How KitKat's 12 tonne loss became brand lore

I'll be honest, when I first saw "Twelve tonnes of Formula 1 KitKat bars stolen in Europe" days before April 1st, I thought it was an elaborate marketing stunt. It wasn't, or at least it didn't start out that way, and that's what makes it great. This was the kind of baffling headline that breaks through even the most niche feeds.

A viral moment that would inspire dozens of great ideas for any brand often dies in the timelines of traditional approval chains – but Kit Kat clearly isn't one of them. Where others see chaos, the brands winning in culture see opportunity.

Article continues below You may like KitKats KitKat reveals genius response to robbery drama A Cup Noodles branded "Heatless Curls Kit" featuring a box and loose hair accessories like a spray bottle labeled "Broth Boost Finishing Mist," scrunchies, and foam rollers designed to look like ramen noodles against a solid red background. Which brand won April Fools in 2026? Kit-Kat posters Kit-Kat tweaks its logo in delightful new print ads

Then, one day after April Fool's Day, in a still somewhat vulnerable yet self-aware "OFFICIAL STATEMENT IN RESPONSE TO OTHER OFFICIAL STATEMENTS," they confirmed the heist was in fact "not an April Fool's joke." In the same post, they launched an online tracker and asked for help searching for over 400,000 F1 car-shaped, chocolate-covered wafers – in what could be the largest Easter candy hunt the world has ever seen. Agency teams everywhere have spent months crafting case studies they wish were this good.

best rebrands of all time.

Creative Bloq is now easier to access than ever before with our on-the-go app, which brings you all the content you know and love from our website, but in a super-streamlined design.

AI Article