Not all memes are the same. Some of them come from the fans latching onto a particular line or scene and spreading it like wildfire, while others are tongue-in-cheek reinterpretations and exaggerations. And, in this case, some memes are born from fans jokingly going along with what the work says, no matter how blatantly false or absurd it is.
This can take many forms such as these:
- Probably the most common is when a character uses a Paper-Thin Disguise, and fans pretend to not be aware that they're the same person — or will guess any identity besides the real one.
- If a character claims to be invisible, the audience can no longer see them.
- If a fictional product promotes itself as real, people will talk about the work as if it is.
- If the work features a Show Within a Show, it will be discussed as real in its own right.
- If all in-universe memories and/or records of a character are erased, the audience cannot remember them either.
- If a character is erased from ever having existed, the audience cannot remember, notice, or recognize them.
- The audience will call a Retraux work a childhood classic.
- If a character's name is changed in-universe, the audience will only call them by their new name and accuse anyone who mentions the original name of spouting gibberish.
- If a character is meant to have some kind of false public image—a Villain with Good Publicity, a Hero with Bad Publicity, a Fake Ultimate Hero, etc— fans tend to treat the false image as true.
- The audience cannot see characters who are Invisible to Normals.
These forms and many more exist because the audience jokingly takes the work's word at face value. A Play-Along Meme thus makes heavy use of Kayfabe — it's obvious that the meme is a joke, but everyone goes along with it for the sake of furthering the joke's humor and/or the meme's spread. Fans who don't play along are thus often jokingly "corrected" by the people spreading the meme.
A Sub-Trope of Memetic Mutation.
Examples:
- Agravity Boys featured an in-series award-winning historical drama called Masaru, which all of the cast is a fan of and gets regular references throughout the story. Fans sometimes make jokes about their favorite Masaru episodes and what seasons were their favorites, despite the fact that Masaru itself was made long after the 21st century.
- Bakuman。: The entire premise of the series is about mangaka creating several in-universe manga in hopes of receiving an anime adaptation. It is common courtesy of its fans to discuss said manga as if they were actual, real life series.
- Bleach:
- Shukuro Tsukishima has the power to insert himself into the life of a person he stabs with his sword, altering their personal history to include him as a constant presence. At one point, when he's used his power on most of the protagonists, they all remember and speak of him as if he were a close friend or family member who was there from Day 1 and helped out countless times in prior arcs. Naturally, fans tend to run with this idea by joking that Tsukishima was present in all those arcs, and anyone claiming him to be a villain is a liar — some go so far as to declare that their beloved uncle Tsukishima could never do something like that.
- The final episode of the Thousand-Year Blood War anime adaptation's second cour ended with Yhwach being renamed to "Black Ant" from Ichibe's power. In accordance, the fandom started referring to him as Black Ant, as the original name no longer existed in-universe by then. Whenever a user would write the original name in discussions on forums and social media, retorts of the user spouting gibberish would follow suit.
- In Chainsaw Man, any devil that the Chainsaw Devil eats is completely erased from existence along with the memories of them and even the fear they represent. Cue fans pretending to also lose their memories of said devils.
- One memorable occasion was when the ear devil, and by consequence, all ears, were temporarily erased. Many subreddits were swarmed with people asking what the strange growths next to the character's heads were.
- In CLANNAD, everyone gradually forgets that Fūko has been running around the school lately and becomes unable to see or remember her. Viewers sometimes claim to not remember who she is or say that that they've never seen her before.
- In Cromartie High School, the character Mechazawa is very obviously a Tin-Can Robot in a school uniform, yet other characters treat him as if he's just a normal high school boy. Fans often follow this, by saying that there's nothing weird when a picture of Mechazawa is posted.
- Dragon Ball:
- Master Roshi disguises himself as "Jackie Chun" when entering the 21st World Martial Arts Tournament, hiding his identity because he doesn't want his newest students, Goku and Krillin to recognize him. His goal being to defeat them so they don't get overconfident. The series makes it obvious that Jackie Chun is Master Roshi, but the characters have no idea it's him (except for Tien in the following Tournament). Fans continue to act like Jackie Chun is some mysterious person who appeared out of nowhere and disappeared just as mysteriously. It's also not uncommon to see people comparing Jackie Chun with Master Roshi, even pondering who would win if they fought.
- Mr. Satan is known to the audience and the main cast as a showman with no real abilities other than the gift of gab who stole the credit for defeating Cell from Gohan. But to the rest of the populace, he's the strongest in the world and a legendary hero to defeated Cell, Majin Buu, and Beerus singlehandedly. Fans like to pretend that Mr. Satan really is some insanely strong character who not only beat Cell and Buu, but could even beat Goku and Vegeta. Not only that, but people tend to take it further, like him being strong enough to beat Omni-Man, Yujiro, and Saitama. This one is helped along by a few points making it clear that by human standards, he really is insanely strong for someone without any ki, probably even could have been threatening early on in Dragon Ball, and the world's belief in his fraudulent feats literally saves the universe in the final battle of Z. Characters in this setting are just cracked enough to make him the uncontested Joke Character by the point of his debut.
- Eureka Seven AO: Ao is ultimately Ret-Gone'd, leading to fans claiming to not remember him.
- Gundam:
- Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam: Lieutenant Quattro Bajeena of the AEUG is, in reality, Char Aznable. This is revealed early on, and is more of an Internal Reveal since the audience has no trouble figuring it out the moment he first speaks, coupled with his first Mobile Suit in the series being red. However, most fans tend to jokingly treat Char and Quattro as entirely different people. This has extended to Alex Dino, Montag, and other poorly hidden characters through the franchise, though not to the extent of Char.
- At one point in Zeta Gundam, Char tells Haman "I've never betrayed anyone in my life". This is laughably untrue, with Char having backstabbed multiple people over both the run of the original series and several shows to follow, so of course fans react to any claim that Char has betrayed anyone with confusion and disbelief. Some compromise by claiming that Quattro Bajeena has never betrayed anyone, unlike that dastardly Char.
- The first opening of Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ prominently features a line often translated as "It's not an anime, it's for real!"note For this reason, many fans like to refer to ZZ as the first live-action Gundam series, and will jokingly express confusion if someone calls it an anime.
- Similarly to the Quattro example above, Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch from Mercury has major character Guel Jeturk run away from home and assume the identity of "Bob" midway through. Fans jokingly say that Guel vanished from the show halfway through and was entirely replaced by the new fan favorite character Bob.
- Inuyasha ends with Kagome using the Shikon Jewel to wish Naraku out of existence along with the Jewel itself. Naturally, this has caused some fans to joke that he's not present in anything involving him.
- Jewelpet has two examples involving Sapphie:
- At one point, she wears a pink shirt, headphones, and garland and dyes her ears and eyes pink, leaving her unrecognizable both in-universe and out.
- In Jewelpet Magical Change, the characters cannot tell the original Sapphie apart from her pink-eared copies. Cue fans confusing her with her copies as well.
- As Stands in JoJo's Bizarre Adventure are Invisible to Normals, cue comments joking about why anyone is so excited over a bunch of idiots striking dramatic poses and yelling at each other while things inexplicably happen around them.
- Shindou from Kaguya-sama: Love Is War is often talked up by the fandom as the greatest character in the series, as his only actual appearance boiled down to Kaguya having no idea who he is while everyone else talks about how awesome he is.
- In Kubo Won't Let Me Be Invisible, Junta Shiraishi lacks almost any kind of presence, so others often overlook him or assume he's not there. It's common to not see him in images.
- Martian Successor Nadesico: Fans commonly act as if the Show Within a Show Gekiganger 3 is a real anime that they have watched (an actual OVA was released post-series).
- One Piece:
- A running gag involving Usopp is that, despite being one of the weakest members of the Straw Hats in a straight fight, he loves telling outrageous stories about his accomplishments and capabilities, claiming to be the real Captain of the crew, the commander of thousands of pirates, and the one who defeated every major antagonist. Naturally, the fandom likes to run with this, claiming that all of Usopp's lies are accurate. The fact that Usopp regularly shows that he's not all bluster when backed into a corner certainly helps this reading, with his in-universe over-the-top title of "God Usopp" often being given a step up to "Go D. Usopp."
- During the Water 7 arc, after separating from the Straw Hats, Usopp goes under the guise of a super-hero named Sogeking/Sniper King because he doesn't want his crewmates to know that he's helping them. Obviously, being a Paper-Thin Disguise, none of the crew fall for it save for Luffy and Chopper, the two most gullible members of the crew. It is however a recurring joke for fans to refer as Usopp and Sogeking/Sniper King as two different characters, often complaining how Sogeking/Sniper King completely disappeared from the story after this arc ended.
- An anime-original story arc sees the Straw Hats — minus Robin, disguised as an officer — trapped in a Marine prison cell. Also in the cell is the officer whose clothing Robin stole, who demands to be let out and protests his identity. Usopp, thinking quickly, pretends the man is actually a beloved member of the Straw Hats named "Condoriano", who (tragically) lost his memory and now thinks he's a Marine officer. Even Zoro, completely straight-faced, gets in on the act. Fans will jokingly claim Condoriano as their favourite Straw Hat, lamenting his lack of focus in recent arcs and building him up as a legendary warrior with the "Will of D" (as Con D. Oriano).
- Buggy the Clown's skill and powers are in the range of "local terror in the East Blue, total joke in the Grand Line", not having improved much since his first appearance in the second arc. However, over the course of the series, a mixture of failing upwards, dumb luck, other people using him as a patsy, and some feats of genuine bravery and panache, causes him to become one of the most famous pirates in the world, with a bounty in the billions. Fans like to claim that Buggy's hype is accurate, and that his various stronger "underlings" are actually nothing in comparison to him. Like Condoriano and Usopp, he's gotten his own "Will of D" title, that being Buggy D. Clown.
- Among the One-Punch Man fandom, it's common to jokingly talk about Saitama the same way other characters talk about him in-universe (i.e. calling him a fraud who steals credit from other heroes like King).
- The first episode of New Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt features a brief recap of the first season's finale, with several references to the real life 15-year gap between the shows, only for Garterbelt to reveal that it's only been five minutes since Season 1's finale. Fans of the series have jokingly pretended that the fifteen year wait didn't happen, acting as if it had really just only been five minutes since the finale.
- Pokémon the Series:
- There's one involving Team Rocket antagonists Cassidy and Butch. A common gag in the show is that everyone gets Butch's name wrong with him being referred to as Bob, Biff, Hutch, Mitch, Buzz, Patch, etc., causing him to correct them. Even when Cassidy calls him by his correct name, he'll "correct" her by calling himself an incorrect name. Fans follow suit by also never getting Butch's name right.
- The comment section of any YouTube video involving Jigglypuff singing her song consists of users pretending they've fallen asleep by commenting "Zzz" or the sleep emoji 😴.
- At the end of Puella Magi Madoka Magica: Madoka re-writes the rules of the world so that witches don't exist but is written out of existence herself, unable to be known to or interact with anyone. The only person who remembers her is Homura. Cue fans claiming they've never heard of Madoka.
- At the end of RahXephon, Ayato erases Bähbem and the Mu from existence, causing some viewers to act like Bähbem and the Mu never existed.
- Re:Zero: After Rem is consumed by the Archbishop of Gluttony, everyone's memories of her completely disappear, meaning that Subaru is the only one who remembers her. Thus, fans will often ask "Who's Rem?" whenever she's brought up. Also, because she spends all of season 2 in a coma, someone who has only watched that season sincerely won't know who that blue-haired girl is and why Subaru insists on her wellbeing. In Season 3 Episode 16, Julius suffers a similar fate, leading to the same jokes note .
- Even if that's the case, CDawgVA will always remember her.
- Rebuild of Evangelion ends with Shinji rewriting reality without Evas or Angels ever having existed, leading to jokes of not knowing what they are.
- At the end of Serial Experiments Lain, Lain rewrites reality so that Eiri never conceives his plan to assimilate reality into the Wired and removes all traces of herself from the physical world. By the end the only people who seem to have any memory of Lain's existence are her father, Taro, and Alice, and even then it is closer to them having the feeling of forgetting someone they once knew rather than a true recollection of who she is. As a result, many anime fans claim to never have heard of Lain and instead wonder who this brown-haired girl is.
- Tsukihime: Fans often say they wish they would give this an anime adaptation already. Whenever someone tries to talk about the actual anime adaptation that aired in 2003, others will say they must be mistaken because there is no Tsukihime anime. Same goes with claims that Umineko no Naku Koro ni, Demonbane, Dies Irae, and the Fate route of Fate/stay night also don't have anime adaptations.
- With You and the Rain follows the daily lives of a young woman and her pet tanuki, which she and most of the other characters mistakenly believe to be a dog. This also extends to the fans, who will almost exclusively refer to her pet as a dog or "dog-like creature" and act confused whenever someone calls it a tanuki.
- Yu-Gi-Oh!:
- The extremely simple card Pot of Greed (which allows its player to draw two cards from their deck) is explained in full almost every single time it's played, which is extremely often in the first two series (characters almost always explain what their cards do upon activating them; Pot of Greed just happens to be both very simple and a very commonly-played card). Fans like to joke that they really are that forgetful and claim to have no idea what the card does whenever it pops up. At World Championship 2008, it was even voted the "Most Confusing Card" in the game.
- In Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, Misawa gets Demoted to Extra after the first season before being increasingly written out in the third and fourth. One of the main running gags in the second season is that he's a Forgettable Character who fails to make an impression on people, which is played even further in the Tag Force games, where nobody, even people who regularly interact with him, can remember who he is. Because of this, it's common in Japanese fandom to make fun of this, such as claiming that screenshots where Misawa is visible actually show an empty background, or writing a bunch of blank spaces instead of his name.
- John Mulaney:
- One of his standup bits in New in Town is about how he was bullied as a child for being Asian-American (which he is not) and was also often mistaken for a woman, capping with him calling himself a "proud Asian-American woman." As such, fans will often jokingly celebrate John as an example of female Asian-American representation in comedy.
- Another joke mentions that his mother broke the news of Princess Diana's death with an accusatory tone, to which John points out the absurdity of a child in Illinois having anything to do with it. Fans sometimes pretend they actually believe John to be responsible, accusing him of getting away with murder for years.
- It's common in discussions about superhero vs superhero for fans to go the Exact Words route if one or more participant is referred to by their Secret Identity. Bruce Wayne versus Tony Stark? Why would a billionaire philanthropist be in a fight with Iron Man?
- Superman fans have historically been all too happy to joke about how the idea that that nerdy reporter from Metropolis could be Superman is completely absurd, especially when they've been seen together so often. This may be combined with wild theorizing — claiming that Bruce Wayne, for instance, is Superman (he has all that free time as a rich layabout, after all).
- It's not uncommon to see people bring up the time Lex Luthor stole 40 cakes and acting like it's the worst thing he's ever done, even outclassing the genuinely awful stuff he actually did do. The use of the sentence "And That's Terrible" after mentioning this heinous act is almost mandatory.
- Back in the 90s, a poster came to the rec.arts.comics Usenet group to ask about developments in Suicide Squad, but thanks to a typo, ended up calling the series Suicide Squid. Cue the group's users making up an entire storyline for this nonexistent "Suicide Squid" character.
- Sonic the Hedgehog (IDW): Dr. Eggman suffers from amnesia and becomes a model citizen, now named "Mr. Tinker." Cue jokes about Mr. Tinker being a new character who can't possibly be Eggman.
- House of Gold, a Real-Person Fic shipping Drew Gooden and Danny Gonzalez, writes Drew's wife (or girlfriend, as written in the fic) Amanda out of the story by saying she was lost at war in Afghanistan. After Drew and Danny read the fic in a crossover video, Drew's fandom began joking that Amanda was still lost in Afghanistan, despite her never going to war in real life. Even when Amanda appears in Drew's videos, the comments section will express relief that she's finally been "rescued." (However, this became a Discredited Meme in 2022 when Amanda herself admitted it made her uncomfortable.
)
- Fans of Encanto tend to play along with Bruno's characters Hernando and Jorge, pretending that the three of them are separate individuals, rather than just Bruno's blatant character-acting. For example, Pepa's verse in "We Don't Talk About Bruno" will be recontextualized as though Hernando framed Bruno for causing the hurricane, as Hernando is merely Bruno with his hood up, which is how Bruno appears at the wedding. Another example is fans being thankful that Jorge was there to save Bruno when the Casita was collapsing.
- Because KPop Demon Hunters briefly showcased past generations of girl group demon hunters, fans like to thank real-life K-pop girl groups (namely the Kim Sisters, Settorae, and S.E.S.) in their music videos’ YouTube comments for protecting the Honmoon.
- To promote Toy Story 3, two commercials made to look like they were from The '80s were commissioned, featuring the defictionalized Lots-o'-Huggin' Bear doll — one English,
one Japanese.
In the former's description, the uploader claims to have grown up with said doll.
- Fans of Wallace & Gromit will sometimes pretend the villain of The Wrong Trousers, Feathers McGraw, is a chicken, due to the authorities and main characters failing to realize he's a penguin wearing a red glove on his head.
- Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter: Taking the ridiculous premise of the movie as a completely accurate historical biopic. It is not uncommon for discussions about Abraham Lincoln's life to include comments in the vein of "but what about when he was a vampire hunter?".
- On most YouTube uploads of Alternative 3 or excerpts thereof, it's not uncommon to see commenters treat it as an actual documentary rather than a mere dramatic hoax. The fact that it's rather convincingly shot like the real thing helps (although the copyright date is a bit of a giveaway as to its staged nature).
- Since The Bubble concerns the filming of the sixth installment of a fictional blockbuster film franchise, Netflix released a trailer for Cliff Beasts 6 as part of the marketing for the film. Most comments under the trailer's YouTube video are people treating Cliff Beasts as if they were real movies, talking about how much of an impact the franchise has had on their lives and how excited they are for this new installment.
- Jurassic Park: Visual effects artist Phil Tippett was given the credit of "Dinosaur Supervisor" in the first film's credits, which led to fans jokingly blaming him for all the deaths in the movie as though he were an incompetent park employee. He referred to the meme a few times on Twitter
◊, and blamed the meme in jest for causing him to be credited merely as "Dinosaur Consultant" on Jurassic World.'
- There's an old Urban Legend that the Lumière Films production Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat (an early, 46-second-long silent film depicting exactly that) caused people to panic, believing that the train was about to hit them. Because of this, nearly any discussion of the film will feature a number of people reacting in genuine fear or scolding the filmmakers for driving a train through the theater, with some even describing it as one of the scariest horror films ever made.
- Marvel Cinematic Universe:
- Avengers: Infinity War:
- Drax claims to have mastered the art of standing so still as to become invisible, despite Quill saying that's not how it works and Mantis immediately saying hi. This spawned the "invisible Drax" meme of not noticing Drax in images, or of claiming that Drax is actually in the background of any random shot in any MCU movie. It even extends to joking that his actor Dave Bautista isn't present in his fights or pictures. His matches with John Cena are a further example, with comments joking about why people are so excited over what's apparently just the referee bouncing around.
- Before YouTube disabled the dislike counter, videos of Thanos' line "perfectly balanced, as all things should be" had viewers keep the number of likes and dislikes as close to even as they could. The comments typically came peppered with other Thanos lines, particularly "the hardest choices require the strongest wills."
- MCU Spider-Man Series:
- Spider-Man: Far From Home: When Ned tries to cover for Peter, who is dressed in the S.H.I.E.L.D.-provided stealth suit, he makes up a superhero named "Night Monkey" to explain who the black-suited superhero was. Fans quickly started making jokes that he really is a separate hero that is in no way related to Spider-Man. Even Sony played along with it.
- Spider-Man: No Way Home: After Doctor Strange uses a memory-erasing spell to eliminate the memory of Peter Parker's identity from the minds of everyone in the universe at the end of the film, some fans played along by pretending the spell had affected them too, reacting in confusion to the appearance of the character whose identity was erased whenever it was mentioned or appeared in other installments of the MCU.
- Spider-Man: Far From Home: When Ned tries to cover for Peter, who is dressed in the S.H.I.E.L.D.-provided stealth suit, he makes up a superhero named "Night Monkey" to explain who the black-suited superhero was. Fans quickly started making jokes that he really is a separate hero that is in no way related to Spider-Man. Even Sony played along with it.
- Avengers: Infinity War:
- Memento's main character is incapable of creating new memories, leading to fans pretending they can't remember the movie or what it's about.
- Nope: The theme for the Show Within a Show Gordy's Home is "(You're A) Strange Animal" by Lawrence Gowan. Naturally, fans of the movie went to comment sections of "(You're A) Strange Animal" and made comments about Gordy's Home as if it was a real show, complete with remarks about their favorite moments and lamentations about the on-set tragedy that caused its end.
- Star Wars:
- In the Prequel Trilogy, Ian McDiarmid plays Senator Sheev Palpatine and his alter ego Darth Sidious. In his role as Palpatine, he will always be wearing gaudy outfits and putting on a face of benevolence, but as a Sith Lord, he wears a hooded black cloak with a Face Framed in Shadow. The fans love to pretend that there is no way the two people are the same. Similarly, they love to pretend that Anakin Skywalker and Darth Vader are two different beings and can't possibly be the same person.
- Palpatine's memetic line "I AM the Senate" in Revenge of the Sith has resulted in many fans treating "the Senate" as the character's name. In addition, in The Phantom Menace, he says the line "I must be frank, your majesty," which resulted in many fans acting as though Frank was his first name.
- In The Force Awakens, C-3PO introduces himself to Han by expressing that he probably didn't recognize him with his new red arm. Cue fans claiming that they have no idea who this strange red-armed protocol droid in all the pictures is.
- Tár:
- Due to many viewers walking away from the film assuming that Lydia Tár was a real person, fans have run with it, doing things like lamenting her downfall from the world of classical music, sharing anecdotes about her, and reporting news on what's happening to her. It's become so widespread that Vulture would end up getting on it, posting an article
sharing fun facts about Lydia as if she were a real person, and ever since it's become a Running Gag for them to treat her like one whenever Tár gets brought up. There's also a fan-run Lydia Tár Twitter account
that tweets things completely in-character with an accompanying website
and Letterboxd account
, also in-character.
- This was taken to its furthest after director Todd Field claimed that Lydia was lying about having been mentored by Leonard Bernstein due to him dying when she was a teenager, leading to the actual estate of Leonard Bernstein to refute that in an article
from The New Yorker, where they clarified that Bernstein noticed Lydia's talent and mentored her in the last year of his life.
- Due to many viewers walking away from the film assuming that Lydia Tár was a real person, fans have run with it, doing things like lamenting her downfall from the world of classical music, sharing anecdotes about her, and reporting news on what's happening to her. It's become so widespread that Vulture would end up getting on it, posting an article
- 1986's This Is Spın̈al Tap is an early example. It's clearly a Mockumentary, and a long series of improvised sketches, but fans of the film have been treating this obvious parody of a band as a real, iconic, classic rock band pretty much since the film came out— including on This Very Wiki. It helps that the cast have frequently appeared in character on stage and on talk shows to keep up Kayfabe. Plus, the film is a Fountain of Memes as it is.
- Twins (1988) features, as its main comedic conceit, the fact that the titular lead characters are played by Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito, two people who couldn't look less alike but are nonetheless fraternal twins due to a bizarre science experiment. Though the film itself is honest about how different the two are, the advertising for the film liked to play on it, with the tagline for the film noting that "only their mother can tell them apart", and the ending of the film uses a similar gag. Because of this, fans like to joke about how Schwarzenegger and DeVito actually do look identical, or are even twins in real life.
- As Weird: The Al Yankovic Story is a parody of musical biopics, particularly their tendency to employ artistic license, it has a lot of inaccuracies in the name of the Rule of Funny. Fans treat these inaccuracies as if they really happened, including the ending, where Al is killed in 1986 by a cartel hitman employed by Madonna.
- X-Men: Days of Future Past ends with both the future Sentinels and the previous films erased from history. Naturally, some viewers pretend that they never heard of Sentinels or any X-Men films prior to X-Men: Apocalypse or "complain" that Days of Future Past is just a single scene of Wolverine talking to Charles before the credits roll.
- In the film Yesterday, Jack Malik wakes up in a world where The Beatles never existed. To get famous, he begins passing off their music as his own. This led to fans claiming to not know who The Beatles were, and also claiming Jack Malik to be the writer of the songs.
- Candle Cove: There are typically two groups of fans that play along with the story's lore about the fictitious Candle Cove TV series. The first group of fans say that they remember watching the show, and will often have discussions as they recount various episodes and plotlines that are typically made up on the spot for the sake of the joke. The second group of fans insists that they only see static whenever they try watching the show. When it comes to fan "uploads" of Candle Cove on YouTube, expect to see the first group of fans commenting on videos that are nothing but static, and the second group of fans commenting on videos that actually have visual footage.
- Dracula: In May of 2022, the "Dracula Daily" newsletter exploded in popularity. Because the novel is a Scrapbook Story of journals, letters, and articles, and everything in the book has a date, the newsletter sends subscribers an email with whatever happened that day in canon. (For example, the first part of the book is Jonathan Harker's journal, with the first entry being on May 3. Therefore, on May 3, subscribers got an email with that entry.) Tumblr in particular latched onto the newsletter, and began posting their reactions in real time, and many react as if they're getting emails and blog entries from real people describing things that are currently happening to them. As far as the subscribers are concerned, Jonathan Harker is their good friend, they have no idea what will happen next, and they can't wait to get his next email update about his work trip in Transylvania — and they wonder if his girlfriend Mina will update her blog soon. Similarly, days with no updates will be met with posts in the tag about how they haven't heard from Jonathan today and they hope he's okay, while others say that they miss Jon, but they're sure everything's fine.
- Every time a true fan of House of Leaves discusses the book, they will mark every instance of the word house in blue. Yes, "the house" and "the house" are different things (some even say they sound different). Even This Very Wiki plays along with this.
- Nineteen Eighty-Four: It has been common to play along with the Double Think of the Party when talking about the book. Remember, we were always at war with Eastasia while Eurasia has always been our ally. What's that? Yesterday Eastasia was our ally and Eurasia was our enemy? Nonsense, things were always this way.
- In Re:Zero, Rem's existence is completely erased to the point that even close family cannot recognize her. Fans carry on the effects of this event by pretending they don't recognize her at all.
- Sherlock Holmes: It is a convention in publications by Holmesian or Sherlockian clubs and scholars that the Great Detective was a real, historic person and Dr. Watson really wrote the stories and novels as a "biographer." This meant they had to spend much time and effort explaining apparent discrepancies in the text (as Doyle sometimes wrote that Watson's wartime injury was in his leg, and other times it was in his shoulder.)
- Sky Wizards Academy: When a Sky Wizard dies in battle, all regulars forget that he or she ever existed. Naturally, consumers pretend to be affected too.
- Song of the Sorcelator and Epic Legends of the Hierarchs are two projects (well, one project) that run on this. After a series of comic strips mocking bad fantasy novels in Penny Arcade, the creators set up fan wikis for the two franchises they made up and had the fanbase treat them as if they were real, letting them create as much Stylistic Suck and Fandom Rivalry as they pleased.
- Vermis I: Being a game guide for a game that never really existed, fans of the book will often play along and talk about their memories of playing Vermis when they were younger.
- Worm: The character of Imp has the ability to make people forget she exists, even if they're staring right at her. Discussions of Imp will sometimes feature fans suddenly "forgetting" what character they were talking about.
- The Afterparty: The series released a music video
that was made in-universe by murder victim Xavier. Viewers commented on the video as though Xavier were a real, sadly deceased celebrity.
- Better Call Saul: Howard Hamlin was set up by Jimmy McGill and Kim Wexler to appear to be addicted to cocaine and prostitutes, with stunts such as having prostitutes accost him at lunch, Jimmy kicking Wendy out of Howard's car, and placing baby powder in Howard's locker. It's a common joke to treat Howard as he actually is addicted to prostitutes and coke. Furthermore during the aforementioned lunch Howard mistakes the word "Tug Boat" as someone's street name, hence fans treating "Tug Boat" as an actual character.
- The Boys: In promotional videos made as in-universe news programs, movie trailers, music videos, and promos posted by the Vought International YouTube account
, the comments will be full of people talking about the characters and media as if they're real and as if they have no idea what's really behind the facade. Particularly clever comments will reference events in the show in ways that come across as Innocently Insensitive if spoken by a true Vought believer, such as one commentator saying it must have been "hard to stomach" when The Deep lost his good friend Timothy.
Commenter: Homelander saved my cat stuck in a tree yesterday. She lost her tail but it's a small price to pay. Thanks Homelander! - Breaking Bad:
- Fans often praise Villain with Good Publicity Gus Fring as an outstanding pillar of the community, and are outraged at any suggestion that he might be involved in something shady.
- It's a common joke among fans to take Walt's fake confession that pins most of his crimes on Hank from season 5 at face value, expressing sympathy for the former and disgust at the latter.
- Fans like to prop up Badger and Skinny Pete as Memetic Badasses by playing along with Walt's claim that he has hired "two best hitmen west of the Mississippi" when he actually just has the two junkies use some laser pointers to threaten Gretchen and Elliot in the finale.
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer:
- Reaction Videos for the first episodes of Season 5 tend to be full of comments insisting that Buffy's sister Dawn was merely Out of Focus for the past seasons, and acting surprised whenever a new viewer "forgets" all the times when Dawn was an important part of a certain episode or season.
- After the reveal that Glory has a spell to prevent anyone remembering her and Ben turning into each other, fans started making comments asking if there was a "connection" between Ben and Glory.
- Chousei Kantai Sazer-X ends with Takuto wishing with the Cosmo-Capsules that Descal never took over Earth, erasing King Neo Descal from ever having existed. Viewers pretend that this effect extended past the fourth wall and say that they have never heard of him.
- Cobra Kai: In Season 2, Daniel LaRusso's commercial for the Miyagi-Do dojo gets him accused of cultural appropriation by angry internet trolls who even nickname him "Daniel LaRacist", despite Daniel being one of the least racist characters on the show when compared to the likes of Johnny and Kreese. Cue fans using the nickname themselves and ironically calling him racist while upholding Cobra Kai as a pillar of progressiveness and political correctness.
- Doctor Who:
- Series 6 (2011) introduced the Silence, a religious order of creepy humanoids. Once anyone looks away from a Silent, they forget about them. However, these aliens use post-hypnotic suggestions. Many commenters act like they've never seen the Silence but remember what they said; it went as far as videos of the Apollo 11 moon landing, a major plot point in the episode "Day of the Moon". note
- Once in a while ever since "Thin Ice", some fans would mourn the loss of "Pete", someone the Doctor jokingly claims to be Bill's friend until he gets Ret-Goned after he accidentally steps on a butterfly, as if he is a longtime companion. Asking who Pete is just leads to the memers using the Doctor's joke that he has been erased from Bill's memories.
- In "Wild Blue Yonder", the Doctor and Donna accidentally interrupt Isaac Newton just as he figures out gravity, causing Newton to give the fundamental interaction of gravity the name "mavity" instead. From that point onwards in the show, all characters refer to the fundamental interaction of gravity as "mavity", including the Fifteenth Doctor. A lot of fans have taken this and run with it, including attributing the First Doctor mentioning "gravity" to one of William Hartnell's infamous line flubs, and various other incarnations of the character mentioning "gravity" being taken to be "bloopers that were left in by mistake", and so on.
- In season 4 of The Expanse, Amos expresses his dislike for Murtry by calling him everything except "Murtry". Since Murtry is a Hate Sink, fans took to doing the same. They might even correct others using the wrong name, but the "corrections" are still never his actual name.
- Game of Thrones:
- In Season 5, Ramsay Bolton declares that "I don't need an army, I need twenty good men", before managing to use that small team to ransack Stannis's camp and cripple an army of thousands without even being noticed. Due to the perceived implausibility of the whole thing and it contributing to the breakdown and death of a character the writers claimed to dislike, fans started making mocking declarations of just how impressive Ramsay's "twenty good men" must be, before eventually hitting on the silliest possible conclusion: Ramsay was not referring to a small team, but rather to the greatest knight in Westeros, Ser Twenty of House Goodmen, who carried out the operation singlehandedly. This was then combined with several other mentions in the series of this famed knight (i.e. Mance Rayder telling Tormund to "take Orell and twenty good men" in Season 3) to come up with further accounts of his skill. Bronn claiming "Give me ten good men and some climbing spikes, I'll impregnate the bitch" led to the idea that Ser Twenty's only equal is his kinsman, Ten.
- In Season 6, after murdering his own father to seize power for himself, Ramsay Bolton covers this up with the extremely flimsy cover story that Roose was "poisoned by his enemies", which isn't believed by anyone. Fans took to playing along by commiserating with Ramsay over his father's death and hoping he gets the chance to avenge his poisoning.
- Also in Season 6, Mace Tyrell makes a pathetic attempt at a Rousing Speech that leaves Jaime rolling his eyes when the two lead the Tyrell troops to rescue Margaery from the Sparrows. Due to Roger Ashton-Griffiths' hilarious Large Ham delivery, fans have treated the speech as genuinely brilliant and motivational, claiming that "Mace the Ace" is the greatest and most charismatic general in all of Westeros. The odd way he pronounces the word "madness" when declaring "Madness has overtaken this city" has, similarly to the Ser Twenty Goodmen example, lead to claims that King's Landing has actually been conquered by a mysterious man named Magnus, who is considered Mace's only Worthy Opponent.
- I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson: One sketch has a man named Reggie feel left out when all his friends share their favorite viral videos, so he makes a Gag Dub of The Bozo Show and claims it's an existing viral video. When pressed, he insists that it's Bozo himself doing the dub based on what he wanted to say on the show at the time. Fans thus don't credit Reggie or even Tim Robinson for "Bozo Dubbed Over," insisting it was Bozo himself who made the dub.
- Kamen Rider Den-O sometimes has fans joke that there is only one Kamen Rider (the titular Den-O, Ryotaro Nogami) while being unable to recognize the other main Rider, Yuuto Sakurai/Zeronos. This is due to the effects of the Zeronos Belt, which literally burns away other people's memories of him (and later his own once he acquires Zero Form) whenever he uses it to transform.
- In one episode of Limmy's Show, Limmy interrupts a sketch about a pair of metalheads listening to a-ha's "Manhattan Skyline" to encourage his audience to spread around messages eulogising a made-up man named Benny Harvey. As such, if you look in the comments for any upload of "Manhattan Skyline", you'll inevitably find people paying their respects to Benny Harvey, claiming it was his favourite song and reminiscing on all the fond memories of him it brings back.
- The Office (US): Thanks to the "Asian Jim" prank shown in "Andy's Ancestry", fans will often deliberately confuse John Krasinski for Randall Park and vice-versa. Even the actors themselves
have played into the joke.
- Fans of RuPaul's Drag Race particularly took to Season 13 contestant Joey Jay, and her running joke of announcing she's gay... despite the fact that every season is a Cast Full of Gay and her frequent mentions of this fact are obviously redundant (come on, it's a show about drag queens!). Fans found this so funny that they christened Joey Jay the "first openly gay contestant" and praised the show for "finally having gay representation." It kept Joey a fan favorite long after her early elimination.
- Thanks to a famous gag
in Saturday Night Live, when people mention late Spanish fascist dictator Francisco Franco, they will be quick to update that he is still dead.
- Just like in the books A Series of Unfortunate Events is based off of, Count Olaf's disguises are all ineffective to the Baudelaires and the audience. This has resulted in a lot of memes in which people either pretend to fall for them, or post a picture of Neil Patrick Harris (who portrays him in the series) and say "It's count Olaf in disguise!"
- Sherlock spawned one more dramatic and heartwarming than funny. In the Series 2 finale, Moriarty's Evil Plan is to discredit Sherlock in the eyes of the public by making it look like he orchestrated all his own cases, traumatized children, and framed an innocent bystander as the non-existent Moriarty. Fans expressed their support for Sherlock by sharing the memes "I believe in Sherlock Holmes" and "Moriarty was real".
- Star Wars Expanded Universe:
- The Mandalorian: In Season 2, Mando and the rest of his friends agree to let Mayfeld go free as thanks for getting them crucial information from an Imperial refinery, under the cover story that he died in a botched escape from the base. Fans quickly began hailing him as a tragic martyr, staunchly denying any chance of his survival.
- Andor: Cassian Andor uses several different aliases over the course of the series, so the fandom likes to play along and act like "Clem", "Keef Girga", "Varian Sky", "Ronnie Googe" and "Justa Toorist" are all completely separate characters from Cassian.
- Succession: After Logan's death in the fourth season, several news publications posted actual
obituaries
for him shortly after the episode came out. Along with being a succinct look at Logan's backstory, actions, and in-universe legacy, they're also very detailed, with the LA Times article referencing two of Waystar Studio's movies, whose posters can be spotted as a Freeze-Frame Bonus on the walls of Waystar's offices, and the Vulture article including pictures of a young Brian Cox to help maintain the illusion that it was a real event.
- Taskmaster: In the straightforward task 'Get goosebumps. Fastest wins', Victoria Corren-Mitchell drew spots on her arm with a felt tip and said they were goosebumps. Even for Taskmaster's long-standing acceptance of lateral thinking, the hosts were unsure about whether the drawn-on spots counted. When Victoria leant on the lateral thinking argument during the studio section, Greg said "But you're not known nationally as 'Old Goosebump Arm', are you?", to which Victoria laughed and said "I wasn't". Greg decided that if the nickname 'Old Goosebump Arm' caught on for Victoria after the broadcast, he'd retroactively give her points, and in the context of Series 12 fans have gladly obliged.
- The Umbrella Academy (2019): Faced with one apocalypse after another throughout the series, the Hargreeves siblings perform a Heroic Sacrifice where they don't just kill themselves, but also erase themselves from history because their very existence is causing all of this. This combined with the ending itself being an Audience-Alienating Ending has caused many to pretend the entire show never happened.
- One popular meme involves posting doctored screenshots of lyrics sites like AZLyrics or Genius featuring ridiculous, obviously fake songs from popular bands and artists. It's considered common courtesy when discussing these to treat them as a real part of their musicians' discographies, such as praising Jay-Z for his confessional "Helicopter Addict" or debating whether the controversy surrounding The Beatles' "It's Okay to Leave a Dog in a Hot Car" was warranted or not.
- Ninja Sex Party: In "6969", Danny's love interest is named Kristen, but he immediately forgets her name and instead calls her "Katie". As a result, fans will refer to her as any K-name besides Kristen.
- Will Smith's music video for the Men in Black theme song ends with him turning to the camera, putting on sunglasses, and "Neuralyzing" the audience. On uploads of the video, you can often find people in the comments saying they know they sat down to watch the video but can't remember any of it.
- Planet of the Bass is a parody song of 90s eurodance music. As part of the aesthetics, the music clip was also released in a version meant to emulate VHS. YouTube comments will see many people say that the song was actually released in the 90s, and be nostalgic for it with memories to tell and saying how DJ Crazy Times is finally getting well-deserved recognition. A few YouTube accounts have gone so far as to put up unofficial streams of the video but add grain, high contrast and other degraded effects to the video to make it actually look like it was aired on late night television, recorded to VHS, then digitized and uploaded.
- "All Star" by Smash Mouth has this 1987 remix
. One of its commenters claims to remember hearing it for the first time in January 1988.
- In the song "Businessman" by comedy musician Tom Cardy, the titular businessman repeatedly insists that he's definitely not a cop despite all evidence suggesting otherwise. Naturally, fans in the comments section will insist that he's just an ordinary businessman, and that there's no possible way he could be an undercover cop.
- It's not hard nowadays to find spaces where adults talk about Santa Claus as though he were a real person, and react with mock-indignation when someone suggests that the presents they got from him really came from their parents. This joke has become so widespread that NORAD, a real-world military command agency, now has an official program to "track" Santa's movements through the sky every December, and, in 2006, Forbes magazine declared that he was no longer eligible for their list of the richest characters in fiction.
- Welcome to Night Vale: It's not uncommon to see fans jokingly mix up the identities of Hiram McDaniels, who is literally a five-headed dragon, and Frank Chen, a posthumous human character who is heavily implied to have been murdered by Hiram several years ago (Cause of Death: Dragon, at least three heads), after Hiram assumed Chen's identity in the wake of several unsuccessful assassination attempts on newly elected mayor Dana Cardinal, in order to avoid capture by the secret police.
- John Cena's theme song is "My Time is Now" and features the lyric "You can't see me!" Internet users like to pretend that they can't see him whenever he is present in any image or video they see that he's in.
- In reality, Christopher Daniels and Curry Man are one and the same. But as far as fans are concerned, there's no relation. Ditto with Hulk Hogan and Mr. America.
- Elias, between Wrestlemania and Summerslam 2022, brought back the Charlie Brown from Outta Town gimmick of old and played it perfectly straight when he returned as his "younger brother", Ezekiel. It was less than a Paper-Thin Disguise — the only thing Jeffrey Sciullo did to change character was shave his beard – but one of the most entertaining things in the WWE over those four months was wrestlers and fans alike playing along as if the two men were separate, whilst Kevin Owens descended into insanity as the Only Sane Man in the industry.
- Mick Foley has three alter egos during his career: Cactus Jack, Dude Love, and Mankind, with his real life self occasionally added to the list. Because there were promos with all three of his alter ego together, him entering the Royal Rumble as all three of his gimmicks, and many WWE games included all three of his gimmicks and his real life self as playable characters, it's been said that Cactus Jack, Dude Love, Mankind, and Mick Foley are four separate people and that fans want a fatal four way match with all four wrestlers.
- Bobby Heenan, during the famous segment of Shawn Michaels betraying Marty Jannetty by smashing his head through a barbershop window, accused Jannetty of attempting to dive out the window to escape as an "act of cowardism". Although this was obviously a heelish display of Selective Obliviousness from Heenan, to this day fans will insist that Jannetty is indeed a Dirty Coward who jumped out the window of his own accord.
- Examples involving R-Truth:
- Fans love to act as if his bizarre Cloudcuckoolander comments are completely factual, in particular his claim that John Cena was his childhood hero (the joke being that Truth is five years older than Cena and joined the WWE before Cena did). Speaking of Truth, after he mistook #DIY as D-Generation X, the internet has affectionately called Johnny Gargano and Tommasso Cimapa "Shawn Michaels" and "Triple H" while doing the reverse for the real Michaels and Triple H themselves.
- After R-Truth released a Judgement Day PSA where he mistakingly called Dominik Mysterio "Tom and Nick Mysterio", to which Truth says that "he hasn't seen Nick", fans also began to question the whereabouts of Nick, or state that Rey had been a neglectful dad to Nick. WWE even played along with the gag, introducing a shirt of Truth alongside Tom and Nick Mysterio!
- Rey Mysterio's habit of being betrayed by every ally he's ever had has lead fans to act is if Rey is the real problem, and present his opponents' self-serving excuses for turning on him as accurate. Among other things, Rey is frequently accused of being a deadbeat dad to his son Dominik Mysterio and a bad friend to Batista (who famously declared "You're supposed to be my friend!" when turning heel on Rey in 2009).
- Cody Rhodes gave a widely derided promo during his feud with Anthony Ogogo in AEW in which he appeared to insinuate that being married to a black woman and having a mixed-race child amounted to some great stand against racism. "Cody Rhodes ended racism" has since become an ironic rallying cry for his detractors and even his fans, who use it as more playful mockery.
- Sami Zayn joined WWE in the beginning of 2013, and is completely unrelated to "El Generico", the folk-hero generic luchador who was an indie sensation until the end of 2012. Everyone knows that El Generico retired back to Tijuana to work at the orphanage that he saved with his wrestling money!
- As part of the second act of her feud with Mariah May, Toni Storm returned to AEW in December 2024 seemingly acting as if she had debuted in the company after long years of toiling on the indies, and the previous three years — in which she won three world championships! — had not happened at all. Whilst her rookie antics — such as wrestling on the B-shows (even Ring of Honor!) and PPV pre-shows, helping out backstage, and enthusiastically introducing herself to anyone and everyone — were met with general bemusement by her colleagues, the fans absolutely lapped it up, effusive with nothing but positivity about her rookie status whenever she appeared. She eventually dropped that facade after several weeks, revealing it as just a ruse to get under May's skin, but the fans continued to play along with her antics, including chants of "which one's which?" when she "played the role" of May (whilst the real May was on commentary) during a match on Dynamite.
- After Chad Gable went on a journey to learn about the secrets of lucha libre, a mysterious masked wrestler named El Grande Americano suddenly showed up and started attacking masked wrestlers. It's clearly obvious based on his moves, build, wearing the exact same outfit, and everyone flubbing the lines that it's Gable but because they showed Gable and "El Grande Americano" at the same time, fans are "convinced" that they are both two different people and are "guessing" who is this "mysterious" masked wrestlers. Gable's injuries has allowed fans to say that it really wasn't him after Ludwig Kaiser took over the role but fans are still saying that El Grande Americano and Ludwig Kaiser are two different people.
- Ask any guest star on The Muppet Show, and they will tell you that co-starring with the Muppets was a great experience and that they highly respect them as actors. Both among fans and among professionals, it is considered practically sacrilege to suggest that the Muppets are anything other than skilled actors, as it would be breaking the commonly-understood idea that it's not to be done.
- In Team America: World Police, there is a parody of the real Matt Damon who can only say his name and wasn't voiced by the real actor in question. However, many fans act like Matt Damon really was involved in the movie, even acting like he was an inspiration or pivotal character, despite his minor role.
- It's very common for fans of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, especially in the older, geekier days of the Internet, to hold their own games of "Mornington Crescent," with the same mock Rules Lawyering heard on the show. Acknowledging that Mornington Crescent is Calvinball is obviously forbidden.
- The Random Number God trope - most gamers are well aware that dice don't actually have personalities, or are aware of the situation in the game, but acting as if they do is part of the fun.
- Fans of Magic: The Gathering would occasionally comment on the nine guilds of Ravnica, and how the supposed tenth guild 'House Dimir' was just a load of rubbish. After Dimir's cover got blown and it started to operate in the open, fans now instead express confusion about why anyone would think that this guild of couriers and shopkeepers could possibly be up to anything nefarious.
- A legal dispute between FASA and Harmony Gold (see here) resulted in a number of BattleTech mecha, the designs of which were originally from Super Dimension Fortress Macross and other anime) having no official artwork or models. Fans dubbed these "The Unseen". Years later, the Macross designs were used in Palladium's Robotech Tactics miniatures game - and promptly snatched up by the Battletech fandom. When pictures of those models appear online, Battletech fans claim they can't see them.
- Exalted: The White Veil Society is a secret society that focuses on stealth, infiltration and other subtle activities. Even their own martial arts style is designed so that the people they fight don't realize they were ever in a fight. Thus, fans like to talk about them in a Suspiciously Specific Denial, such as "The White Veil Society does not exist. It does not have spies in every major society, to further the far-reaching political agenda it doesn't have."
- Warhammer: The Empire's extensive cover-up of the Skaven's existence has led to many fans jokingly pretending they're not real in-universe.
- Warhammer 40,000: Part of the lore of the Blood Angels is that members occasionally suffer the Black Rage, a bizarre mental breakdown where they hallucinate themselves as their Primarch, Sanguinius, in his final moments when he was battling Horus. This causes them to enter a permanent Unstoppable Rage as they view everyone around them as Horus—and because of this, Blood Angels players will often joke about seeing people as Horus. The launch of Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine II sparked a particularly popular variant of this meme, where players complained about a "bug" where wearing Blood Angels Death Company armor replaced all the enemies with Horus for some reason.
- Many writers on the internet have made posts treating the claims about the villainous Macavity in Cats completely seriously; picking them apart as if they were writing a myth-busting article.
- AI: The Somnium Files: There's a Running Gag of characters forgetting the name of Inspector Kagami, and the fans also have a tendency to "forget" his name.
- Amanda the Adventurer is named after the titular Show Within a Show. As the show is based on typical early 2000s preschool cartoons, some fans have jokingly acted like Amanda the Adventurer was a real show.
- Arcaea: Mentioning Tenniel, a character from the Ephemeral Page side story, in a discussion about the game tends to invoke remarks of "Who's Tenniel?" Tenniel is an Imaginary Friend of Alice.
- Any Arknights player familiar with its major characters will easily recognise the "Female Tourist C" briefly seen at the start of Heart of Surging Flame as Ch'en taking a vacation after the events of the Reunion storyline. However, since the event never calls her by name, some fans started treating her as a separate character actually named Female Tourist C who inexplicably looks just like Ch'en wearing a swimsuit.
- A common meme in the Batman: Arkham Series community (largely stemming from the subreddit) is the character of "Man", a character stemming from a photoshopped image of Michael Keaton as the Caped Crusader in The Flash, but lacking any bat-iconography. From there, more and more characters were misnamed and treated as if they were the originals, such as "Jonkler" for the Joker, "Bone" for Bane, "Woman" for Catwoman, and "Horny Queef" for Harley Quinn. Whenever Batman himself is brought up in a thread, expect for him to be dismissed as a "furry Man knockoff", or as Man with an anatomically-misplaced Raging Stiffie. The in-meme explanation is that everyone in the subreddit has gone completely insane due to a lack of content.
- BioShock: Adding the words, "Would you kindly...?" to a request. The game reveals that "would you kindly" is actually a phrase used to mind-control Jack, and consequently, the player.
- In Bloons Tower Defense, Camo Bloons can't be attacked by towers who can't detect them, despite being just as colorful as regular bloons, just with camo patterns on. Players like to joke they really can't see pictures of Camo Bloons. This is usually followed by a variation of "wearing the red wristbands", since the upgrade that lets Dart Monkeys see Camo is depicted in-game as a pair of red wristbands.
- City of Heroes had a radio mission involving Dr Stephen Fayte, mistaken for a powerful sorcerer, but everyone who meets him agrees he's merely "a gifted surgeon and nothing more." Players like to play along, using the same specific phrase to describe him; it's also been extended to the characters he's named after, particularly Strange, who was a gifted surgeon.
- The intro of Dark Souls I describes, among other important figures in the game's backstory, a character known as the Furtive Pygmy, who the narrator describes as being "so easily forgotten." Fans like to act like they've never heard of him whenever he's mentioned. It doesn't help that the games themselves have very few direct references to the Pygmy to begin with, so it's not unknown for players who weren't paying very much attention to the lore to have genuinely forgotten he exists.
- Deltarune:
- In the first chapter, Lancer disguises himself by putting on a mustache. In the second chapter, this mustachioed Lancer, now titled Chef Lancer, appears in the Castle Town's bakery, with Lancer acting like they're two separate people. Fans often pretend that they are separate characters as well, and a common joke "theory" is speculating that the two are related somehow.
- Also in the first chapter, the two puzzles that Rouxls Kaard gives you are brainlessly easy (just push a box to a nearby button), the joke being that he talks them up like they are nigh-impossible to solve. Naturally, one can find posts and comments from people who are "stuck" on these puzzles and asking for help, with a common joke response being an incredibly overly-complicated way of saying "press Z to push the box onto the button".
- Once the fourth chapter was released, it's common to see fans poking fun at the excessive amount of memes the game has spawned by complaining that they're sick and tired of the overused meme that Berdly loves caramel. Of course, there's no association in-game between Berdly and caramel, and no such meme actually exists, but it's common to see people mock-complaining about it while side-eyeing other memes that actually annoy them.
- Dota 2: Ogre Magi's Multicast, a purely luck-based ability which gives his abilities and items a chance to cast multiple times per use, is insisted by both the game and players as the Magi succeeding through "pure skill".
- Earth Defense Force 5 introduces the Colonist enemy units, aliens who resemble giant bipedal frogs. The game never describes them as frogs; instead, characters repeatedly insist they look "almost exactly like humans." Thus, fans will comment on how much they look like humans, or pretend to mistake them for real humans. Even the EDF Wiki
refers to them as "human-like creatures".
- Fallout 4 has a boss called the Red Death, who is hyped up as an all powerful monster. In truth, however, it is a Zero-Effort Boss- a tiny Bloodrage Mirelurk that goes down easily. Still, fans have gone along with the beliefs, claiming the Red Death to be a That One Boss of epic proportions, bringing up how many resources they had to use to kill it.
- Fate/Grand Order: Following Miyamoto Musashi's Heroic Sacrifice in the climax of Lostbelt 5.2. "Olympus" which sees the character essentially Ret-Gone from existence, many fans and players have asked who exactly this character who sacrificed themselves is, or alternatively, refer to her simply as "Data Lost" due to the aforementioned actions. Possibly another contribution to the treatment of this character is how Kirschtaria welcomes you to the final duel, congratulating you on how you lost nobody on your team, and lists down everyone except her. Chaldea is totally pissed, believing him to be mocking her sacrifice.
- Final Fantasy XIV has a fight in Endwalker where the final boss attempts to annihilate the party with a powerful move that can only be defended against with a Tank's Limit Break. However, unlike most attempts that occur in this fashion, the final boss just does it again to ensure the party dies since you just used up your strongest defense. Veteran players play up the hopelessness they're going to wipe (sometimes even saying they messed up a non-existent mechanic) and start over to hide the fact it's a Fission Mailed to new players.
- Fire Emblem:
- Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance has a character named Devdan. In its sequel, Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn there's a man called Danved, who insists that "Danved is definitely not Devdan" and joins the party, so the fanbase likes to pretend the same.
- Fire Emblem: Awakening: The character Kellam, despite being a Knight in noisy, bulky armor, is basically treated in-universe as if he's invisible. Naturally, whenever he shows up in official or fan content, fans often pretend to not see him. Alternatively, fans may claim a picture where Kellam really isn't present actually does depict him, or make "fan art" or mock up screenshots of Kellam consisting of blank or even broken images.
- Despite Generic Fishing Game being tagged "horror" and quickly escalating to nightmarish levels, many commentors follow the title's cue and pretend the game is actually a generic fishing simulator.
- Genshin Impact: Chapter III Act V of the storyline has Greater Lord Rukkhadevata getting Ret-Gone'd with all memories of her disappearing from everybody's minds, and the game is very thorough about removing all mention of her, with dialogue, item descriptions, and in-game books being changed to remove all mention of her. The fanbase followed suit, often jokingly asking who Rukkhadevata is or asking why her successor Lesser Lord Kusanali is called that when there's no one she's "lesser" than.
- Helldivers II: The "2/27/25 Ceasefire Incident" involved a bug which forced the game's developers to pause the in-game systems tracking community progress, more or less halting player activity for the day. Upon fixing the bug, an official tweet jokingly declared that nothing had happened in the past 24 hours and everything was normal. The players, roleplaying happily brainwashed citizens of Super Earth, immediately and pointedly agreed, refusing to acknowledge the bug despite loads of memes they had made about playing volleyball with the Automatons during "ceasefire."
- Hollow Knight: A wanderer who calls himself "Zote the Mighty" is a complete failure as an adventurer, being either in the mouth of a Vengefly or stuck in a web in Deepnest (and complains that he was perfectly fine before you rescue him), and when fought as a boss in the Colosseum of Fools, he can't even deal damage to the Knight; even the fantasized version of him, while strong, is clumsy and hard to take seriously. Fans, however, go along with Zote's delusions and turn him into a Memetic Badass who actually holds godlike powers, but holds back to help the Knight progress into their own quest to kill a god.
- Hollow Knight: Silksong: A pilgrim called Sherma likes to play a song in gibberish, and when you talk to him, he pretends this song is able to reach the gods and that they would answer his prayers, something he brags you about when you open the bone door at the start of the game. Many fans go along with Sherma’s delusions, thanking him for opening the door, and pretend he can really reshape the world with his little song.
- It's common to see fans of Hypnospace Outlaw pretending the events of the game and the fictional music artists are real, waxing nostalgic over using Hypnospace in the 90's or hating on/praising the Chowder Man, the game's resident White-Dwarf Starlet.
- I Was a Teenage Exocolonist: The in-game context of the various lines about Cal having "romantic interactions" with floatcows is soldiers with no sympathy for the xenofauna insulting the resident Naïve Animal Lover. If Cal's flaws have any reason to be mentioned in a discussion, chances are that one of them will be liking the floatcows a little too much.
- Kingdom Hearts: After the events of Kingdom Hearts: 358/2 Days, it became a joke to ask who Xion is. Since she is basically the manifestation of Sora's memories, after she dies, everyone forgets who she is. However, it was largely discredited after Kingdom Hearts III with Xion's return.
- The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time: The twist that Sheik's true identity of Princess Zelda is well-known, but fans pretend that they have no idea who she really is.
- Like a Dragon:
- Yakuza 5: Series protagonist Kazuma Kiryu works as a taxi driver under the alias "Taichi Suzuki" in the events of this game to distance himself from his past. Fans like to treat the ex-yakuza Kiryu and the driver Suzuki as separate characters, some even going as far as to say that Suzuki completely disappears from the game after Part 1 and Kiryu appears out of nowhere in the finale.
- Kiryu's alias of "Joryu" in Like a Dragon Gaiden: The Man Who Erased His Name gets the same treatment, with fans expressing that they think Joryu is a neat protagonist but that they hope to see Kiryu again sometime.
- In Yakuza Kiwami, Hannya-Man is blatantly just Goro Majima in his suit from Yakuza 0 and a Hannya Mask, but some fans pretend that the two are completely distinct characters, jokingly speculating what, if any, possible connections the two have.
- Limbus Company: Canto VI's climax involves Catherine erasing herself from every world, resulting in almost everyone forgetting her existence. Even in Heathcliff's Uptie stories and Identities, her name is replaced with static noises and black squares. Naturally, it's become a common in-joke among Limbus fans to act like you don't remember who Catherine/█████ is.
- Metal Gear:
- Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty has fans playing along with Solid Snake's Paper-Thin Disguise as "Iroquois Pliskin", joking about him being a new character who couldn't possibly be Snake, since Snake "died" in the Tanker incident in the prologue.
- Screenshots of Naked Snake from Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater where he's wearing a camouflage pattern matching his environment are treated as if he's completely invisible, with fans questioning why an image of an empty space was even shared to begin with.
- In the 2020s, the Duran Duran song "Invisible" began being used in an odd number of Metal Gear videos, due to people finding its lyrics and style fit the themes and tone of the series. This led to it being used as something of a musical shorthand for Metal Gear in memes, with people treating it as if it were the franchise's theme music. The song has nothing whatsoever to do with the franchise—it came out in 2021, well after the release of its last game to date—but because of this association, fans like to claim that it actually is from the games, often claiming that it plays in a specific mission later in Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. Some even congratulate Kojima for cleverly Foreshadowing the game's twist through the use of a song released over five years later.
- Metroid:
- To hide the true identity of its protagonist, the original Metroid manual described Samus Aran as a cyborg man. Therefore, the Metroid fandom continues to subscribe to her in-universe Shrouded in Myth status by jokingly referring to Samus as a robot dude in various memes. Super Smash Bros. having Samus as a playable character both in and out of her power armor (the latter being called Zero Suit Samus) resulted in the gag evolving into "Metroid and his girlfriend Samus."
- In Metroid Dread, ADAM, the computer A.I. of Samus' gunship and exposition guide to ZDR, claims that Samus is not a worthy opponent to Raven Beak, not even at her full potential, and she has a low probability of defeating him. Once it's revealed that "ADAM" is actually Raven Beak impersonating the AI, these statements come across as less of a threat and more of a narcissistic boast from the evil Chozo, and consequently, fans decide to go along with ADAM's claims and begin adding their own "facts" into the pile, making Raven Beak the ultimate Memetic Badass of the Metroid universe. They go as far as claiming that Raven Beak has a shredded eight-pack and his Zero Suit is so sexy that it was removed from the game because it instantly bumped the ESRB rating from T to AO.
- The Murder of Sonic the Hedgehog: Fans naturally started running with Sonic's "death" upon the games' announcement, pretending the Blue Blur really had been murdered and that there will be no more games as a result. Series critics reacted with rare good humor, suggesting Sega was "finally giving [the critics] what they really wanted!" The official Atlus Twitter account even tweeted out a suggestion
for Jack Frost to replace the hedgehog, to which the official SEGA Twitter account simply stated "approved." Another example is claiming that the player character is teaming up with Tails from the hit multimedia franchise Tails.
- In NEO: The World Ends with You, the Big Bad Tanzo Kubo gets exorcized which means not only is he erased in the traditional sense but even his appearance is retroactively removed in the past as if he never existed. Naturally, this causes fans to say that they have never heard of him and wonder who this middle aged looking Reaper is.
- Since the main conceit of the game Octodad is almost nobody realizing the titular character is an octopus in disguise, it's become common for videos and pictures of him to be met with comments wondering what's so interesting about this normal everyday dad doing normal everyday things.
- Paper Mario:
- The Thousand-Year Door:
- Many fans like to pretend that they don't know what Doopliss' name is, and will often spell his name as either DooPliss or Doo_liss. This also sometimes extends to replacing any instances of the letter "p" with a blank underscore when discussing topics related to him, like in the comments for videos of his boss music.
- Similarly, despite how obvious it is that "Four-Eyes" is actually Lord Crump (to the point where he turns to the player to say as much), many fans like to act surprised when the reveal happens.
- Super Paper Mario: No-one In-Universe is able to recognize the real identity of Count Bleck's enigmatic minion Mr. L. And despite the fact that he's obviously a Brainwashed and Crazy Luigi, neither are fans of the game.
- The Thousand-Year Door:
- Persona 5: The Phantom X's Starter Villain Takeyuki Kiuchi is ultimately just a petty thug who attacks women on the subway, but he acts like such an over-the-top Card-Carrying Villain about it that fans love to jokingly buy into his hype, talking up the "Subway Slammer" as the most powerful and menacing antagonist that Atlus have ever written.
- Pokémon:
- Ditto is a Pokémon that can shapeshift into any kind of Pokémon, but it sometimes gets the face wrong and keeps its own face with dot eyes and a line mouth. When there is a group of Pokémon with one that is clearly a transformed Ditto, people will comment about how all the Pokémon look perfectly normal, and there's nothing to see there.
- Pokémon Sun and Moon: Ask a fan who the Masked Royal is, and they'll tell you they have no idea, but it certainly isn't Professor Kukui.
- Pokémon Scarlet and Violet: Although they have many similarities with regards to their appearance, Clive is certainly not Director Clavell.
- Pokémon Legends: Z-A: After an official video was released depicting people being obsessed with Malamar, a Pokémon that's known to control people's minds, fans started to talk about how much they love Malamar, as if Malamar was controlling their minds in real life.
- Pressure: Due to her effects on people, its pretty common for people to refer to My Beautiful Wife as their wife due to people seeing my wife as their own, regardless of gender or orientation.
- Puyo Puyo 2: Who the heck is Masked Satan? Surely not reoccurring villain Satan wearing a fancy eyemask, right? Well, that can't be, because he has his own slot in the playable roster in the PC-Engine port!
- You'll be hard pressed to find a guide for The Stanley Parable that doesn't include the Whiteboard Ending and the Broom Closet Ending even though neither is actually an ending, since both allow the player to move on with the story once they are done. This is because both are jokingly referred to as endings by the game: the former features a whiteboard with the words "Welcome to the WHITEBOARD ENDING!" in it, and the latter has the narrator question if you are staying inside the broom closet for so long because you're expecting to get an ending out of it, and how you'll tell your friends that "the broom closet ending was [your] favorite".
- Rockman ZX Prequel ends with Elf and Nett merged with E. L. F. and forgotten by everyone. Players who complete it pretend to also forget who they were.
- Splatoon 3: The song "Liquid Sunshine" is a music collaboration between the Squid Sisters and an enigmatic Splatlandian singer named Ian BGM. Then months later, it's revealed in Deep Cut's new song "Big Betrayal" that Ian BGM is an anagram for Big Man and the song is about how a poorly disguised Big Man got caught hanging out with the Squid Sisters by Shiver and Frye. Big Man insists it's not him, but rather Ian BGM who clearly has no relations with him. While Deep Cut clearly doesn't buy it, the fans do and insist that Big Man is innocent because Ian BGM is clearly a separate manta ray who just so happens to look almost identical.
- Whenever someone posts Steamshovel Harry, people write comments about the levels in the game, such as how they are struggling to beat them. It's an Unwinnable Joke Game that ends on the first screen of the first "level".
- Super Princess Peach has Peach rescue Luigi after beating the boss of Giddy Sky, but the game confusedly calls him "the green man?". Speedrunners often act like they have no idea who this green fellow in blue overalls is.
- Suzerain: The "Koronti Wedding" meme involves the playerbase pretending that there is an elaborately hidden scene involving our resident corrupt media mogul Marcel Koronti getting married and a whole array of obscure choices you must make in order to see it. There is no such thing of course, outside the collective imagination of trolls trying to trick new players into a Snipe Hunt.
- The Spy from Team Fortress 2 is able to disguise himself as any of the 9 classes (including his own) on either his or the enemy's team by wearing a literal Paper-Thin Disguise. Pictures of random characters from other media often appear in the feeds of TF2 communities, much to their confusion.
- Town of Salem has a swear filter that changes words to "polite" words. Unlike other examples of swear filters, players find it humorous and either keep it on, or intentionally type like anachronistic pilgrims saying "Tarnation you!" or "Oh flummery".
- UFO 50 is a collection of 50 games made by an obscure company known as LX Systems, later rebranded to UFO Soft. They were all made for the LX computer line back in the 1980s, before the company shut its doors in 1990. They seemed to be lost media, until Mossmouth happened to stumble on a storage unit with an old LX and a disc that contained all of their games
. Together, Mossmouth formed the UFO 50 Recovery Team, and took home a big win for video game preservation when they successfully got all of UFO Soft's games working on modern computers... or at least, that's the Framing Device. In reality, all of the games were made by Mossmouth in the late 2010s-early 2020s, but you'll regularly see people sharing fond memories of playing the long-forgotten 80s classics contained in UFO 50, crediting all of the games to the brilliant employees at UFO Soft, and praising Mossmouth's excellent work in making them accessible for a modern audience.
- Umamusume: Pretty Derby:
- Super Creek asking her trainer to play "goo-goo babies" with her has led some fans to start talking about "goo-goo babies" as you would a typical competitive video game, complete with acting like toxic competitive players who take things way too seriously.
- El Condor Pasa taking off her signature mask causes a significant change to how her face looks, accentuated by her true shy personality behind the mask. Thus, fans pretend as if she is an unknown Uma whenever they see her without the mask and wonder where El Condor Pasa has gone.
- Warframe:
- During the quest "The New War", there are some segments where you play as different characters than your Tenno and Warframe, including one starring a Corpus technician named Veso. A Running Gag throughout the segment (and afterwards) has Veso be the victim of constant Accidental Misnaming, leading to fans continuing this by referring to him as anything but Veso.
- Tenno who discuss On-Lyne, the In-Universe boy band that's the basis for the Infested Adversaries, will do so as if they are an actual band, such as "recalling" making their hit single into their first ring-tone or saying that they attended a concert when they were younger.
- The creator of The Amazing Digital Circus, Gooseworx, drew a couple of non-canonical shitpost comics where Pomni frequently says "Well, it's possible", with "<-(her catchphrase)" drawn next to her speech bubble each time she says it. This despite the fact that Pomni has never said it in the show proper. As a result, fans often play along that "Well, it's possible" is her in-universe Catchphrase, with "^ (her catchphrase)" included in replies wherever the phrase is written. Similarly, Jax is associated with the (also erroneous) Catchphrase "You go, girl!" (to the point where there's an official jumper with his face with the phrase).
- Angel Hare has an official forum
designed for this, where users share their memories of Angel Hare as if it were a genuine nostalgic childhood cartoon.
- In Bowser's Koopalings, no one is able to remember Fryguy's name and people usually forget who he is when he shows up. This appears to affect fans too, as they often get confused when someone mentions Fryguy.
- DEATH BATTLE!:
- The fight between Wally West and Archie Comics' Sonic the Hedgehog ends with the latter being hit with enough intensity to erase him from existence. Afterwards, it became a common joke for fans to not recognize characters from, mentions of, and allusions to Sonic the Hedgehog, as well as "complain" that the title was just "Wally West VS (DC VS)", the thumbnail just had him with the right side blank, and the animation was just him running around punching the air.
- The same thing would occur with Rick vs. The Doctor, where it ended with Rick getting hit by the Doctor's Dematerialization gun, therefore erasing him from existence, time and pretty much everything as a whole. Much like the above example, it's fairly common for people to ironically complain that the episode was just 22 minutes of radio silence other than The Doctor's analysis, the title just being "VS The Doctor (VS Doctor Who)", the thumbnail only having The Doctor with the left side blank or both him and a zoomed-out picture of Morty "from the hit Adult Swim show Morty/And Morty" on the left side, Rick's Death Battle wiki page being blank, or that the fight was just The Doctor talking to thin air and swinging a spoon around, or his opponent was actually an invisible character (such as See-Through the Invisible Man, and confusion on Morty making a cameo appearance at the end.
- Earlier during The Doctor's rundown, Boomstick shoots DUMMI with the aforementioned De-Mat Gun, leading to the same jokes with DUMMI.
- Bowser vs. Doctor Eggman has the Time Eater erased from existence with the Dream Stone, causing the Time Eater to be subjected to the same jokes as Rick and DUMMI.
- Since Cursed Spirits are Invisible to Normals unless in a near-death experience, people jokingly complain about "Shigaraki vs. Mahito" and how they couldn't even see Mahito until the end of the fight, referencing how Shigaraki could only see him when using Search.
- After Master Chief's 2025 preview has Boomstick call him and his opponent "Master Chef" and the "Food Slayer", fans began joking that Death Battle was a cooking show all along.
- Helluva Boss:
- Despite not looking any thinner or wider than any other imp on the show, Loona likes to get under Moxxie's skin by constantly calling him fat. At one point, even Blitz gets in on the action. The fandom will, of course, comment about Moxxie's weight as if he's been putting on the pounds.
- In "Spring Broken", a couple of humans mistakenly believe that Moxxie is a possum. The fandom now refers to Moxxie as a possum instead of an imp.
- Homestar Runner: Several fans have latched onto this with Mr. Poofers, a fictional (poodle?) dog invented by Homestar for a Halloween horror story, who has thus far resisted all attempts by various characters to murder or otherwise harm him through the medium of storytelling. This, of course, led fans to try and come up with their own stories of Mr. Poofers meeting a grisly end, only for them to fail at even putting the character in harm's way. Some fans have even likened Mr. Poofers to an SCP character.
- Saturday Morning Watchmen has led to a large number of people (including this wiki) referring to it as if it were a real show and a childhood favorite. Whether the actual Watchmen is the original material or a Darker and Edgier reboot varies from person to person, though consensus tends to be that nobody liked it and the show is much better (sometimes resulting in laments that Alan Moore "ruined the characters").
- TED-Ed: The Dongle's Difficult Dilemma episode is a rather blatant homage to The Legend of Zelda, complete with Captain Ersatzes of Link, Ganondorf and the Triforce. Several tongue-in-cheek comments wondering about The Legend of Zelda, alongside acting as if it never existed and asking for a game to be based on the animation, have been made in its comment section.
- The SpongeBob SquarePants Anime is a series of parody videos casting the characters of SpongeBob SquarePants in steretopyical Anime opening-sequences of a Stock Shonen Manga. Go into the comments sections of any of them and you'll find mostly people acting as though these were openings of an actual, fully-produced anime adapted from a manga. Phrases like "anime-only watchers aren't ready for this arc" (which is a common thing to say on real anime OP comments) are very common.
- MS Paint Adventures:
- "What Pumpkin?" In Jailbreak, the Lemony Narrator refuses to acknowledge the presence of a pumpkin and insists there never was one, even though these are Blatant Lies. This becomes a Running Gag in Problem Sleuth and Homestuck, where pumpkins appear and disappear erratically. Sometimes, fans play along with the narration's Gaslighting and feign confusion when anyone mentions the presence or lack of a pumpkin.
- Homestuck specifically had "The Squiddles", a Show Within a Show that some fans like to pretend is real and claim they watched it as children.
- Chuck Norris Facts portrays American actor Chuck Norris not just as a Memetic Badass, but as a Comically Invincible Hero who can do just about anything he wants, including feats that require a Logic Bomb to work (such as counting backwards from infinity and The Grim Reaper being too scared to come for Chuck's soul). Any time Chuck Norris is mentioned, the facts are sure to follow in the comments, with commenters treating the facts about Norris as the genuine article.
- In late 2022, a thriving fandom for Martin Scorsese's forgotten 1973 film Goncharov sprung up practically overnight on Tumblr. Memes, GIFs, and screenshots were shared of the movie's pivotal scenes, and serious critical analysis was written of screenwriter Matteo JWHJ 0715's harrowing tale of a Russian mobster climbing through the ranks of the Naples criminal underworld. There was even a dedicated shipping scene, owing to the intense Homoerotic Subtext between its characters. Despite all this, the film never existed — the whole thing is just a very elaborate collaborative meme stemming from a pair of off-brand knockoff boots that inexplicably had text from the poster for the 2008 film Gomorrah on the label, only with the title changed due to an optical character recognition error.
- Within Neopets, since 2002 there's been rumors of a place called Jelly World — a place made entirely out of gelatin, as its name suggests. But it doesn't really exist. That would just be silly. So silly that at least one unfortunate crackpot
has been canonically imprisoned for life for being caught talking of such lunacy. Users have played along with the Running Gag and dismissed the idea as the preposterous concept it is for decades, albeit in part due to the site's word filters blocking this hypothetical place's name. But mostly because the very idea of such a place would be absurd. If you haven't figured it out, it's an Open Secret that it actually is an accessible area
, complete with a daily item collection and a shop. But you didn't hear it from us...!
- Scary News out of Tokyo-3 started out as a play-along meme, but evolved over time into a full-blown roleplay.
- The SCP Foundation has a number of "Meta" SCPs that mess with the way they can be talked or written about. This, of course, leads to the fans respecting the formats when they talk about them whenever possible. For example:
- I, SCP-426, am a toaster that will exclusively be referred to in the first person.
- Anyone writing about SCP-586 will inevitably make at least one shelling mistake per sentence.
- Any direct reference to His Majesty's SCP-1561 causes any unworthy peasants writing or talking about it to describe it as befitting the King's ascended status.
- ... -.-. .—. -....- ..—- ..... ..—- .—— / ... - . .- .-.. ... / — —- ... - / .. -. ..-. —- / .- -... —- ..- - / .. - ... . .-.. ..-. —..— / ... .—. —- -.- . -. —..— / .— .-. .. - - . -. / —- .-. / -.. .. —. .. - .- .-.. .-.-.- / - .... . / ... —- .-.. . / . -..- -.-. . .—. - .. —- -. / .. ... / .—. .. -.-. - —- —. .-. .- .—. .... .. -.-. / .. -. ..-. —- —..— / .— .... .. -.-. .... / .. - / -.. —- . ... -. .——. - / ... . . — / - —- / ..- -. -.. . .-. ... - .- -. -.. .-.-.- Translation
- In the Chinese community, comments about SCP-2521 will trail off as if SCP-2521 abducted the commenter in the middle of writ
- Talking about the former library, SCP-2602, will inevitably result in many references to the fact that the ex-library was, in fact, a library.
- SCP-7098 is a dumb thing that happens only at site 96 but its kinda like that 586 thing aboce only worse because it makes all the sentences bad and the splelling bad to and now anyone who trys to talk about the stupid thing sounds like a angry moran
- we also cant talk about it like adults becuz it takes away basic writing protocal to
- yeah i even tried to tell the admins about it but i was just told to stop bein lazy and not to engaje in nater
- SCP-____-J is a rock that makes you procrastinate, fans commonly %%add later
- The first of Series V interacts badly with names, and the article refers to it and related entities with indirect descriptions and Rainbow Speak, a convention that fans will replicate in their own discussions.
- The "stuck cylinder
" guy, a poster who asked for help removing a cylinder stuck inside a slightly smaller cylinder. Since the poster insisted that they had not gotten their penis stuck inside something despite it being increasingly and obviously the case, the replies turn to ever more violently destructive ways of freeing the smaller cylinder, such as freezing both then using a hammer to shatter the outer cylinder or cutting it up.
- Alpharad's second channel, prior to its rebranding as "Alpharad LIVE", used to be called "Not Alpharad". Due to this, commenters loved to jokingly talk the channel up as a humble smaller creator they were proud to support in place of egotistical big YouTubers like Alpharad, or accuse Jacob of plagiarism whenever he reuploaded a video from there on his main channel.
- Backstroke of the West is a batshit insane Recursive Translation of the already memetic Revenge of the Sith from Chinese back into English. A subset of Star Wars fans have taken the original screenshots by Jeremy Winterson and especially the fan dub and run with them, pretending that the nonsensical plot developments and dialogue are perfectly normal and searching for some kind of greater meaning in all the insanity.
- Trying to identify the 'real' plot of the nonsense dialogue has taken off with other Recursive Translation works as well, with Book of Mario: Thousands of Doors being a particularly strong example to the point of having a comprehensive wiki.
- Bad Lip Reading has released a few videos that feature characters singing snippets of lyrics from supposedly real songs. This has led to the creation of their alter ego, Faron North, a folk musician who has released the full versions of these songs on a separate YouTube channel
. The comments on these videos are typically full of people pretending that Faron North is a real artist who they saw live in their youth, emotionally gushing about meeting their partners at Faron North shows, and all the things you typically see in comments sections for real musicians.
- Captain Disillusion's video on the Invisible Box Challenge
ends with a clip of him climbing over an invisible box, filmed with a moving camera and with shadows crossing over the spot where the box should be, meaning that it couldn't have been done with the simple compositing tricks he'd already described. He signs off by announcing that he'll reveal how he faked it exactly ten years after the video's release... only to get impatient and reveal everything immediately. Even so, you can find fans in the comments excitedly counting down the days until the video's ten-year anniversary, waiting to finally learn how he pulled it off.
- Critical Role: In the first campaign, a dwarf named Larkin tagged along with Vox Machina after their Enemy Mine with the evil Green Dragon Raishan. He was obviously Raishan in disguise... to every player except Liam O'Brien, who genuinely wondered where Larkin went once Raishan revealed herself. Because of this, Critters (and Liam himself) have taken to treating Larkin as a separate character.
- Danny Gonzalez: In two separate videos, Danny attempted to fool his audience by disguising himself as new people to get clout for the new identity. Though these attempts failed, fans still like to pretend that these identities (cousin Zayden Longzan and musician Ned Flames) are separate people, such as mocking Danny's music while praising Ned Flames's "Circus".
- Enter the Dojo focuses on Master Ken, and his dojo where he teaches the martial art of Ameri-Do-Te. Within the world of the series, it's pretty clear that Master Ken is a dimwitted blowhard who only has consistent students because they're even dumber than him, and Ameri-Do-Te is a smattering of whatever he bothered to learn from other styles combined with Groin Attacks and various "techniques" more likely to hurt oneself than the opponent. Naturally, fans of the series speak of Master Ken as if he were a true martial arts legend on par with Bruce Lee, and describe Ameri-Do-Te as the most lethal form of combat in the world, spinning anecdotes about meeting him in person or using the Hurticane to ward off a dozen armed attackers.
- Several comments on the Epic NPC Man video "How Speed Runners Look to NPC's
" discuss the tech Rowan uses in the run, including the "Bucket Thrust Exploit", "Comet Skip", and bonding with Greg in order to get a faster ending.
- Game Grumps:
- Once Brian Wecht of Ninja Sex Party started showing up as himself in Grumps videos and as NSP's Ninja Brian, it became common to see people wondering who Ninja Brian is... While excluding Brian himself from the running. Alternatively, theories that Brian is actually Ninja Brian would be treated as Epileptic Trees for suggesting it.
- Starting in 2020, the channel began promoting the latest work of novelist Dr. Cecil H.H. Mills (author of the "Ghost Hunters Adventure Club" series). Of course, Dr. Mills is actually a character played by Arin wearing old man makeup and a fancy suit, and speaking with a deep Mid-Atlantic accent. Of course, many fans still play along with the bit that Dr. Mills is Arin's long-lost uncle, with a long and illustrious, but troubled, career. Many of the reviews for the first GHAC book on Amazon talk about Dr. Mills' previous works with high regard.
- How It's Actually Made:
- The series is a parody of How It's Made, where Huggbees replaces the original narration with lies and disturbing nonsense. Naturally, the comments section is full of people vouching for the accuracy of the most outrageous things Huggbees says in each episode. Variations on "I'm a [professional in a field relevant to the topic of the video] and I can confirm this is 100% accurate" are practically a catchphrase among the audience.
- In the "Cheesecake" episode, Huggbees stops narrating and instead describes how people watch episodes of the original series to help fall asleep, then YouTube's autoplay starts mixing in episodes of his series as they're nodding off. He announces that he's going to randomly scream to wake up all the sleepy viewers, and he asks everyone else to help Gaslight them by not mentioning this at all in the comments. Not only did the fans comply, but they went a step further by posting about how relaxing this episode is, and what a great sleep aide it makes.
- Jarvis Johnson: In one video, Jarvis offhandedly joked that his girlfriend might've just been a figment of his imagination. Fans took the joke and ran with it, pretending from then on that any videos with her featured in them were actually just clips of Jarvis talking to nobody.
- When NicoB played Master Detective Archives: Rain Code, he was caught off-guard by the sudden deaths of the newly introduced detectives featured in Chapter 0, but decides to still use their character portraits in future video thumbnails to throw off unsuspecting viewers. Numerous commenters play along by talking about the various antics those characters supposedly get up to in subsequent episodes, such as getting some incredibly wholesome Ship Tease moments or a sudden and crazy Face–Heel Turn.
- The Nostalgia Critic's review of The Star Wars Holiday Special ends with Santa Christ blowing it up with Force Lightning and then wiping the special from the Critic's mind. Some viewers have jokingly acted like they also forgot that the special was ever made.
- PointCrow
is a video game speedrunner who plays, among other things, The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. It's become a recurring joke that every time he plays the game and completes the Great Plateau, he will be shocked and amazed when the friendly old man reveals himself to be the ghost of King Rhoam Bosphoramus, and his chat plays along.
- Lysanderoth from ProZD's King Dragon Canon skits is a parody of the Obvious Judas; a man with a sinister moustache and monocle who introduces himself with a villainous monologue and constantly acts suspicious, yet is inexplicably trusted by the heroes and whose betrayal comes as a massive shock to all but the clearly frustrated Player Character Dennis. Fans, of course, ran with this, praising Lysanderoth as one of the greatest Twist Villains in all of fiction and a master of deception whose machinations lay undetected for years.
- Scott The Woz: Jeb Jab has a Running Gag where he mistakes things for Gex: Enter the Gecko, ranging from other video games to a gun. The fandom likewise calls these things "Gex."
- Screen Rant Pitch Meetings videos have a screenwriter and producer (and occasionally more characters) played by the same person, Ryan George. A lot of fans joke in the comments that of course these are different individuals: they look nothing alike, they wear different clothes, and also, the screenwriter has glasses.
- SiIvaGunner: For a few days following March 31st, 2021, all Mario videos on the channel were privated to coincide with the shutdown of Super Mario Bros. 35 and the removal of Super Mario 3D All Stars from the eShop. During this time, new Mario videos would be posted, but with their titles changed to delete or obscure Mario's name, and with Mario's presence removed from the video footage. All comments under these videos pretended to not remember Mario's existence, usually remembering Luigi as the protagonist of the "Bros."/"Super Bros." franchise.
- TierZoo discusses the mechanics, development, and playerbase of an MMO game called Outside. The "game" is just real life and everyone knows it, but everyone in the comments section of the videos will always talk about playing Outside as if it were a game because it's more fun that way.
- Two Best Friends Play:
- Matt and Pat loved talking about Woolie behind his back and inventing "lore" about him whenever he wasn't present for a video. Sometimes they'd take real events and exaggerate them into absurdity; other times they'd invent "facts" from scratch. The fandom took all of this as the gospel truth, interpreting Woolie as a compulsive liar, a habitual pie thief, and someone who killed a man while playing a high school football game.
- When Liam departed from the Best Friends Zaibatsu to focus on his own solo channel, he asked Best Friends-related sites (like the Facebook group and the subreddit) not to link to his solo videos. In addition, since Liam appeared in the intro for the Best Friends sub-series Saturday Morning Scrublords, all future episodes had him edited out (very awkwardly, for laughs). The fandom ran with that, pretending that Liam has been completely Unpersoned and can only be referred to as [Redacted] now.
- Ukinojoe: In the video Eddie Murphy, when it was revealed that Eddie Murphy passed away after making one thousand Norbit sequels, comments on the video has viewers debate which of the fake sequels were the best or worst.
- Vinesauce:
- Due to it being surprisingly common for newcomers to mix up Vinny and Joel, many Vinesauce fans jokingly pretend that the two are the same person, with collaborations and reactions to each other's material being met with tongue-in-cheek praise for one streamer's acting skills (usually Vinny's).
- Every now and then, Vinny streams in-character as V-Dub, a parody of the kinds of hypermasculine Small Name, Big Ego frat boys who littered the Call of Duty player base during the height of its popularity in the late 2000s and early 2010s. Because the V-Dub character revolves heavily around kayfabe, up to and including a feud with Vinny, many fans jokingly pretend that the two are indeed separate individuals, describing their similarities to each other as uncanny coincidences and expressing tongue-in-cheek hope that they collaborate someday.
- Henya the Genius (formerly of VShojo) is established in her lore to be the most intelligent girl, with an IQ of 999. However, this does not stop her from being a bit of a klutz, nor does that prevent her from being clueless about certain things beyond her understanding or making dubiously reasonable choices... which turns out to be quite a lot (her profile even stated that she spelled her name phonetically because she could not remember how to spell "genia"). Some fans stated that her blunders are actually a demonstration of her genius, and that the viewers are not smart enough to understand. A related bit of fanon cites that it is actually quite common for even smart people to be scatterbrained, and by extension, Henya's ditziness is a side-effect of her impossibly high IQ.
- A popular thing for commenters for Winter of '83 to do is makes joke comments on the "Medicine Lake Campgrounds Infomercial"
segment about the titular infomercial, which was altered by the snowlems to add horrific images and messages, and act like those were always part of the infomercial, that many of them have actually been there, and indeed that "the Embrace" (a rundown building) and looking for Steven Millbanks are part of the actual experience.
- In almost every YouTube Poop, whenever a character's name is mixed into something nonsensical, the comments sections will almost always invariably refer to said characters by their new names.
- At the end of Abra-Catastrophe!, Timmy wishes that everyone forgot he had fairy godparents. Some viewers played along by pretending that the wish also affected them.
- The Amazing World of Gumball: Fans tend to intentionally forget or misspell Rob's name, because Gumball forgetting his name is a Running Gag.
- Archer: Lana is noted to have exceptionally large hands by everyone else in the cast, despite them not appearing any bigger to the viewers. Thus the fanbase loves to comment about how her hands are massive in completely normal screenshots.
- Avatar franchise:
- Avatar: The Last Airbender:
- The city of Ba Sing Se, capital of the Earth Kingdom, is pretty much entirely under the control of the Secret Police and their Propaganda Machine meant to convince the population of the city that there is no war in Ba Sing Se despite the pretty strong evidence that there actually is. The fans took the quote in stride and every time a viewer points out an evidence of the city not being as peaceful as the the authority pretend, they are quickly rebuked by other fans because there is no war in Ba Sing Se.
- In the Book Three episode "The Headband", Sokka dons a Paper-Thin Disguise consisting of a fake beard and uses "Wang Fire" as an alias. Fans are fond of jokingly treating "Wang Fire" as a separate character (and as something of a Memetic Badass to boot).
- The Legend of Korra: The Book Two episode "The Sting" ends with the line "Who's Avatar Korra?", leading to jokes of not remembering said Avatar.
- Avatar: The Last Airbender:
- Big Mouth: In the Christmas Episode, the Jansen twins tell a story about a terrifying holiday mascot in their homeland known as "Vader Johan." It ends with them telling the characters, and the audience, to share the legend of Vader Johan, or the creature will eat their bones. This led to several fans posting the story of Vader Johan on the show's social media groups just to ward off the beast.
- BoJack Horseman:
- Horsin' Around, the in-universe sitcom that BoJack starred in during the 90s, will often be treated as a real show by fans, complete with comments about how much they loved the show while growing up.
- After the show in-universe was recut following Bojack Horseman's scandals to remove him from the show, some fans will question just what "Horsin' Around" is and ask if it is related to "Around", the show where three orphans live alone and learn life lessons.
- Fans will generally refer to Vincent Adultman as the adult man he's pretending to be, rather than several kids in a trench coat, in keeping with nearly every character on the show.
- Horsin' Around, the in-universe sitcom that BoJack starred in during the 90s, will often be treated as a real show by fans, complete with comments about how much they loved the show while growing up.
- Freakazoid!: Candle Jack, from the episode "Candlejack", is a bogeyman-like villain who appears to kidnap children if his name is ever spoken out loud. This inspired a popular Interrupting Meme where fans pretend to be Candle Jack's victims by typing his name in a comment, then cutting off the text to make it appear as though Candle Jack himself has kidnapped them at that very moment. Sometimes, a Non Sequitur will begin from where the original text is cut off, making it seem like Candle Jack also hijacked the user's computer for fun.
- Futurama:
- Fans often gas up the Hypnotoad and his sitcom as one of the best things ever. The Hypnotoad does nothing but stare into people's eyes and hypnotize them into loving him, so the implication is that he also hypnotizes the audience (which the show has itself implied once or twice). Often crosses over with Interrupting Meme, as people will drop everything to shout "ALL GLORY TO THE HYPNOTOAD!"
- Whenever there's a YouTube video about the Neutrals, a race of people who are completely neutral about everything, the responses are often neutral as well, mimicking the aforementioned race. Before likes and dislikes were disabled, such videos would also have perfectly balanced like-to-dislike ratios, also keeping it neutral. Some would even change their previous voting to make sure it was balanced.
- In "Love and Rocket", the alien Lrrr tries to watch an "ancient Earth" program called Friends, and complains that it doesn't explain why Ross, as the largest of the Friends, doesn't simply eat the other five. Nowadays, if you mention Friends around a group of Futurama fans, they're likely to claim that this supposed plot hole always bothered them, too.
- Invincible (2021) features a Spider-Man Send-Up named Agent Spider as a Suspiciously Similar Substitute for the actual Spider-Man in the original comic. Almost immediately, fans began talking about Agent Spider as if he was just as real and popular as Spider-Man, ranging from asking for opinions on his supporting cast to complaining about equivalents to poorly received storylines, with some even outright, in a tongue-in-cheek way, accusing Spider-Man of being the rip-off.
- Johnny Test: Occasionally, Dukey dresses fully in order to interact with people outside of Johnny's immediate family, with Johnny claiming that he's a kid with a rare hair disorder, not a dog. Naturally, fans will sometimes pretend Dukey is human themselves.
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic:
- In an early episode, Fluttershy mentioned that she would like to be a tree. Cue bronies everywhere calling trees "Fluttershy" or pointing out a tree in any shot Fluttershy is in. Similarly, when Apple Bloom called Scootaloo a chicken, and the latter called Sweetie Belle a dictionary in another episode, the same thing happened with them.
- In the Season 2 premiere, Twilight had Spike bear the Element of Loyalty necklace and told him "you're the new Rainbow Dash". Fans will thus occasionally discuss pictures of Spike as though they were pictures of Rainbow Dash.
- Maud Pie canonically doesn't express facial emotion (at least, very rarely), so fans often pretend that she is heavily emoting in images that contain a completely neutral expression.
- Dragon Lord Ember remarks that she gets Twilight Sparkle and Starlight Glimmer confused because they look the same and have similar-sounding names. Cue the fandom latching onto this and joking about Ember being confused any time Twilight and Starlight are on screen at the same time, or posting a picture with several characters who either look like Twilight (such as Wind Sprint) or whose names are plays on Twilight's (such as Sunset Shimmer), or both (Starlight Glimmer) followed by Ember having a mental breakdown. Sometimes they just recolor everyone in Twilight's colors too.
- Fans will sometimes claim not to remember who Wallflower Blush is, or say that that they've never seen her before — this is because in My Little Pony: Equestria Girls – Forgotten Friendship, she used a magical artifact to erase everyone's memories of her.
- PAW Patrol: There is an inside joke that nobody can remember Zuma because he's not called out very often.
- Given that Phineas and Ferb is rife with Running Gags that are memes of their own; the fandom has gone nuts with several of them.
- Referring to Dr. Doofenshmirtz as a pharmacist because of his lab coat, as every character who comes across him believes, despite his building being labeled "Doofenshmirtz Evil Inc."
- Reacting with total shock whenever someone photoshops a fedora onto something (usually a platypus to match the show), like so. "A platypus?" [Cue fedora] "PERRY THE PLATYPUS?!" Dr. Doofenshmirtz is completely unable to recognize Perry without his signature fedora (and only his fedora), to the point where even when Perry has the hat on alongside a plumber's toolbelt, Doof still doesn't recognize him.
- Heaping joke-hate on anyone whose name is a palindrome after an episode features an event in which there's prejudice against people with palindrome names, typified with Professor Ross Eforp being the subject of mockery and having to wear a paper bag over his head.
- From Across the 2nd Dimension, Dr. Doofenshmirtz-2's Freudian Excuse is deliberately as shallow as possible, but fans have taken to jokingly acting as though him losing his toy train is the most tragic backstory in the world, even more than Doofenshmirtz's own Hilariously Abusive Childhood.
- Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated: The Nibiru Entity's final fate is to be completely erased from time. More than one viewer has pretended that this effect extended past the fourth wall and acted like they've lost their memories of the Entity as well.
- The Simpsons: In "Marge vs. the Monorail", Mr. Burns, after getting fined three million dollars, attempts to get people to invest in the Springfield Power Plant using the money by putting on a fake mustache and introducing himself as Mr. Snrub. Notably, the usually-stupid citizens of Springfield recognized him at once, but fans still like to wonder about the enigmatic Mr. Snrub. note Andrew Kepple even made an alternate ending to "Who Shot Mr. Burns? Part Two" where Mr. Snrub was the real victim of the shooting after getting too comfortable in his role as Mr. Burns' body double and the real Burns was the shooter. Not only that, Smithers also had a body double as revealed by his Season 1 design.
- Bart vs. Australia is a popular episode with Australian viewers, who like to praise the accuracy with which the show depicts certain (obviously-fabricated) aspects of Australian culture, such as the currency being dollaridoos, criminals being punished by getting kicked with an oversized boot, and especially the beloved game knifey-spoony. Australian fans will often insist that there’s a lot of nuanced strategy to knifey-spoony, despite the game consisting entirely of telling the difference between a knife and a spoon.
- Smiling Friends:
- In the second episode, The Mr. Frog Show is a fictional program starring the titular celebrity Mr. Frog, which is shown to have been a popular Long Runner with an huge following in-universe in spite of the absurdly barebones formula implied to be used for each episode. note The fanbase ran with the joke by pretending to be reviewers or long-time fans of The Mr. Frog Show, doing everything from calling the program a masterpiece, praising the writing and performance of its (non-existent) episodes, sharing their favorite moments from the show, lamenting its Audience-Alienating Era, expressing confusion about a Bizarro Episode, etc.
- The first episode of Season 2 has Gwimbly, a former video game mascot from the PS1 era who has fallen on hard times. Many fans acted like he was an actual video game character in real life; a successful series of games, a cameo in
The Simpsons, being in Super Smash Bros., and even a more modern redesign/reboot. It's not uncommon to see people talk about the various Gwimbly games like they actually existed, such as Gwimbly's jump into 3D or a spin-off starring Mr. Millipede.
- In fact, people tend to act like these characters had deeper backstories than what was presented; like talking about Mr. Millipede dealing with his fentanyl addiction while working on a game, Mr. Frog's reason for going into television, and even acting like they met Gwimbly in person.
- The episode "The Magical Red Jewel (aka Tyler Gets Fired)" immediately begins with Mr. Boss firing an employee from the company... a live-action human named Tyler, who was never seen or mentioned at any point beforehand and appears only to get fired on this specific scene, but despite this, the other characters get very upset at Tyler's firing, especially Charlie. Fans started joking about being similarly disappointed with Tyler's "removal" from the series, acting like he was an important main character who had appeared frequently and is getting Put on a Bus now, and claiming that phasing out Tyler will lead to Seasonal Rot.
- In the episode "Pim Finally Turns Green", a sentient snowman named Rotten learns about death and becomes terrified of it. So to remedy his fears, Charlie brings in Bill Nye to explain why death isn't something to be afraid of. However, while singing about death, he's fatally electrocuted by a power line. Despite not sounding anything like the real Bill Nye, many act like Smiling Friends really did bring Bill Nye onto the show, and mourn his tragic passing as if it actually happened.
- South Park: "The Big Fix" reveals that Token Black's first name is actually spelled "Tolkien", and Stan spends the episode feeling guilty that he thought the only black boy in school was actually named "Token." The fandom ran with this by accusing anybody who still called him "Token" of being racist, and claiming that any scenes where he was still called "Token" were edited. Adding to the meme is the fact that the creators went back and edited the closed captioning in previous episodes such that every mention of "Token" was changed to "Tolkien"... except in Stan and Kyle's dialogue.
- Star Trek: Lower Decks: T'Lyn is introduced in an episode where she is drummed out of the Vulcan Navy and into Starfleet because she's too emotional and rebellious—the joke being that an emotional and rebellious Vulcan is still a borderline robotic stoic by the standards of most other people. The fanbase therefore likes to big up scenes where she does something even mildly against the Straw Vulcan stereotype as another example of her being completely barbaric and out of control.
- Star Wars Rebels: Ezra Bridger frequently claims to be Jabba the Hutt when captured by enemies, which obviously nobody ever believes since Ezra is a human and Jabba is a giant slug monster. However, fans have taken to playing along by calling Ezra Jabba and claiming that the two are obviously the same character. Some even jokingly criticized Ezra's return in Ahsoka for supposedly bringing "Jabba" Back from the Dead without explanation after his death in Return of the Jedi.
- Joshua Norton was a failed businessman who lived in San Francisco in the 1800s, who at some point went through some kind of mental break and declared himself to be the Emperor of the United States. He began walking around the streets in an old dress uniform, issuing "Norton scrip" currency, and making proclamations and political demands. In what might be one of the earliest examples of this trope, most of the people who met him decided to play along: his currency was widely accepted, the local media often reported on his latest requests, and he received frequent donations that kept him out of homelessness — even Kamehameha V, king of Hawaii, referred to Norton as the United States's true leader. By most accounts he was, despite his pompousness and eccentricities, a goodhearted and likeable man who tried to use his "position" to the benefit of others (indeed, he seems to have been a fairly progressive man for his time, supporting abolition of slavery and women's suffrage), which contributed to the rest of the city being willing to entertain his attitude. Even his gravestone describes him with his full titles.
- In Australian folklore, the drop bear is a fictional animal that looks like a koala, but is carnivorous and much more dangerous, hiding in trees and dropping down onto unsuspecting humans below in order to maul them to death. It is known to specifically target tourists, being able to tell them apart based on their accent. Of course, it's all a joke, but Australian natives will often keep a straight face while describing them in an attempt at scaring tourists or making them do humiliating things (like putting on a fake Australian accent and spreading Vegemite behind their ears) in order to ward off drop bears.
- Jára Cimrman is a Czech polymath who has supposedly invented/discovered/written practically everything known to humankind. Some teachers when giving assignments will go so far as to preemptively tell their students that of course Jára Cimrman has done everything, but the students are required to write about someone else instead.
- George P. Burdell is one of Georgia Tech's most famous and accomplished graduates; he's also an Invented Individual (see that page for details). Tech students and alumni still perpetuate the joke, using his name in all sorts of unlikely positions.
- Tony Hawk sometimes posts on Twitter about people almost recognizing him in public (i.e. mistaking him for a Tony Hawk impersonator, or thinking it's funny that he has the same name as famous pro skateboarder Tony Hawk). Ever since this "Existential Nightmare"
became well-known, his actual fans pretend not to recognize him, both online
and in real
life
.
- A running joke with Ayo Edebiri and her fans is about her supposed Irish heritage, giving shout-outs to Ireland in her numerous award acceptance speeches for her role in The Bear and referring to it as her home country, despite having no actual Irish descent (Edebiri is an American born to a Barbadian mother and a Nigerian father; the joke originated from an interview where she jokingly claimed in a mock but surprisingly good Irish accent to have played Jenny the donkey from The Banshees of Inisherin). The country of Ireland decided to embrace it and has essentially adopted her as an honorary citizen, with several Irish actors (including Cillian Murphy, Paul Mescal, and Barry Keoghan, the latter of whom starred in The Banshees of Inisherin) also running along with it. Even several Irish news publications got in, celebrating her wins across the 2024 awards season and expressing pride to call her one of their own.
- A common joke when coming across real-life examples of a light-up sign where individual letters in the sign are burnt out is to act like the remaining letters are the real name of the establishment. For example, a Five Guys sign having two letters burnt out
and joking about how it is either IV Guys or 4 Guys now.
- The premise of Groundhog Day hinges on everyone accepting that Punxsutawney Phil is capable of prognosticating what the weather will be like for the next six weeks. (It also, in part, requires believing that Phil has lived for decades longer than the average groundhog.) Mock legal threats have been made against Phil on occasions where his prediction is incorrect, but they never pan out due to Phil's 100% accuracy; any errors were on the part of his translators.
- One real-life joke is to claim people wearing green-and-brown camo-print clothes are literally invisible, even if (or rather, especially if) they're in an urban landscape or other environment where they stick out like a sore thumb.
- Whenever Benderpit Cucumberpatch is brought up, his name gets comically mangled, but treated as accurate. Bonus points if subsequent mentions of Dendrophile Bandersnatch are even more mangled.
- If they have to show images of Benito Mussolini, many online antifascists will flip the picture upside down as a reference to the bodies of him and his collaborators being hung upside down in a public square as a form of Last Disrespects, in a similar manner to the SNL example above with Francisco Franco, who is still dead.
- Speaking of Axis leaders, Hermann Göring is often referred to as "Meyer", after boasting that "If a single Allied bomber crosses the Ruhr, my name is Meyer", not long before Allied air forces began bombing Germany flat.
- The Cap'n Crunch cereal has a spinoff called "Oops! All Berries", which consists solely of the berry cereal in the "Crunch Berries" variant without the traditional Cap'n Crunch. The advertising around the product focuses on the idea that it was created due to a factory mishap, hence the name. Because of this, a lot of people like to claim that it really was created this way, and ponder just what kind of horrible mistakes could have led to its creation.