When I was an undergrad student, the first application that was given to me of the construction of the fundamental group was the non-retraction lemma : there is no continuous map from the disk to the circle that induces the identity on the circle. From this lemma, you easily deduce the Brouwer fixed point Theorem for the circle.
This was (for me) one of this "WOOOOW" moments where you realize that abstract constructions and some seemingly innocuous functorial lemmas may yield striking results (especially as I knew a quite long and complicated proof of Brouwer Theorem in dimension 2 before taking this topology class).
I was wondering if there exist (+ reference if they do) similarly "cute" applications of the construction of the étale fundamental group in Algebraic Geometry. Of course "cute" is not well-defined and may vary for each one of us, but existence of fixed points for the Frobenius morphism would I find especially cute. Any other relatively elementary result related to algebraic geometry over fields of positive characteristic will be appreciated!
Edit : I am obviously curious of any application of the étale fundamental group endowed with the aforementioned "WOOOW feeling". However, I'd be really interested in examples I could explain to smart grad students who are taking a first (but relatively advanced) course in Algebraic Geometry.