| NPC (non-player character) | |
|---|---|
![]() The NPC | |
| First appearance | July 7, 2016; 9 years ago (2016-07-07) |
| Created by | Anonymous/v/ user[1] |
| Based on | Wojak |
TheNPC (/ɛn.pi.si/; also known as theNPC Wojak), derived fromnon-player character, is awojak character that represents people deemed to not think for themselves. It may refer to those who lackintrospection orintrapersonal communication, or whoseidentity is deemed entirely determined by their surroundings and the information they consume, with no consciousprocessing or discernment being done by the person themselves.[1][2][3][4] The meme gained further viral status onTikTok in 2022, with the surge of "NPC Streamers".[5] The NPC wojak, which graphically is based on theWojak memes, was created in July 2016 by an anonymous author and first published on theimageboard4chan, where the idea and inspiration behind the meme were introduced.[6]
In terms of politics, it has often been used by those withanti-establishment views to describe those who fail to question authority, "groupthink", or a stance that would display conformity and obedience.[7][8][9] The NPC character became a meme and gained mainstream popularity during thefirst presidency of Donald Trump.[2][10] In October 2018 the meme was covered by numerous news outlets, includingThe Verge,[1] theBBC,[11] andThe New York Times, who called it a popular insult among "the pro-Trump internet" as well as a "collectivemascot for the far-right commenters".[2] The following month,InfoWars held a competition promoting the creation of NPC memes; the winning entry was endorsed by Trump on Twitter.[10]
Computer games and video games often have characters controlled by the computer who have simple repetitive behaviour, such as attacking anyone they see who is not on their team or offering to pay gold to anyone who kills ten giant rats. By 2010, members of theLessWrong subculture in California called people outside their subculture NPCs because they supposedly followed rules without thinking.[12][13]
In 2016, the concept was revived in a 4chan post by an anonymous user who created a graphic and turned NPC from a slur into a meme. The post asked "Are you an NPC?" and detailed the behaviour of individuals acting similarly to non-player characters in video games by repeatedly using phrases such as "JUST BE YOURSELF",[14] and ended the post with the following description of people the NPC meme intends to depict.[6]
If you get in a discussion with them it's always the samebuzzwords and hackneyed arguments. They're the kind of people who make a show of discomfort when you break the status quo like by breaking the normie barrier to invoke a real discussion. it's like in a [video game] when you accidentally talk to somebody twice and they give you the exact lines word for word once more.
The design of the NPC meme character is based onWojak,[6] a meme created inMicrosoft Paint in 2010.[15] Unlike the NPC meme, the Wojak meme (also known as Feels Guy[11]) appeared first on the image hosting website vichan and has mainly been used for expression of feelings, most often melancholy or regret.[15]
The NPC meme became popular infar-right Internet spaces, being used to describe those who do not shareconservative political views—particularlyliberals.[2][16][3] Writing forThe New York Times,Kevin Roose called it a "collectivemascot for the far-right commenters online."[2] During the weeks leading up to the2018 midterm elections in the United States, the NPC meme gained remarkable attention, with relatively high media coverage, publication of new NPC memes online, and several noticeable events. A large number of animated videos based on the NPC meme were uploaded to YouTube in the second half of October 2018,[17] and Google searches for the term "NPC Wojak" peaked around the same time.[6] In October 2018, a large number ofTwitter accounts were created which presented themselves as NPCs, and more than 1,500 such accounts were subsequently banned by Twitter.[11] In November, the far-rightInfoWars held a competition promoting the creation of NPC memes. The winning entry, by a Twitter user named "Carpe Donktum", was later retweeted by then-U.S. PresidentDonald Trump in February 2019 before it was removed for copyright infringement.[10][18] The re-election campaign for then-IowaRepresentativeSteve King also tweeted an NPC meme around the same time, aimed at the sittingDemocratic members ofCongress.[19]
The number of searches for the search term "NPC Wojak" remained relatively constant during 2019, though at a level significantly lower than its peak from early October through mid November 2018.[6]
Although the NPC meme was created six years after the Wojak meme, the NPC meme rapidly gained attention in comparison with the Wojak meme. On the website of the meme communityKnow Your Meme, the NPC meme had 858,000 page views, 33 videos, 597 images and 749 comments as of December 31, 2019.[6] This can be compared to the Wojak meme on which NPC is based, which had 787,000 page views, 6 videos, 332 images and 47 comments as of December 31, 2019.[15]
In 2022, a variation of the NPC meme called "I Support The Current Thing" was popularized. According toSlate, the meme was mainly used by the political right to mock liberals for "perceived conformism, frivolousness, and distractibility" who "blindly flit from news story to news story, issue to issue, changing their Facebook profile pics and Twitter display names to 'support' whatever 'Current Thing' dominates news and commentary. The current thing has beenthe Russian invasion of Ukraine,essential workers, theWomen's March,Notre Dame after itcaught on fire, etc." In March 2022,Elon Musk tweeted a version of the meme.[20]
In appearance, the NPC character isgrey in colour, and usually short in stature[21] simple in its design,[4] with an expressionless face,[3][22] a triangular nose[2] and a blank stare.[6] The shape of the NPC face resembles that of Wojak, and is drawn crudely.[2]
The initialNPC refers tonon-player character, a term used in video-games for characters the player cannot control.[22][23] A non-player character typically interacts with the player through simple and repetitive actions, such as saying the same sentence each time the player approaches the NPC. For example: "Greetings!" or "What's the gossip guys?". As such, NPCs have "no internality, agency, or capacity for critical thought",[14] they rely on scripted lines[2][24] and do not think for themselves.[3] Following the analogy of non-player characters, the NPC meme is used to mock individuals the maker perceives as lacking introspection, individual opinions, or critical thinking, generally political opponents. Due to NPC memes' greater popularity among the political right, the NPC is generally portrayed as parroting left-wing positions, but both left- and right-wing NPC variants exist.[1][4][14][22]
The NPC meme has been featured in major and minor news outlets alike, with frequent coverage during the peak of the NPCs popularity in fall 2018. According toThe Verge, a few articles (including one byThe New York Times published on October 16, 2018) sparked a "domino effect" and led to increased spread of the meme on Twitter, YouTube and through articles.[1]
In October 2018, users ofr/The_Donald, a large subreddit that supported United States PresidentDonald Trump,[25] coordinated in creating accounts presented as NPCs on the microblogging and social networking service Twitter.[11] According toThe Week, the accounts spread "bland, politically correct messages intended to mimic and provoke liberal pronouncements".[4] Following the mass creation of NPC Twitter accounts, the term "NPC" was used over 30,000 times on Twitter in a time span of 24 hours.[11] Twitter responded to the event by banning more than 1,500 of its users presenting themselves as NPCs.[4] The created accounts typically used profile pictures of NPC with slight modifications, such as colorful hair or partially covering masks.[2] According to one or more anonymous sources quoted byThe Week andThe New York Times, the users were banned for violating a term of use by Twitter against "intentionally misleading election-related content", ahead of the United States 2018 midterm election.[2][4] The claim that NPC memes were used to spread misinformation about the 2018 United States midterm election was also reported by other news agencies, includingThe Verge,[1]BBC[11] andThe Independent.[3] According to the BBC, the decision by Twitter to remove NPC accounts has upset many conservatives.[11]
In 2019, the NPC meme was used in the modification of two existing billboards in the United States.[17]
On January 13, 2019, the conservative street artist groupThe Faction modified a billboard featuring American comedianBill Maher inWest Hollywood using the NPC meme.[24]
On February 19, 2019, a similar modification was performed on a billboard featuring English comedianJohn Oliver inLos Angeles, in which the face of Oliver was replaced by that of an NPC, and text "Last Week Tonight with John Oliver" was replaced by "TheOrange Man Bad Show with John Oliver".[26] The modified billboard also included the text "*MATRIX APPROVED NPC PROGRAMMING" and aspeech balloon from the NPC containing words such as "CHEETOH" [sic] and "DRUMPH" with random symbols in green text, resemblingthe text shown inThe Matrix. According toThe Daily Dot, the modification of the billboard featuring Oliver, also credited toThe Faction, was an attempt to counteract the media's supposed "Trump derangement syndrome".[17]
On March 22, 2023, inMill Creek, Washington, an 11-year-old boy was reportedly stabbed near aDollar Tree after insulting a 29-year-old man by calling him an NPC.[27]
NPC Wojak... has become a kind of collective mascot for the far-right commenters online.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). Retrieved December 31, 2019.NPC... became popular in far-right spaces like 4chan.