
A notable video example was uploaded to YouTube on June 10th, 2010 (shown below), and it has received roughly 286,200 views as of December 2021. One notable example is of Shrek and Sonic. The concept of the two SpongeBob characters' forbidden love started being remixed into videos and other image macros that involved different, odd-couple cartoon character romances, expecting their own offspring in separate, Rule 34 universes.

The image (shown below) depicts SpongeBob Squarepants and a pregnant Sandy Cheeks walking together with the caption, "Mistakes into Miracles," written above them. Mistakes Into Miracles refers to a notable Rule 34 meme trend sparked by a DeviantArt post made on November 22nd, 2008, by user spongygirl92. The rule often manifests itself in a similar fashion to Rule 34, with fan art depicting the gender-swapped characters engaging in sexual behavior. Īn expanded edition of the Rules of the Internet included Rule 63, which asserted that for every character, there is an opposite sex version of that character. These responses were covered by The Daily Dot. The video struck viewers as wholesome, as they remembered their excitement at being able to watch porn legally. The video, which is NSFW, gained over 2,600 retweets and 9,200 likes (shown below). On November 14th, 2018, streamer posted a video to Twitter in which he celebrated turning eighteen, the legal age to consume pornography, by looking up Rule 34 pictures.
#RULE 34 DEAD BY DAYLIGHT TV#
On August 6th, 2010, a TV Tropes page for the rule was created, which compared it to the tropes "Brain Bleach", "Sexy Whatever Outfit", "Freud Was Right" and "Fetish Fuel." As of June 15th, 2012, a Facebook page for "Rule 34" has accumulated over 6,400 likes. On October 23rd, 2009, The Telegraph published an article titled "Internet Rules and Laws: The Top 10, From Godwin to Poe", which mentioned Rule 34's prevalence in online fanfiction. On August 24th, 2009, the Internet humor site Holy Taco published a post titled "25 SFW Rule 34 Images", which featured several notable demotivational posters of the rule. On February 17th, 2008, an anonymous 4chan user started a thread on the /b/ board titled "Rule 34 thread", which accumulated over 365 responses prior to being archived. On August 20th, the webcomic Xkcd published at comic titled “Rule 34”, which illustrated a hypothetical sexual scenario involving a woman and a guitar.

#RULE 34 DEAD BY DAYLIGHT ARCHIVE#
In May of 2007, the Rule 34 database was launched on with a searchable archive of Rule 34 images. Rule 35: If no porn is found at the moment, it will be made.

Rule 34: There is porn of it, no exceptions. Rule 35 was created as an addendum to the rule, which clarified that if porn on a subject did not currently exist, it would be created. On October 12th, the rule was included in the original "Rules of the Internet" list submitted to the Internet culture wiki Encyclopedia Dramatica. On March 30th, 2006, the first Urban Dictionary definition for "Rule 34" was submitted by user Nukeitall, who claimed the adage was commonly used on a variety of message boards. In May of 2009, Something Awful user Electric Eggs posted a thread titled “Ask me about inventing Rule 34”, in which he claimed to have created the comic with his sister after learning the adage in an IRC chatroom. OriginĪccording to the Lurkmore Wiki, Rule 34 originated from a comic posted on the website Zoom-Out, which was cached by Google as early as October 5th, 2004. Rule 34 is an Internet adage in the "Rules of the Internet" list of protocols and conventions which asserts that "if something exists, there is porn of it." The humorous concept is commonly illustrated through fanarts and fanfictions in which fictional TV and cartoon characters engage in sexual behavior, in similar vein to the Ruined Childhood meme. Rules, 34, internet, porn, rule, axiom, 1990s, rule 34, fetish, lurkmore, zoom-out, lurkmore wiki, electric eggs, holy tacoĮncyclopedia Dramatica Reddit Twitter Urban Dictionary Wikipedia "There is porn of it.
