If youâve been scrolling through Japanese Twitter (X) or lurking in certain image boards lately, you might have seen a new term popping up in the lexicon:
So next time you see a suspicious link, remember: Donât be the launchpad.
So, literally: The Meme Origin The term reportedly started on a niche netto-uyoku (internet right-wing) and otaku forum as a derogatory joke about how quickly certain types of content spread online. waisetsu missile
Japanese police have actually started using the term internally (allegedly) to describe the rise of âcyber flashingââsending lewd images to strangers online. The missile doesnât care about your consent. It only cares about impact. The âWaisetsu Missileâ is a perfect artifact of the 2026 internet: fast, anonymous, destructive to your sanity, and impossible to put back in the silo.
Date: April 14, 2026
The âWaisetsu Missileâ refers to a piece of digital contentâusually a short video, a deepfake, or an unsolicited illustrationâthat gets âlaunchedâ into a public timeline or group chat. Once fired, it cannot be recalled. It will land in someoneâs DMs, replies, or For You page whether they like it or not.
Pro tip: If the video thumbnail is a blank gray screen but the caption is âăă°ă (Yabai),â do not fire the missile. You are about to become ground zero. Like any meme, itâs a double-edged sword. In closed friend groups, âlaunching a Waisetsu Missileâ is a chaotic way to win a âworst post of the dayâ contest. In public spaces? Itâs harassment. If youâve been scrolling through Japanese Twitter (X)
⌠well, you know what a missile is.