Being a meme genre, it's pretty obvious that Surreal Memes could have memes of its own.
- ANGERY Explanation Spawned from a surreal meme comic posted on the Green de la Bean Facebook page, the comic focused on Meme Man at a restaurant. It starts with him asking where his food is, and then the waiter arrives with his steak with no vegetal, as he ordered. As Meme Man begins eating, a vegetal (in the form of Green de la Bean's mascot, which has been used as the most common vegetal in surreal memes ever since the comic was posted) comes in and flies into Meme Man's mouth, causing Meme Man to taste it and become ANGERY. Ever since, ANGERY has been associated with surreal memes, but the term is also used outside of surreal memes.
- Stonks Explanation Comes from a picture of Meme Man placed as the head of a man wearing a suit in front of a stock chart. It's usually used for jokes about making extremely bad decisions, financially or otherwise, though there are still cases where it's used for positive decisions.
- Not Stonks Explanation A polar opposite of the "Stonks" meme, usually used by memers who prefer to use the original meme for positive situations; the joke here is the usual negative one.
- Helth Explanation Another offshoot of the "Stonks" meme, where the joke is making decisions that will likely be a detriment to one's well-being.
- Shef Explanation Another variant, for memes about being a Cordon Bleugh Chef or otherwise being weird in the kitchen.
- I have achieved comedy. Explanation An image of Meme Man with the aforementioned phrase. Used to mock someone's Incredibly Lame Pun.
- No. This is wrong. Stop this immediately. Explanation The narrator from the Facts series' reaction to an incredibly long pumpkin in the Pumpkin Facts video. Used as a "No. Just… No" Reaction or to tell someone that their image, action or statement is incredibly cursed, disconcerting or off-kilter. In the meme's distilled form, the three sentences here are separate from each other, as shown here.◊