Let’s be honest—trusting the internet in 2025 feels like walking on thin ice. These days, we zoom in, squint, and overanalyze every pixel, trying to figure out if what we’re seeing is legit or just another digital illusion. With AI getting smarter by the minute, skepticism has basically become a survival skill. But rewind a few years, and things were very different. Back then, we scrolled fast, believed quick, and shared even faster.
Not so long ago, the internet was a wild place where context went missing and viral images ruled the timeline. A single photo could spark outrage, awe, or total confusion—often without anyone stopping to ask how or why it existed. Some of these images looked so real, so perfectly timed, that questioning them felt unnecessary. And that’s exactly how they fooled millions.
The 25 viral images in this collection are proof that appearances can be wildly deceptive. From photos taken at just the right angle to images stripped of their original context, each one tells a story that isn’t quite true. Some were honest misunderstandings. Others were exaggerated, edited, or flat-out misleading. But all of them managed to slip past our collective skepticism and live online as “facts” for far too long.
What makes these images fascinating isn’t just the deception—it’s how easily our brains fill in the blanks. We want stories to be simple. We want visuals to make sense instantly. And when an image feeds into that instinct, we rarely stop to double-check. Until, of course, the truth comes out and flips everything upside down.
Scroll through this gallery with fresh eyes. Each image comes with the backstory that changes how you see it—and maybe changes how you scroll from now on.
#1

Image source: Leila Thomas
Q: Remember that photo that became a meme overnight of a guy making a humongous wave out of fried rice?
A: That was actually staged.
The source of the rice wave is actually a sculpture made as part of a fake food museum in Tokyo, called the “giga wave”.
#2

Image source: coolguy9001
The WWII V-Day celebration picture where the guy kisses the girl. They didn’t know each other, the dude just came up from behind, grabbed her, and kissed her.
Potato_Tots:
Also worth noting – the woman in the picture says she does not consider it [harassment] in any way, despite people saying that she should. She was briefly frightened by the suddenness of it, but acknowledges that it was simply an act of spontaneous joy over the war being over and gratitude towards the nurses that had helped the soldiers.
#3

Image source: intangible-tangerine
The Dogon people who live around lake Antogo in Mali consider the lake to be sacred and only permit themselves to fish there once per year, they have a big ceremony where loads of people, mostly adult men, go in to the lake at once and catch as much as they can in their baskets amidst the good natured frenzy.
I’ve seen images from this ceremony posted with captions saying that the people are starving and they’re so hungry they’re fighting over the fish. Whilst there is some food insecurity in Mali, that’s not what’s happening in the pictures. It’s a festival! The misleading captions annoy me because they’re taking something joyous from a traditional African culture and twisting it to fit the ‘poor Africa’ narrative.
#4

Image source: Thomas Yen
This one is utterly ridiculous. You won’t be able to grapple the selfie in the first place as your whole body will be flung out as the plane travels at around 500 miles per hour or 800 kilometres an hour.
#5

Image source: Leila Thomas
Q: Venice.
There’s a photo showcasing how its canals in the winter look like you could easily ice skate on them, don’t they?
A: In fact, no.
The frozen water in this picture actually comes from Lake Baikal in Russia.
#6

Image source: Arun Singh Kandari
Claim: MGM strapped the lion to film their iconic logo view.
Truth: The lion was ill and just getting a CAT scan at an Israeli zoo.
#7

Image source: Paul Barends
This photo of Teddy Roosevelt riding a moose. Old school fake news. Pre-Photoshop cutting and glueing. Used as part of his presidential campaign in 1912.
#8

Image source: anon
This photo was circulating Tumblr as the audition line for Sabrina the Teenage Witch’s cat Salem. Obviously not, given the outfits these ladies are wearing. This was clearly taken in the 1950’s, not the early 90’s.
Master of all Trades: This audition was likely for Tales of Terror (1962) by Roger Corman
#9

Image source: affordalisimo
Tourist Guy (9/11)
Splatterh0use: That spells fake all over. That day on Sept 11 it was still summer in NY and hot; that dude is dressed for winter.
SanguisFluens: There are several things wrong with this photo. First, the observation deck doesn’t normally open until 9:30 and both planes had hit by then. Second, the camera would have been destroyed when the building collapsed. Third, the plane is coming from the wrong direction, and fourth, it is the wrong type of plane.
jimmorrison-: Are we all ignoring the fact that the plane looks glaringly fake?
#10

Image source: Michael Yun
I have no idea why people still show this picture whenever there’s a discussion about the Loch Ness Monster. It was admitted to have been faked years ago.
#11

Image source: Shiva Kiran Gupta
The Mustache Wasn’t Enough, They Had To Add Those Angry Eyebrows
The internet just loves animals, especially if they look weird or cute, or both at the same time. So there is no surprise that a photo of a cat with adorable mustache and eyebrows would go viral. Well, there is a silver lining to this story, the cat does in fact have that incredible mustache, but the eyebrows are a result of clever photo manipulation.
#12

Image source: Carol Lawrence
Before, Nikon held a photography competition, and finally, they decided to award the prize to a contestant named Chay Yu Wei, because he “accidentally caught an airplane” in the process of shooting, which made the whole picture very special.
But then someone adjusted the tone and found it was fake!
#13

Image source: Thomas Yen
The real one still looks amazing.
#14

Image source: deathcu6ek
Haven’t seen it for a while, but that one about the tiger “adopting” a litter of pigs since she lost her own cubs. What actually happened was a zoo experiment, they swapped the tiger cubs and baby pigs at birth. Dressed the pigs up as tigers and sure the mother tiger raised them as her own. But so did the mother pig. I don’t know why so many articles would only show one half of the story and even lie about what happened to boot. But people on Facebook just hit share on everything without doing the 2 minutes of research themselves to see if it’s true. Yay Facebook.
#15

Image source: blueyb
The Pink Foam Pic is always accompanied by “Look at what’s in McDonalds Chicken McNuggets!”
I have corrected this nonsense so many times on Facebook.
flakAttack510: That’s ice cream.
#16

Image source: Thomas Yen
Someone photoshopped sharks into the flooding in a mall in Kuwait and it went viral.
#17

Image source: Arun Singh Kandari
Claim: Egypt’s Sphinx was covered in snow, and that was reported to be the first snowfall for 112 years in North Africa.
Truth: It is a miniature replica of the Sphinx at the Tobu World Square theme park in Japan.
#18

Image source: JSA17
This picture that purportedly shows Israelis laughing at a Palestinian woman gets posted to reddit a lot. Sometimes with that comparison of them and German soldiers.
What the picture actually shows is the Israelis singing as it was one of their holidays. The Palestinian woman came out banging on a pot lid (that you can see in her hand) to try and interrupt their celebration, so they started singing louder and louder.
The first time I saw it without the proper context it made my blood boil. Now that I know its proper origins it makes my blood boil that people try to spin it so heavily.
#19

Image source: Tanishq Goel
Diwali is the festival of lights and is celebrated with great grandeur in India. Every year this image is circulated widely on social media that this is an image taken by NASA of India on Diwali night, but that’s totally fictitious. Moreover lights used in Diwali look scattered and diffused when looked from space and in these image colors are pretty sharp and lambent. Thus it’s a hoax and a mere make-believe image.
Infact this is not even a single image but its a mixture of 2–3 images taken over years by US Defense Meteorological department to show the population growth in 20th–21st century.
#20

Image source: Saurav Vatsayan Tripathi
Lady gave birth to 11 babies.
Again a real pic but wrong story
It was presented that a lady gave birth to 11 babies but the truth is that 11 babies were born on the same day.
#21

Image source: Arun Singh Kandari
Claim: Moon melon, known for its strange blue colour, grows in some parts of Japan and is worth ¥ 16,000 or about $ 200.
Truth: It’s just a picture of a slice of watermelon with its colour digitally altered to blue.
#22

Image source: Arun Singh Kandari
Claim: A young Syrian boy sleeping between the graves of his parents.
Truth: The boy is the photographer’s nephew and is not Syrian. The mounds on either side are not grave but, just piles of stones made to look like graves.
#23

Image source: Dave Hargreaves
Thirteen art students at Leeds University received a grant to create art, prompting them to travel to Spain, where they indulged in alcohol and lived like kings. This escapade captured national news in the UK. However, after the university conducted an investigation, it was discovered that they never left the country; it was a hoax (this was Scarborough) in the name of art. They all received a first in their final exams.
#24

Image source: ThisNameIsUnik
I saw this on tumblr at least four years ago, and I did a quick google search and saw that it’s still circulating.
The story: “A boy left his bike chained to a tree when he went away to war in 1914. He never returned, leaving the tree no choice but to grow around the bike.”
Apparent Truth: “Although text is commonly associated with pictures of the tree claiming that the bicycle was left chained to it by a boy who went off to war in 1914, the bike is not nearly that old, nor was it left behind by a young man setting off to take part in World War I. According to the Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber, the bicycle was left behind in the mid-1950s by a local resident who simply abandoned it.”
#25

Image source: Pallavi Ray
This is a picture of an iceberg that appeared in the last century. It’s very beautiful, isn’t it? However, normal exposure can not achieve such an effect. It is composed of 4 photos, sky, background, Antarctic iceberg (above water), Alaska iceberg (below water). This photo earned photographer Ralph a. Clevenger more than $900000 in royalties.
In Summary
What are misleading viral images?
- They are photos that went viral due to missing context, editing, or misinterpretation.
Why do people believe these images so easily?
- Strong visuals trigger quick emotional reactions, often bypassing critical thinking.
Are these images fake or just misunderstood?
- Some are edited, but many are real photos presented without proper context.
Has AI made this problem worse?
- Yes. AI has increased skepticism, but earlier viral images often spread unchecked.
How can I avoid being fooled?
- Check sources, look for context, and avoid sharing images without verification.
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3 days ago
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English (US) ·