Viral 5-Star Amazon Review for Tiny Plastic Baby Prank Toys
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5-star Verified Purchase review, posted in the United States on January 7, 2021: Yes. I bought these so I could hide them everywhere for my fiancé to find. At first he thought it was a charming new bit of mine. He thought I only had one or two of these tiny plastic babies. He thought wrong. Hearing his deep exhausted sigh followed by “oh my god” because he has found baby #175 has brought me more joy than I could ever describe. The fear in his eyes when he opens anything because he is expecting a small plastic baby has produced more serotonin than you can imagine. He is a broken man. I have destroyed his hope of living a life free of tiny plastic babies. We will be finding these for the next 70 years. I will purchase these again. 30 people found this helpful.
Overview
The image is split into two sections: the top section is a photograph of a human hand holding multiple tiny flesh-colored plastic baby figurines, with a large pile containing hundreds of identical tiny plastic babies next to the hand. The bottom section is a screenshot of a 5-star verified purchase Amazon product review, dated January 7, 2021 and posted from the United States. The reviewer explains they purchased the bulk set of tiny plastic babies to hide all over their home for their fiance to find. Their fiance initially thought there were only 1 or 2 of the toys, but became exhausted and paranoid once he found the 175th hidden baby. The reviewer humorously states the prank has given them immense joy, their fiance is now constantly afraid of finding more hidden babies, and they intend to purchase the set again. 30 users marked the review as helpful.
Origin notes
This is a screenshot of a real viral Amazon product review for bulk tiny plastic baby figurines, which are conventionally used for baby shower games. The review first went viral in early 2021 shortly after it was posted, and has been widely shared across social media platforms including X (formerly Twitter), Reddit, TikTok, and Instagram as a relatable funny prank meme. This specific instance of the meme is sourced from an X.com (Twitter) RSS feed for meme content, as noted in the provided metadata.