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.
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
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. If you’ve scrolled deep enough into the corners
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 trying to look like how I feel
But what—or who— are the GroobGirls? Unlike established aesthetics (Cottagecore, Cyberpunk, Fairycore), GroobGirls don’t have a single creator or manifesto. The term appears to have emerged organically from a handful of digital artists on Tumblr and Twitter around late 2021. The "Groob" itself is a feeling: something squishy, slightly off-kilter, brightly colored, but melancholic.
Are you a GroobGirl? Sound off in the comments—or don’t. That’s very Groob of you. Note: This post explores a niche, emergent subculture. If you are an original creator of GroobGirls or have more definitive history, reach out—I’d love to update this with your story.