Funny Overkill Memes Has Made Me Feel Significantly Better About My Own Excessive Caution

Jun 25, 2026 01:00 AM EDT
Janitor mops up tiny spilled coffee cup surrounded by excessive caution signs and hazard tape.
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OK so somebody recently posted a photograph of a single candy bar carefully isolated between two checkout dividers, as if the candy bar were a precious artifact requiring its own diplomatic buffer zone, and I felt personally identified in a way that no horoscope has ever managed. These just in case memes are the small ongoing archive of human overpreparation taken to its most absurd conclusion, posted by people who recognize the instinct because they, too, have lived it. The threat is imaginary. The precaution is real. Settle in.

A high school locker door overflowing with dozens of interlocking combination padlocks.

Good luck getting your math textbook before the bell rings.

A man walking down a city street with an American passport strapped to his forehead.

The ultimate power move when boarding a flight.

A flatbed truck transport trailer carrying a tiny pile of loose gravel held down by straps.

Wouldn't want those three pebbles catching a draft.

A yellow plastic wet floor caution sign floating perfectly in a swimming pool.
A single Snickers candy bar isolated between two divider bars on a grocery checkout conveyor.

Don't look at it, don't touch it, it's mine.

A tiny patch of perfectly paved asphalt road laid down in the middle of a gravel path.
A vintage cyclist receiving a spray of liquid on their rear wheel from a moving car.
Cyclists riding on a wet street surrounded by large rectangular cage structures made of PVC pipes.
A parked car completely wrapped in yellow hazard tape to match the parking lines below.
A meme featuring Fry from Futurama squinting intensely with text about saving a video game twice.

Just in case meme

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Look, the actual reason this lane of content works as well as it does is that almost everybody carries some small version of the overpreparation instinct, and the photographs in this category are essentially documenting the moments when that instinct has been taken to a level so extreme that it crosses over into comedy. The funny overkill memes circulating online are essentially the documented evidence of this exact human tendency, where the precaution being taken is, on close inspection, wildly disproportionate to any actual risk the situation presents.

The literal compliance content specifically is where this stuff gets genuinely funny. There is a particular flavor of overpreparation that involves following a rule with such precise, exact accuracy that the result becomes absurd, and the better safe than sorry memes in this lane are essentially documenting people who have decided that the letter of the instruction matters more than the spirit. The wet floor sign floating in the pool. The three pebbles strapped to the truck bed. The compliance is technically correct. The correctness is, frankly, the entire joke.

The protection content has its own particular flavor of recognition. The locker covered in padlocks. The video game saved three times in a row. The paranoid preparation memes in this category are essentially documenting the small daily rituals that anxious people perform to protect things that are, in many cases, not actually under threat, and the recognition of these rituals is, frankly, more validating than most professional reassurance currently available.

The bigger thing happening across all this content is that the human instinct to overprepare is, on close examination, deeply universal, and the photographs in this category give the audience permission to laugh at a tendency that most of us perform privately and slightly shamefully. The just in case memes that travel the furthest are essentially the documented evidence of this exact instinct, where the audience recognizes their own behavior in the absurd extreme being depicted and feels, somehow, less alone for the recognition.

The funny overpreparation content that endures tends to involve this exact quality of relatable excess. The audience is not, mostly, mocking the people in the photographs. The audience is, in many cases, quietly identifying with them, because everybody has, at some point this week, taken a precaution that a more relaxed person would have considered completely unnecessary. The recognition is the medicine. The medicine is, frankly, what makes the content circulate.

The threat is imaginary. The precaution is permanent. The internet has, somehow, become the place where the overprepared finally find each other.

If the relatable excess was your kind of fun, our anxiety humor content is right where you’d want to land next, and we’ve got plenty of overthinking archives, paranoid preparation threads, and relatable overkill compilations for anyone whose contingency plans have, on close inspection, their own contingency plans. Double check everything.

Katie Rodriguez is a seasoned writer with eight years dedicated to meme commentary, viral internet events, and digital storytelling. Formerly a senior meme analyst at Bored Panda and an occasional guest contributor at Vice's Motherboard, Kat specializes in meme culture’s intersection with social media phenomena—covering trends like Milk Crate Challenge, Area 51 Raid, and Baby Yoda. She’s known for her witty writing style and deep understanding of why certain memes resonate across generations, making her a valuable voice on Thunder Dungeon.
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