitterrand, in Paris on October 19, 2025.
Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP through Getty Photographs
In probably the most notorious heist in current historical past, 4 masked thieves stole $102 million price of jewels from the Louvre’s Apollo Gallery in October, which have but to be recovered.
The theft lasted less than seven minutes, because the bandits used a truck with an extendable ladder to chop via a window on a second-floor balcony, according to police.
Dressed as development staff, the robbers smashed two show instances and absconded with eight pieces of jewelry belonging to Emperor Napoleon and his spouse earlier than fleeing on motorbikes.
When police arrived minutes later, they discovered two angle grinders, a blowtorch, gasoline, gloves, a walkie-talkie, a blanket, and a yellow vest that was apparently dropped by one of many fleeing perpetrators.

$102 million in jewels stolen from Louvre
Louvre Museum
