A fork of Rural Dictionary
A play on the pro-choice slogan "My body, my choice." While it has existed since at least 2018, the phrase went viral in November 2024 after political commentator Nick Fuentes posted it on X in response to Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 US presidential election. Fuentes's post was viewed over 90 million times and the phrase saw wide usage on X, Facebook, Reddit, and TikTok, as well as high school and college campuses.
I saw a girl complaining about the election on TikTok and the comments were full of guys saying "Your body, my choice."
A play on the PlayStation slogan "Play has no limits." in reference to the exorbitant prices of PlayStation 5 consoles, games, and accessories. The phrase became popular in mid-2024 following the reveal of the $700 digital-only PlayStation 5 Pro.
The PS5 Pro costs $700 and doesn't come with a disc drive or vertical stand. They're sold separately for $80 and $30, respectively. Pay has no limits.
A now-defunct massively multiplayer online (MMO) game released in March 2017 as the successor to the classic children's MMO Club Penguin, which was discontinued on the same day. The game served as a last-ditch effort to continue the franchise following its predecessor's decline in popularity and resulting demise. It was poorly received due to its initial mobile-only release, lack of content at launch and, like its predecessor, locking most features behind recurring paid membership. Due to a combination of these factors as well as competition from social media and other forms of children's entertainment, the game was a commercial failure. Club Penguin Island, and with it the Club Penguin franchise, was discontinued in December 2018.
Club Penguin Island will live on as an example of how to NOT revive a dying franchise.
A term used by Minecraft players to refer to the enchanted golden apple, a rare and powerful in-game healing item. It is also referred to as a "Notch apple" in reference to Minecraft creator Markus "Notch" Persson.
I found 3 god apples in that ancient city.
A limited-time menu item served at Taco Bell restaurants from 2016 to 2017. It consisted of marinated steak, fried potatoes, bacon bits, sour cream, and cheese sauce encased in a flour tortilla. It was served with a side of nacho chips and cheese dip. In early 2024, public interest in the Steakhouse Burrito was renewed by popular Twitch streamer CaseOh, who frequently expresses his affinity for the menu item and his desire for its return.
As much as you plead and beg and ask people on Reddit, the Steakhouse Burrito isn't coming back anytime soon.
A fan-made revival of Club Penguin that existed from 2017 to 2020. During the last few months of its life, the game became infamous for the predatory behavior of its founder, attacks on fellow Club Penguin revivals by its staff, and the presence of mature servers despite being a revival of a children's game. A combination of these factors led to the game receiving a DMCA takedown notice from the Walt Disney Company and the arrest of the founder in May 2020. Many of the game's former staff later founded New Club Penguin, an ongoing revival of the classic MMO.
I couldn't go one day on Club Penguin Online without seeing people hosting strip clubs in their igloos.
An unlicensed emulation of the now-defunct massively multiplayer online (MMO) game Club Penguin. Often shortened to CPPS, these servers frequently contain custom items, rooms, or other features not present in the original game. While they first became popular in 2010, their popularity increased following the Club Penguin's discontinuation in 2017 and the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Notable CPPSs, operating and defunct, include Club Penguin Rewritten (2017-2022), Club Penguin Online (2017-2020), New Club Penguin (2020-present), and Club Penguin Journey (2023-2024, 2024-present).
I never see any kids on a Club Penguin private server; it's all late-teens and 20's desperately clinging to their childhoods.