Oxford Names ‘Rage Bait’ Word of the Year 2025, Highlighting Toxic Side of Digital Engagement
WorldNow.co.in | New Delhi | 01 December 2025
“Rage bait” has been crowned the Oxford Word of the Year 2025, Oxford University Press announced today, underscoring how deliberately provocative online content has become a defining feature of the internet age.
The term, which refers to posts, videos, headlines or comments intentionally crafted to spark anger, outrage or heated arguments in order to boost clicks, views and platform engagement, saw its usage surge more than 300 per cent over the past twelve months, according to Oxford’s language data.
Casper Grathwohl, President of Oxford Languages, said the selection reflects “a growing public awareness of how algorithms reward extreme emotion over nuance.” He added: “Rage bait isn’t just about getting attention any more—it’s a calculated business model that exploits our hardest-wired reactions for profit.”
Oxford’s annual Word of the Year is chosen by linguists based on evidence of rapid rise in usage and cultural resonance. Past winners include “rizz” (2023), “goblin mode” (2022) and “vax” (2021).
The 2025 shortlist also featured “demure,” “slay,” “brain rot” and “dynamic pricing,” but “rage bait” emerged as the clear frontrunner in both corpus analysis and public voting.
Experts say the term’s explosive growth mirrors broader concerns about social media’s role in polarising societies. Deliberately inflammatory content—whether political memes, culture-war hot takes or doctored clips—triggers dopamine-driven comment sections and shares, keeping users scrolling while platforms harvest advertising revenue.
“Rage bait blurs the line between genuine outrage and manufactured controversy,” said Dr. Priya Menon, digital media researcher at Jawaharlal Nehru University. “Once you recognise the pattern, you see it everywhere—from election campaigns to brand marketing.”
The announcement comes weeks after major platforms faced renewed scrutiny over algorithmic amplification of divisive material during multiple national elections in 2025.
Oxford noted that “rage bait” has already spawned related phrases such as “rage farming,” “outrage laundering” and the sardonic “touch grass” retort aimed at those falling for obvious provocation.
As 2025 draws to a close, the crowning of “rage bait” serves as both diagnosis and warning: in an attention economy built on emotion, anger remains the most reliable currency.
By Samaran, Founding Editor, WorldNow.co.in



































