An example of Poland portrayed as a "countryball." The inversion of the Polish flag is intentional.

Polandball, also known as Countryballs,[a] is an internet meme, a genre of geopolitical satire, and an art style primarily used in webcomics and videos in which countries and other political entities are personified as anthropomorphic balls bearing the design of their national flagโ€”these figures are generally referred to as "countryballs." Polandball comics usually feature plots that satirize international relations, historical events, and stereotypes associated with featured countries, and are primarily created with widely available graphic art software such as Microsoft Paint, though comics created with more advanced software are often intentionally made to look crudely drawn.

The name "Polandball" is derived from the comics' origin as a means to troll a Polish user on the board named Wojak, who often spoke in broken English. Notably, in these early comics, Poland was drawn with an inverted Polish flag (resembling the flag of Indonesia or Monaco), which is now considered a defining feature of the genre.[1]

After the initial strips that were focused on Wojak, other users on the board began to create their own comics featuring other countryballs and exploring real-world geopolitical relationships and history. The Polandball meme eventually spread to other parts of the internet, spawning large communities on social media sites like Facebook and Reddit,[1][2][3][4] while "Countryballs" videos have grown and continue to be popular on YouTube.[5][6][7]

Background history

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Precursors

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A still frame from "Europe vs. Italy".

The Polandball meme, as noted by the British magazine The Shortlisted, was possibly inspired by the work of Italian animator Bruno Bozzetto.[8] In his 1999 cartoon "Europe vs. Italy," the European Union and Italy are depicted as circles, and the clip highlights the cultural and social differences between Italians and Europeans.[8]

Another possible inspiration for Polandball can be traced back to drawball.com, where users could freely draw on a circular canvas called a "drawball". [9] In August 2009, thousands of Polish netizens from Wykop.pl, PokazyWarka, and various other sites took over the drawball with an illustration of the Polish flag with the word "POLSKA" in the middle. The circular canvas constrained the flag in such a way that it became a literal "Poland ball". [9][10][11] The raid happened after a person on the Kibice.net forum asked for people to help them draw the Polish flag.[10][11]

Other users on the website attempted to sabotage the artwork by inverting the color scheme to match that of a Pokรฉ Ball, or defacing it with a large swastika.[10][11] Eventually, hackers attacked NK.pl and Wykop.pl on 18 August. The sites withstood the attacks, but ran considerably slower for the rest of the day.[10]

First Polandball comics and spread

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The first Polandball comics were published on the German imageboard krautchan.net by a British user of the site under the name Falco, with the intention of trolling a Polish user called Wojak.[1][2][12] Falco's style of irreverent humor, crude drawing, and emphasis on broken English and stereotypes proved popular with other users for the purpose of satirizing countries other than Poland.[1][2][7]

When the style eventually began to be shared in other places on the internet outside of krautchan.net, with Facebook and Reddit emerging as the two most prominent hubs for Polandball comics and community activity, different ideas of what constitutes "good quality Countryballs content" began to develop according to the unique characteristics of each site.[1]

Facebook

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On 11 November 2009, a Facebook page named POLANDBALL was created, reaching over 215,000 likes by July 2015[4], and it is notable for being one of the earliest major hubs for Polandball comics outside of krautchan.net.[13] Though it was initially dedicated to posting Polandball content in the style of the original krautchan.net comics, the POLANDBALL page became known for sharing comics that deviated from the "standard" Polandball conventions, blending the Polandball style with other memes, and simply posting non-Polandball memes centered around history and geopolitics.[1]

The POLANDBALL page is considered the normative authority for Countryball content on Facebook, however the decentralized nature of the various Countryball pages on Facebook has led to concerns about community conduct.[1] The community centered around the POLANDBALL page is known for its rejection of "politically correct" language in its comments sections,[4] and the "satirical and often disparaging humor" often employed within its content across all associated pages.[14] It is speculated that this led to a series of suspensions for the main POLANDBALL page, and its temporary removal in 2017.[13]

Reddit

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A basic Polandball tutorial

In May 2011, a subreddit named r/polandball was created that reached over 350,000 subscribers as of September 2017.[3] In response to the POLANDBALL Facebook page's sharing of "non-orthodox" Polandball content, moderation of Polandball content on Reddit is much stricter and the "rules" of Polandball comics are more heavily enforced than on Facebook or other sites.[1]

Before Redditors are allowed to submit comics to the subreddit, they must submit their first comic for approval by the moderators before being granted permission to post, and every comic must adhere to many pages of rules to preserve the high quality of content posted to the subreddit.[3] Consequently, the subreddit's moderators are considered "strict and authoritarian by numerous people outside the website."[1][3] Despite this reputation, r/polandball is generally considered to be the main hub of user-generated Polandball comics on the internet.[2][3] According to the subreddit's side bar:

Polandball is unique and should remain so. It clearly stands apart from rage comics and memes. Read the official Polandball guidelines. To maintain high content quality, all comics must adhere to them.[1][3]

To this end, various Polandball "tutorials" have been developed on Reddit and other parts of the internet in the interest of maintaining the meme's distinct style.[1][3][15]

YouTube

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Between 2012 and 2017, YouTube channels featuring "Countryballs" content emerged, with the Belarusian channel Art's Animations reaching over 297,000 subscribers as of 2020.[7] Another channel under the name No Idea Animations had achieved over 489,000 subscribers as of 2021.[6] Unlike on Reddit (where moderation enforces normative standards for Polandball comics),[1] "Countryballs" content on YouTube is more varied and often deviates from the conventions established on krautchan.[7]

Countryballs content on YouTube overlaps with another genre of geopolitical content known as "mapping," with the primary purpose of tracking the historical and geographical changes occurring throughout historical periods of interestโ€”due to its simplicity and versatility, the Countryballs format has proved popular with YouTubers producing "mapping" content.[7]

Characteristics and Themes

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clockwise from top left; Comic satirising the Cold War, Comic about Poland editing Wikipedia, Comic parodying Deutsche Physik using an Israel countryball, Comic about Swedish IKEA furniture names

Satire

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Similarly to the medium of political cartoons, Polandball comics aim to satirize a wide variety of topics, including political entities, geopolitical events, history, national stereotypes, international relations, and culture.[2][12] Comics done in the Polandball style often employ stereotypes rooted in racism and xenophobia in their portrayal of countries.[3][16] The intent is to create a caricature, such as Poland's common appearance in the comics as a poorly-educated, low-income immigrant speaking broken English.[2]

Other satirical elements of Polandball comics include abridged or over-simplified accounts of historical events. In a paper titled "Memes and Graphic Novels as Public History," Anna Borkiewicz notes that while "Some historical knowledge and knowledge of this and other countriesโ€™ stereotypes is required to understand Polandball memes,... the brevity of the format does not lend itself to providing detailed historical accounts, and often we see historical accuracy sacrificed in favor of unnuanced simplifications โ€“ from which a measure of humor may be derived."[2]

The role of satire in Polandball comics is debated, with some comics displaying a clearly offensive or racist agenda, however, due to the high effort involved in producing Polandball comics (i.e. due to their hand-drawn nature), it is also believed that traditional politicking is unlikely.[3]

Artwork

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Examples of characters in Polandball comics that do not adhere to the standard "Countryball" conventions.

Unlike Rage Comics or other template memes, the Polandball style is generally user-drawn.[15][16][3] Conventions enforced by r/polandball include the avoidance of Microsoft Paint's line and rectangle tools, and the avoidance of the circle tool when drawing countryballs.[3][15]

Some countries featured in Polandball comics have established conventions regarding the inclusion of props and/or accessories carried by their respective countryballs, such as sunglasses for the United States, and a top hat and monocle for the United Kingdom.[3]

Although countryballs are the predominant form employed to portray countries in Polandball comics, the genre has spawned a variety of deviations from this convention:

Dialogue

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An example of broken English commonly employed in Polandball comics.

Polandball comics extensively feature broken English dialogue for non-Anglosphere countries, or countries where English is not an official language.[19] Broken English is also sometimes used when communicating in comments sections.[4] In a study on ludic normativity in Facebook meme pages, Ondrej Prochazka finds that, "The use of โ€˜poorly writtenโ€™ or โ€˜brokenโ€™ English is strategic here. It involves styling โ€“ conscious deployment of various linguistic repertoires and their mixture depending on the individual countryball and authorโ€™s access to Countryball universe."[1]

Some common broken English tropes in Polandball comics include grammatically incorrect phrases like "can/cannot into" (as in the most famous Polandball phrase, "Poland cannot into space"),[19][3] and incorrectly adding the plural progressive present tense suffix "-ings" to the end of verbs or other parts of speech.[4][19] Broken English dialogue is also produced by including words phrases from languages other than English, or by employing another language's grammar structure or alphabet.[19]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The terms "Polandball" and "Countryballs" are widely considered interchangeable when referring to the genre.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Prochรกzka, Ondล™ej (2020). Negotiating ludic normativity in Facebook meme pages. Vol.ย 8 (Tilburg Papers in Culture Studiesย ed.). Tilburg University. ISBNย 978-94-6416-307-0.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Borkiewicz, Anna (19 October 2021), "Polandball", Public History in Poland (1ย ed.), New York: Routledge, pp.ย 206โ€“217, doi:10.4324/9781003165767-16, ISBNย 978-1-003-16576-7, retrieved 1 May 2026{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Hagen, Sal (15 November 2017). "Polandball is of Reddit: How r/polandball Transcends Memes through Carefully Curated Geopolitical Satire". Institute of Network Cultures. Archived from the original on 28 September 2020. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e Prochรกzka, Ondล™ej. (2016). Cohesive Aspects of Humor in Internet Memes on Facebook: a Multimodal Sociolinguistic Analysis. Ostrava Journal of English Philology. 8. 7-38.
  5. ^ Soldatenko, I. S. (2025). Non-classical mnemonic actors and new commemorative practices in the network space. ะ’ะตัั‚ะฝะธะบ ัƒะฝะธะฒะตั€ัะธั‚ะตั‚ะฐ, 25.
  6. ^ a b Ertanowska, Delfina (May 2021). "COUNTRYBALLS: POLITICAL COMICS AS A FORM OF ALTERNATIVE MEDIA NARRATIVE" (PDF). ะŸั€ะพั„ะตัั–ะนะฝะต ัั‚ะฐะฝะพะฒะปะตะฝะฝั ะถัƒั€ะฝะฐะปั–ัั‚ะฐ: ั‚ั€ะฐะดะธั†ั–ั— ั‚ะฐ ะฝะพะฒั– ะฟั–ะดั…ะพะดะธ. ISBNย 978-617-100-578-5.
  7. ^ a b c d e Sneลพkova, Irina Anatolสนevna; ล alygina, Natalสนja Valentinovna; Rossijskaja akademija nauk; Belorusskij Gosudarstvennyj Universitet, eds. (2020). Obrazy Rossii i Belarusi v predstavlenijach molodeลพi dvuch stran v XXI veke. Moskva: Institut ฤ—tnologii i antropologii RAN. ISBNย 978-5-4211-0254-0.
  8. ^ a b Pingitore, Silvia (23 May 2022). "Interview with Bruno Bozzetto | Silvia Pingitore". The Shortlisted | Celebrity Interviews by Silvia Pingitore. Retrieved 5 May 2026.
  9. ^ a b "Polandball โ€“ A Case Study". Culture.pl. Retrieved 5 May 2026.
  10. ^ a b c d Orliล„ski, Wojciech (16 January 2010). "Wyniosล‚e lol zaborcรณw, czyli Polandball". Komentarze (in Polish). Gazeta Wyborcza. Archived from the original on 1 January 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Zapaล‚owski, Radosล‚aw (15 February 2010). "Znowu lecฤ… z nami w... kulki" (in Polish). Cooltura. Archived from the original on 11 October 2014. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  12. ^ a b Moskopp, Nils Dagsson (2013). Internet-Meme - kurz & geek. Christian Heller (1stย ed.). Heidelberg: O'Reilly Media. pp.ย 86โ€“88. ISBNย 978-3-86899-805-4.
  13. ^ a b Prochรกzka, Ondล™ej (2019). "Making Sense of Facebook's Content Moderation: A Posthumanist Perspective on Communicative Competence and Internet Memes". Signs and Society. 7 (3): 362โ€“397. doi:10.1086/704763. ISSNย 2326-4489.
  14. ^ Prochazka, O. (2018). โ€œLearn English before you start posting...โ€: The sociolinguistics of inequality in a translocal Czech Facebook meme page. (Tilburg Papers in Culture Studies; No. 210).
  15. ^ a b c S. Arvidsson, P. Gabrielsson and U. Johansson, "Texture Mapping of Flags onto Polandball Characters using Convolutional Neural Nets," 2021 International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IJCNN), Shenzhen, China, 2021, pp. 1-7, doi: 10.1109/IJCNN52387.2021.9533306. keywords: {Computer vision;Quantization (signal);Image color analysis;Computational modeling;Transforms;Data models;Software},
  16. ^ a b Wilson, Lam. "HB Herald: May 2017" (PDF). IB Herald. p. 42. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 June 2023. Retrieved 18 May 2023.
  17. ^ a b c d Wellisch, Simon (1 April 2023). "Tringapore โ€“ Singapore in geopolitical comics". Political Geography. 102: 102857. doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2023.102857. ISSNย 0962-6298.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: article number as page number (link)
  18. ^ a b c d ะ“ะธะฑะฐะดัƒะปะปะธะฝะฐ, ะ. ะœ (2018). ะ. ะ. ะ—ะฐั€ะฐะนัะบะธะน (ed.). "ะšะพะผะธะบัั‹ ยซCountrybollzยป: ะฒะธะทัƒะฐะปะธะทะฐั†ะธั ะฟะพะปะธั‚ะธะบะธ ะฒ ะ˜ะฝั‚ะตั€ะฝะตั‚ะต" (PDF). ะคะพั€ัƒะผ ะœะพะปะพะดั‹ั… ะฃั‡ั‘ะฝั‹ั…. 3 (19). Naberezhnye Chelny: pp. 120โ€“125. ISSN 2500-4050.
  19. ^ a b c d Ke, Weitao (14 March 2024). "Deciphering Linguistic Stereotypes in Polandball Comics: A Qualitative Analysis of 'Engrish' and Cultural Representation". Lecture Notes in Education Psychology and Public Media. 42 (1): 18โ€“26. doi:10.54254/2753-7048/42/20240811. ISSNย 2753-7048.

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