Confidence is key to a lot of success in life, but it's not some magic solution that allows someone to circumvent reality. However, that has never stopped a certain kind of person who, by the looks of it, makes it their life’s mission to embarrass themselves publicly.
So we’ve gathered some of the best posts from this group dedicated to folks sharing and shaming people who were 100% confident about something they were completely wrong about. Get comfortable as you scroll through, brace yourself for some secondhand embarrassment, upvote your favorite examples and be sure to share your thoughts in the comments down below.
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Well Maybe That’s Her Favorite Kind Of Yogurt
Love This
"No Nation Older Than 250 Years"
The "Confidently Incorrect" subreddit has been around since 2017, and like much of niche internet culture, it was small at first before expanding into a shared belly-laugh of a community. What began as a simple concept, collecting screenshots of people being hilariously, confidently wrong, quickly took off. The internet, of course, is never wanting for people who have strong opinions and thin facts.
The subreddit has grown to hundreds of thousands of users over time and is now one of the default locations for humor that blurs the cringe-comedy line. Its material has a tendency to bleed into the mainstream, showing up on Twitter, TikTok, and Instagram, and sustaining the internet's hunger for this sort of material in general.
A+ Biology
Indian Billionaires
Oh, Lavern
The "Confidently Incorrect" subreddit is one of the darker corners of the internet where there's schadenfreude mixed with humor, and everyone can't help but congregate to stare in awe at how brazenly incorrect someone is. The rules are simple, posts, comments, or screenshots of individuals declaring things with complete and utter certainty, yet being laughably, irrefutably wrong. It's not the mistake that's funny, it's the swagger, the confidence, the complete and utter lack of doubt that turns boring errors into internet gold.
Big Brain Time
An Mistake
Vanilla Abstract
One of the reasons that this type of content is so popular is because it hits a very human frustration, we all know someone in our lives who acts like an encyclopaedia human but speaks absolute muck. Watching random individuals getting publicly roasted for it online is vicarious. It's like seeing the obnoxious guy at the dinner party get fact-checked by the universe itself. There's relief and humor in watching overconfidence get deflated by the world, and that's what makes the subreddit so engrossing.
Imagine Being Called Out By A Book
Abigail Must See This Reply As An Instant Win
Apparently Peeing Is A Type Of Birth Control
A second is the uncooked humor of contrast. Someone who says "the moon is nearer than Australia" with unshakeable conviction is not just wrong, he's so wrong it's an artwork. The gap between their conviction and reality is the humor. While a flat-out mistake, coupled with the recognition of ignorance, can be annoying, confidently erroneous posts demonstrate the human tendency to bluff or to pose, and it usually leads to something absurd.
They’re Not Completely Off, I Guess
Trying To Act Smarter Than A Real Medical Professional
Stand Office
There's also a feeling of communal reassurance. As you scroll through the thread of unapologetically incorrect opinions, you can't help but feel just a little bit smarter by comparison. It's not sinister, exactly, it's more or less a harmless ego stroking. You might not know advanced physics or obscure trivia, but at least you’re not out here insisting with authority that “penguins are a type of plant.” The internet thrives on making people feel like part of an in-group, and laughing together at outrageous errors creates that bond.
That's The Language 570 Million People Speak In *Latin* America
My Friend, Who For Some Reason Doesn’t Believe Helen Keller Was Real, Can’t Do Basic Math
The Holy Trinity Of Trying To Teach Someone What Prefixes Are
Memetic potential plays a big role too. Most assertively wrong posts end up leading lives of their own, becoming jokes that cycle back in other corners of the web. The humor is easy to pass along, easy to understand, and contains low levels of context, great traits for viral content. To that degree, the subreddit is a part of the wider context of internet humor in which screenshots can go from Reddit to Twitter to TikTok, accruing chuckles along the way.
Big Brain Move From This Fella
Aunt Rap Runner
Belgian Whistles
Finally, there is something disconcertingly endearing about fallibility being in action. Sure, it's funny, but it also serves as a reminder that confidence guarantees nothing and that even the most self-assured human can be an utter blunderhead. In a world where misinformation moves fast and individuals double down rather than backing down, there is value in seeing how silly that looks to others.
Rule
Why Don’t Tattoo Places Just Euthanize Their Clients
All This Time I Could’ve Just Told My Teachers I Didn’t Agree With Their Math
The charm of the "Confidently Incorrect" subreddit, then, is a blend of humor, catharsis, and camaraderie. It's a place where egos are deflated, facts prevail, and all the folks scrolling by get to experience just a tiny bit more grounded in their own fallibility, without sacrificing the pleasure of enjoying someone else's absurdity.
I'd Like To Solve The Puzzle
Just Turn It Off
So Close
Just Breathe, Just A Few Breaths
Spain In Pain
Apparently Europe Has No Food And No "Tech"
Had To Confirm This Is Really What They Mean. Damsel In This Dress
Ducks Are Not Birds
The Point Of Twins
Wireless PC's Don't Exist
"An Authentic Italian Thanksgiving Dinner"
Apparently Women Lose Their Autism After Having A Kid
God Bless The American Education System
I Really Don’t Know How To Simplify It More For This Guy
Metric System At It Again
Apparently (Red) Is A High School English Teacher. The Confidence In How Incorrect She Was. I'm Concerned For Said Students
$15 An Hour = $100k Per Year
Another Day Of Texans Overestimating How Big Texas Is
For context, this was a discussion on speed cameras in Europe.
To be clear - Texas has between 590k-680k miles of road (depending on which source you believe). European Union (not all of Europe, just the EU member states) has over 3 million.
Chickens Aren't Animals
Blood Is Blue Apparently
Passive Income
An Interesting Way Of Adding Percentages
The Restaurant Listed Their Hours As 11 AM To 12 PM
Thats Not How Monitor Size Is Measured
Can't Wait To Tell Skin Cancer About That
Just Use Your Brain
On A Post Requesting The Calorie Count Of Fried Chicken That Was Sitting On A Scale Showing 60g
Gas Doesn't Weigh Anything
Neither Films Nor Geography Are This Guy’s Specialist Subject
I Wonder What Could It Be
But It's Less Sugar, Right Guys?
On A "People Before 500 BC" Type Meme
British Spelling
Well He's Not Lying
Redditor Invents Time Travel
Those Darn Coniferous Cats
Sour Crowd
Asos Giving Us Both A Discount Code And An Education
That Is Your Opinion. You’re Entitled To It But It’s Also Completely Medically Incorrect
Time Is Hard
We’ve Been Pronouncing Chemistry Wrong This Whole Time
And That’s Why I I’m Never Taking A DNA Test
Switching From 24 Frames Per Second To 60 Would Make Movies Too Long
Music Publication Gets Called Out For Incorrect Reporting By The Guy They're Reporting On
This Comment
Job Prescription
Chemistry
I Turned Off My Car’s A/C And Now I’m Not Getting Any Cool Air
Ah Yes, HO2
The Education System Has Failed Ya'll
Some Would Say Its Not All Black And White
Math Is Hard
Science Isn't For Everyone
As Car Goes? Mmm, Delicious
It's Up North But Not America
A True Genius
English Teacher Misspelled Psychology After Calling Out Students For Spelling It Wrong
Carbon Monoxide Is Not Dangerous
Nobody Could Ever Have 1.5 TB Of Ram?
That's Not How Averages Work
Going To The Gym Doesn’t Change Your Physique
When Dunning and Kruger spent the day huffing paint and then had the nastiest 0rgy in history.
When Dunning and Kruger spent the day huffing paint and then had the nastiest 0rgy in history.
