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Facebook Poke returns to your notifications
Every time you poke a friend, your count grows, unlocking emojis like a fire icon or the classic “100.”

The poke is back. Or it never really left, Facebook just buried it deep under layers of news feed clutter and Marketplace listings.
Now, Meta is dusting off one of its most infamous relics and putting it front and center again. Yes, poking is officially a thing once more.
Users can now hit a shiny new “poke” button directly from a friend’s profile, instantly delivering a notification that says, essentially: hey, remember me?
You can also head to facebook.com/pokes, where you’ll find a leaderboard-style rundown of who poked you, who you’ve poked back, and your all-important “poke count.”
Because nothing says modern social networking like measuring the digital equivalent of elbow jabs.
Meta clearly thinks this throwback can appeal to Gen Z, who’ve grown up on gamified features like Snapchat streaks and
Every time you poke a friend, your count grows, unlocking emojis like a fire icon or the classic “100.”
It’s part nostalgia play, part engagement strategy, and part “please, teens, we swear Facebook isn’t just for your parents.”
This isn’t the first poke revival attempt.
Back in March 2024, Facebook tweaked its search tool to make poking easier.
The result? A reported 13x spike in pokes. Apparently, give people the option to annoy their friends and they’ll take it.
Of course, Facebook still won’t explain what a poke is supposed to mean. Flirtation? Attention-grab? Passive-aggressive nudge? That ambiguity was always part of the fun, or the frustration, depending on how many pokes you had to ignore.
Users can now dismiss pokes outright, which feels like progress.
Still, critics may see shades of Snapchat streaks here. Researchers like Jonathan Haidt have warned that streaks and similar gamified features can be addictive for younger users.
Meta, of course, is well aware of that, and probably counting on it.
Is Facebook’s poke revival a harmless nostalgia trip, or another attempt to create addictive engagement features targeting younger users? Do you think gamified social media features like poke counts and streaks genuinely enhance connections, or do they manipulate users into compulsive behavior? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
