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Mountain Dew Is Basically Free Right Now And The Internet Is LOSING IT šŸšØšŸ’°

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Mountain Dew Is Basically Free Right Now And The Internet Is LOSING IT šŸšØšŸ’°

Mountain Dew Is Basically Free Right Now And The Internet Is LOSING IT šŸšØšŸ’°

Bruh. I am NOT making this up. Mountain Dew—the nectar of the gods, the green liquid that keeps your gamer chair warm, the official drink of late-night TikTok edits—is selling for FIVE CENTS a bundle right now. I said what I said. FIVE. CENTS. That’s less than a penny per can. That’s basically stealing with extra steps. And the entire internet is currently having a collective meltdown. šŸ’€

Let me paint the picture for you. You walk into a grocery store. Maybe it’s a Walmart. Maybe it’s a Kroger. Maybe it’s some random gas station in Ohio that also sells bait. You see a stack of Mountain Dew 12-packs. Normal, right? Wrong. You check the price tag and your brain literally short-circuits. $0.05. Not $5. Not $50. FIVE CENTS. That’s the same value as a single gumball from a machine that hasn’t been cleaned since 2005. 🫠

This isn’t a glitch. This isn’t a dream. This is real life. And the internet has already turned it into the wildest scavenger hunt of 2025. People are posting videos of them clearing entire shelves like they’re in the Hunger Games but instead of weapons they’re holding cases of Code Red. ā€œNo cap, I just filled my whole trunk with Dew for like 60 cents,ā€ one TikToker said while showing off a literal mountain of soda in their Honda Civic. The caption? ā€œMy dentist is gonna hate me but my bank account is thriving.ā€ šŸ’…

So how did this happen? Let me explain in brainrot terms. Basically, some stores (looking at you, Kroger and their digital coupon system) had a massive oopsie. They dropped the price of Mountain Dew bundles to $0.05 when you use a digital coupon. And when I say massive oopsie, I mean the kind of oopsie that makes your dad yell at the TV during football. People are walking out with 20+ cases for the price of a gallon of gas. Some dude literally bought 50 cases. FIFTY. That’s 600 cans of Dew. That’s enough to fuel a LAN party until the heat death of the universe. 🤯

But here’s where it gets messy. Not everyone is winning. Some stores caught on and started limiting purchases. One poor soul on Reddit posted a story about how they got to checkout with 30 cases and the cashier looked at them like they were committing a federal crime. ā€œSorry, limit 2 per household,ā€ the cashier said. The person literally typed ā€œI’m going to crash outā€ in the comments. Honestly, valid. Imagine being that close to the Dew motherlode and getting blue-balled by a coupon limit. That’s villain origin story material. šŸ¦¹ā€ā™‚ļø

Meanwhile, resellers are popping up like dandelions after rain. Facebook Marketplace is FULL of people selling ā€œrare vintage Mountain Dew bundlesā€ for like $20 each when they literally paid a nickel. One guy had the audacity to put ā€œHARD TO FIND, COLLECTORS ITEMā€ in his listing. Sir, that’s a 12-pack of regular Dew that expires in three months. But you know what? Respect the hustle. Capitalism is undefeated. šŸ’ø

The vibes are immaculate though. People are making it a whole aesthetic. There’s a trend on TikTok where people film themselves opening their fridge and it’s just WALLS of green soda. Like a bodega but in your kitchen. One creator did a taste test of ā€œ5 cent vs full price Mountain Dewā€ and said ā€œtastes exactly the same, maybe even better because I paid less.ā€ That’s real. That’s the American dream right there. šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø

But let’s talk about the health implications for a second. Because I know you’re thinking it. If you drink 600 cans of Mountain Dew in a month, you will literally turn into a glow stick. Your teeth will start vibrating. Your heart will beat in morse code. DO NOT do that. I don’t care if it’s five cents. You are not built for that much sugar, caffeine, and artificial color #5. Your pancreas will send you a strongly worded letter. Please drink responsibly. Or at least share with your friends. Be a Dew philanthropist. 🫶

The memes are already legendary. Somebody photoshopped the Mountain Dew logo onto the Monopoly Man. Another person made a ā€œ5 Cent Dewā€ rap song that’s actually kind of fire? It goes ā€œfive cents a case, I’m feeling so fly, gonna drink this Dew until I touch the sky.ā€ I’m not gonna lie, I’d listen to that unironically. The internet is so beautiful sometimes. šŸŽ¶

And here’s the best part: nobody knows when this deal is gonna end. Some stores are honoring it. Some already fixed the price. Some gas stations are just ignoring it and hoping you don’t notice. It’s chaos. It’s beautiful chaos. It’s the kind of chaos that makes you believe in a higher power—and that higher power is Mountain Dew. šŸ™Œ

If you haven’t checked your local store yet, you are missing out. Go now. Run. Don’t walk. Bring your entire extended family. Make them buy their own limit. Stack those cases. Fill your trunk. Become the Mountain Dew king of your neighborhood. This is the kind of deal people tell their grandkids about. ā€œBack in ’25, I paid five cents for a whole bundle of Dew. We didn’t have much, but we had spark.ā€ 🄤✨

But also, be smart. Don’t get tackled in the parking lot over soda. I’ve seen the videos. People are getting aggressive out there. One lady almost threw hands over the last case of Baja Blast. Baja Blast! That’s

Final Thoughts


It’s a curious thing how a relic of Depression-era pricing—those nickel bundles of Mountain Dew—still manages to evoke a sense of gritty Americana, long after the actual cost of living has rendered the concept absurd. To me, this artifact isn’t just a marketing gimmick; it’s a quiet, fizzy monument to the enduring power of brand mythology, where a simple price tag can anchor a product to a bygone era of perceived simplicity and value. In the end, whether you see it as a nostalgic cheap thrill or a cynical piece of retro packaging, the 5-cent bundle reminds us that in journalism—and in commerce—the story behind the product often holds more weight than the product itself.