We're currently upgrading meme.app to fix some issues experienced by mobile users. Thank you for your patience!
Arby's
|

Fake Arby's Tweet Generator

Create realistic fake tweets as Arby's on X/Twitter. Pre-filled with authentic profile data — edit the text and download as PNG.

Tap anywhere to edit · Scroll down for more options

A
Arby's
@Arbys
We made Goku out of an Arby's bag, curly fries, and a Jamocha shake lid. This took our social media team four hours. They could have been doing literally anything else. We have the meats.
11:42 AM·Mar 15, 2026·14MViews
34K Reposts12K Quotes267K Likes15K Bookmarks

Profile

Profile Photo

Post Content

Embed Photo or Video

Images & videos (max 50MB, 30s)

Time

Time Format

Engagement

Appearance

Theme

Share Your Creation

Get upvotes from the meme.app community

Edit the text to publish

More Profiles Like Arby's

Parody Disclaimer: This tool generates fictional social media posts for entertainment and parody purposes only. Content created with this tool is not real and should not be presented as genuine. All celebrity names and likenesses are used for comedic commentary under fair use.

About the Fake Arby's X Generator

Arby's on Twitter is the quietest powerhouse in fast food social media. While other chains yell, roast, and compete for attention, Arby's posts a photo of a curly fry box folded into the shape of Link's shield from Zelda, captions it "It's dangerous to go alone," and walks away with 50K likes from people who feel seen by a sandwich restaurant. The account is a love letter to nerd culture written in roast beef and cardboard.

The restraint is what makes it work. No hashtag spam. No "LIKE if you agree!" engagement bait. Just a clean photo of handmade pop culture art, a short caption that trusts the audience to get the reference, and then silence until the next post. Arby's tweets like a person who has strong opinions about anime but will only share them if you ask. The feed feels intentional rather than calculated, even though it is absolutely, meticulously calculated.

Fake Arby's X Post Ideas

  • Arby's posting a photo of a Pokeball made from a sauce cup lid with the caption "Gotta catch 'em all. Especially the curly fries."
  • A tweet showing Arby's packaging folded into the Elden Ring with the caption "We have the meats. And the ring."
  • Arby's responding to a game announcement with a photo of the main character recreated from sandwich wrappers, posted within 30 minutes of the reveal trailer
  • A tweet of a curly fry arranged to look like the Triforce with just the word "Courage" as the caption
  • Arby's posting a card from their wrapper shaped like a Yu-Gi-Oh card with the caption "You've activated my lunch card"
  • The account posting at midnight after a major anime finale with a handmade art piece of the main character and zero additional context

How to Make a Fake Arby's X Post

  1. Open the Fake Arby's Tweet Generator with the @Arbys handle and verification badge loaded.
  2. Write a short, dry caption that references a specific piece of pop culture. Trust the audience to get it.
  3. Pair it with an image concept: Arby's packaging crafted into a recognizable character, item, or symbol from games, anime, or TV.
  4. Set engagement to reflect cult following energy: 30K-80K likes, lower retweets because the audience saves these rather than shares.
  5. Download the PNG and watch the replies fill up with people tagging their nerdiest friends.

Popular X Generators

🃏

Play I Have A Meme

Use memes like this one to battle other players in our free multiplayer caption game — right here on meme.app.

Start playing →

All Fake Social Media Generators

FAQ

How do I capture the Arby's Twitter tone?
Understatement. Short captions. Let the art do the talking. Arby's does not explain its references because explaining them would ruin the vibe. Write a caption that a fan of the source material would nod at and a non-fan would find pleasantly mysterious. One sentence, maybe two. No exclamation points. No emojis. The energy is quiet confidence in both the art and the audience's intelligence.
Do Arby's tweets reference their food?
Minimally and cleverly. The food is the medium, not the message. A tweet might say "We have the meats" (the brand's actual slogan) as a punchline to a nerdy reference, but it will never be a hard sell. The curly fries, sauce packets, and packaging are the art supplies. The pop culture property is the subject. The food mention is a wink, not a pitch.
Is this fake tweet generator free?
Yes, completely free. No signup, no account required. Create as many fake tweets as you want and download them instantly.
Can I add a video to a fake tweet?
Yes! meme.app is the only fake tweet generator that lets you embed a real playing video inside the tweet — not just a screenshot. Upload any video and it plays inline just like a real Twitter/X post.
Can I add a verified badge?
Yes! Toggle the verified badge on and choose between Blue (Premium), Gold (Organization), or Gray (Government) badge types.
Does the fake tweet look realistic?
The generator recreates the authentic Twitter/X post layout with the correct fonts, colors, spacing, and engagement metrics. It is designed to be pixel-perfect.
Can I use my own profile picture?
Yes, you can upload any image as the profile photo. Or select a pre-filled profile to auto-fill their real data.
Is there a watermark?
There is a small "meme.app" watermark in the corner for attribution. It is subtle and does not interfere with the content.
Does it support dark mode?
Yes, toggle between light and dark mode for authentic screenshots that match how your audience actually uses Twitter/X.

Usage Policy

This tool is for parody, satire, and entertainment purposes only. By using this generator, you agree to the following:

  • Do not use generated images to harass, threaten, defame, or impersonate any individual.
  • Do not present generated posts as real or use them to spread misinformation.
  • Make it clear to viewers that any generated content is fictional and not genuine.
  • You are solely responsible for how you use and distribute generated images.

Last updated: March 2026