Meme Sound Effects Pack Zip Download

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Mandy Geise

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Aug 4, 2024, 3:50:49 PM8/4/24
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Areyou looking for meme sounds to download? Discover the best meme sounds at Voicemod, play, download or share them with your friends on social networks or WhatApp. You can also upload your own audio clip directly from your computer and we will add it to our Meme Soundboard to share it with our community.

If you have everything set up correctly (5 basic checks if Voicemod doesn't work article), you can hear your meme sounds but your friends can't hear your memes sound, it is a problem related to the Windows mixer.


Death sounds are sounds heard when a player dies. These sounds come from various media, such as streamer clips and meme sound effects. Death sounds can be enabled and disabled using the Settings in the Menu.


Pluh, also known as "Plug" Sound Effect, Plugg Tag or Plug Producer Tag, refers to a hip-hop producer tag and sound effect used in rap songs of a guy saying the word "plug" (a slang term for a drug dealer), however, he pronounces it like "pluh." The producer tag was created for the rap collective BeatPluggz in 2015, used frequently by producer MexikoDro across songs with Playboi Carti and Kodak Black, among others, resulting in the eventual Pluggnb genre of Trap Music. The sound became increasingly viral and used in memes in 2022 and 2023, following YouTube streamer Fulcrum's use of the sound in his videos. Thereafter, many memes on TikTok and elsewhere used the sound. The predominant TikTok usage in 2023 was horny ASMR with female voices saying suggestive or lewd things, interrupted by the "pluh" sound to symbolize the man's response. Most of the TikTok memes used Overwatch or Fortnite footage.


In 2015, producer MexikoDro[1] and his collective BeatPluggz[2] created the "Pluh" sound effect as their producer tag. In a 2018 interview,[3] BeatPluggz rapper Corey Lingo claimed that BeatPluggz producer BeatPluggTwo[4] created the original sound, recording it with his own voice. According to Lingo, BeatPluggTwo originally recorded the sound saying, "beat plug," but producer MexikoDro later simplified it to just "pluh."


One of the earliest and most famous songs with the BeatPluggz tag is "Plug" by Rich The Kid featuring Playboi Carti and Kodak Black, produced by MexikoDro, which launched on WorldStarHipHop's YouTube[5] channel on December 11th, 2015, gaining roughly 62.8 million views and 507,000 likes in eight years (shown below, left). Starting in the 2020s, uploads of just the "plug" sound effect were posted to YouTube[6] (example shown below, right).


In 2022, YouTuber Fulcrum further popularized the "pluh" sound effect in a meme context by using it in his videos, often spamming the sound over and over again. For instance, on August 9th, 2022, Fulcrum posted a video to his TikTok[7] @graysaberfulcrum in which an earrape version of the "plug" sound is repeated, gaining roughly 151,600 plays and 13,500 likes in 10 months (shown below, left). On December 17th, 2022, TikToker[8] @yodiegangyoufeelme posted a clip from a Fulcrum video that had similarly repeated "pluh" sounds, gaining roughly 893,100 plays and 163,500 likes in six months (shown below, right).


On May 3rd, 2023, TikToker[9] @bvs1n posted a video that followed "Pinkcore" and Corecore editing aesthetics, using the audio of a horny ASMR video of unknown origin in which the woman is saying suggestive statements. The ASMR voice was then interjected by the "pluh" sound effect. Although the video's sound has since been removed, it gained roughly 161,000 plays and 24,000 likes in one month. Due to the sound being deleted by TikTok's moderation team (likely for its suggestive nature), TikToker[10] @bvs1n posted another video with the same premise on May 5th, in which the woman's voice said, "It's getting harder and harder," only to be interjected with "pluh." The second video maintained its sound and gained roughly 483,100 plays and 35,900 likes in one month (shown below).


Memes appear simple at first glance but have added complexity beneath the surface. They exist to express the current meta through satire, making us laugh, by having access to all media since, well, the dawn of time.


That meta ranges from humor, current events, to insert subreddit of your choice. Regardless of the topic, what every meme has in common is that they take a media reference and use a colloquialism to tell a joke or express a point of view. Clinical as that explanation might be, I love memes and think they are brilliant!


What about meme sounds? Meme sound effects are often just as important as the meme itself. Much of the same applies, but you are now hearing the cultural reference that goes along with the meme. I usually associate the word meme with images more than sounds, partly because what we now call a meme sound did not have a name back in the 90s and early 2000s. That is not to say they do not conjure up the same emotions or work in the same ways.


Memes occupy a lot of grey areas these days. Meme sound effects fall under this grey area as well. New copyright legislation is introduced often in an attempt to keep up with new content formats, mediums, and technology. Memes use the power of parody and are not often focused on monetization. In many cases, people attempt to get a meme copyrighted but fail.


My take on memes is that they embody the same spirit of cutting apart magazines and assembling the pieces into a collage or a body that tells a new story. It is fun, and yes, certain pieces can be considered art in their own right. We also live in interesting times of premium content; for example, many Instagram accounts focused on making premium cat content, which translated into profit. We can see how it makes sense for them to copyright their original works.


Copyright itself is there to protect the rights of artists, content creators, and the companies that own significant portions of the rights to a piece of work. By that token, yes, make a meme, but do not try to make money off it if you do not have explicit copyright permission.


Brevity of length is not a guarantee of avoiding the need for licensing. The less than six-second rule is often used as a defense. This does not constitute a legal right to use samples without copyright permission. The only real way is to seek permission from the copyright holder, which is often a combination of the record company and the credited songwriters.


This is a grey area because of how rights are enforced. Some cases might see content taken down, others times the original content owner might request a monetized video featuring their content be removed.


The safest, most cost-effective, and legally compliant approach is to make your own sound meme sound effect. This does not mean starting from scratch. There are still plenty of free sounds out there. We have a great article on making your own explosion sound effects. Links to these are located further down.


Start with an idea, chances are that you already have an idea or topic in mind. We will solely be focusing on standalone sounds from here on. I believe that your personality should play a part in creative exercises, this being no exception.


The main point is you can and should get a little silly when generating content. The process can be a lot of fun and that usually feeds back into fueling your creativity. Otherwise, we start using words like forced and contrived.


I recommend seeking some inspiration from material similar in style or genre, when mixing music I will listen to the same tracks from a related genre to calibrate my ears, take note of spatial cues, and balance. Familiarize yourself with relevant sounds and take note of their length and structure.


If making a sound, maybe go for something like an epic slam for a jaw-dropping moment. You can start with a hand clap or hitting a flat surface, take the same tools you just used and manipulate the pitch and duration into something slower and heavier. Add some reverb for good measure in order to give it a sense of space and you now have a one-shot slam effect.


Memes rely on cultural context. You will need an initial topic to latch on to before your meme sound takes on a life of its own. For example, lifting or recreating the entirety of the Ezekiel verse that Samuel L Jackson goes through in Pulp Fiction does not qualify as a meme sound. For one, it is too long, and without the context of the scene, it just becomes a bible verse. However, taking a still image of that same scene and adding the two lines of meme text will bring that scene and its dialogue to the forefront.


Your sound therefore needs to work in the same way, but in reverse. Can your sound replace a lengthy video sequence or set of stills? The Wilhelm scream is a good example, you hear it and instantly have a dozen images flooding in.


When it comes to meme sound effects, a good tactic can be to mimic a sound if you know that copyright is an issue. For example, dialogue can be re-recorded, word choice and phrasing can be altered. You can tell the same joke using different words, provided the end result is the same it makes little difference. I rationalize this in the same way that a band can cover a song and then make a logical leap where a new song might be inspired by an existing body of work.


Reverb Fart Sound Effect is a viral sound effect of a fart with a high amount of reverb added to it. In video memes, the reverb fart sound effect is often added to enhance the video or make it funny. Since 2020, Reverb Fart Sound Effect has been used in many different videos similar to Vine Boom and Bruh Sound Effect, with spin-off memes existing solely because of Reverb Fart Sound Effect.


On January 28th, 2020, TikToker sinmineral[1] uploaded a seven-second TikTok that they claim to have made using the Voloco app. In the TikTok, they can be heard farting with the added echo and reverb before their face appears in the camera and they screech, which earned them over 677,000 likes in four years (shown below).

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