Groobgirls

Think: a background character from Ah! Real Monsters who got lost in a Lisa Frank folder, only to be adopted by a 2000s Webkinz forum.

Many who adopt the GroobGirl persona describe it as a form of digital dissociation. “I’m not trying to be hot or aspirational,” one user explained on a now-deleted Substack. “I’m trying to look like how I feel at 3 PM on a Tuesday—sticky, confused, but fundamentally harmless.” groobgirls

GroobGirls remind us that the internet is still, at its heart, a playground. And on that playground, you don’t have to be pretty. You don’t even have to make sense. You just have to be a little grooby. Think: a background character from Ah

At first glance, the term feels like a typo—a mashup of “grub” and “girl” or a forgotten 90s toy line. But for a small, dedicated subculture, GroobGirls are everything. They are part art project, part digital persona, and part nostalgic fever dream. “I’m not trying to be hot or aspirational,”

There’s also a strong undercurrent of nostalgia for the —the era of GeoCities, Neopets, and Flash games. GroobGirls feel like the forgotten player characters of those spaces, finally getting their moment in the spotlight. The Controversy (Because There’s Always One) No niche internet culture exists without friction. Some critics argue that GroobGirls are simply “ugly art repackaged for dopamine hits”—that the intentional roughness is a gimmick. Others claim the term was originally coined in a private zine collective and has since been co-opted without credit.

If you’ve scrolled deep enough into the corners of TikTok’s alt-art community, wandered through a surrealist Pinterest board, or stumbled upon a Discord server with a strangely specific emoji set, you might have seen them: The GroobGirls.

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