“Rush the turret”的版本间的差异
来自China Digital Space
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<!--Possible additions/revisions: (1) Evidence of 冲塔 in response to COVID-19; (2) 冲塔 esp. directed at Xi Jinping?--> | <!--Possible additions/revisions: (1) Evidence of 冲塔 in response to COVID-19; (2) 冲塔 esp. directed at Xi Jinping?--> | ||
− | === ''chōng tǎ'' 冲塔 === | + | === ''chōng tǎ'' [[冲塔]] === |
− | [[File:054101015E687D288B6C0698662E7C5C.jpg| | + | [[File:054101015E687D288B6C0698662E7C5C.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Rushing the turret to force your way in, that's insane! (Source: [https://theater.jon-rey.com/20200329/127036653536579584 raybet雷竞技])'']] |
− | + | [[File:Screenshot 2020-05-27 07.15.39.png|300px|thumb|right|''"If you don't rush the turret today, the turret will rush you tomorrow" (Source: [https://www.zhihu.com/collection/294147138 Zhihu])'']] | |
− | + | To deliberately post political satire and sensitive material, in the full knowledge of the risk of the post (and the user's account) being deleted or censored. The term comes from [https://jikipedia.com/definition/589784026 League of Legends] fandom, where players whose characters are not fully developed attack an enemy [https://leagueoflegends.fandom.com/wiki/Turret turret], rushing to their near-certain death. Just like in the multi-player game, netizens may [https://project-gutenberg.github.io/Pincong/post/af9871b01383ac0a5d9e0ca79e858008/ collectively rush the turret in protest], as they did on the Guangzhou Communist Youth League's Weibo account in response to their January 29 [https://twitter.com/realemperorpooh/status/1222509279522877445 post] about [[Personal Emperor|Xi Jinping's meeting with the WHO chief]] to discuss efforts to quell the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. | |
− | [[ | + | The question and answer platform Zhihu has been a popular site for group turret-rushing. In December 2019, a Zhihu user created a Q&A page asking, "[https://chinadigitaltimes.net/chinese/2019/12/%e3%80%90%e9%ba%bb%e8%be%a3%e6%80%bb%e5%b1%80%e3%80%91%e7%9f%a5%e4%b9%8e%e6%8f%90%e9%97%ae%e5%a6%82%e4%bd%95%e6%b8%85%e6%b4%97%e7%bb%86%e9%a2%88%e7%93%b6%e8%a2%ab%e5%88%a0/ How do you thoroughly clean a narrow-necked bottle] (''xì jǐng píng'' 细颈瓶)?", alluding homophonously to [[:分类:Xi Jinping|Xi Jinping]] (''Xí Jìnpíng'' 习近平). The page attracted dozens of responses, notably from self-proclaimed chemists recommending various solvents and asking follow-up questions as to the dimensions of the "bottle." The page gathered at least 47 replies before Zhihu took it down for "violating the relevant internet laws and regulations." In a later Zhihu turret-rushing, recorded in April 2020, someone asked, "[https://twitter.com/realEmperorPooh/status/1251074372535607297/photo/1 If you lived in Hitler's Germany, would you resist?]" Among the 39 replies, one user wrote, "I don't even dare right now." |
− | [[ | + | [[分类:Lexicon]][[分类:Resistance Discourse]][[分类:COVID-19]] |
2024年10月6日 (日) 01:44的最新版本
chōng tǎ 冲塔
To deliberately post political satire and sensitive material, in the full knowledge of the risk of the post (and the user's account) being deleted or censored. The term comes from League of Legends fandom, where players whose characters are not fully developed attack an enemy turret, rushing to their near-certain death. Just like in the multi-player game, netizens may collectively rush the turret in protest, as they did on the Guangzhou Communist Youth League's Weibo account in response to their January 29 post about Xi Jinping's meeting with the WHO chief to discuss efforts to quell the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
The question and answer platform Zhihu has been a popular site for group turret-rushing. In December 2019, a Zhihu user created a Q&A page asking, "How do you thoroughly clean a narrow-necked bottle (xì jǐng píng 细颈瓶)?", alluding homophonously to Xi Jinping (Xí Jìnpíng 习近平). The page attracted dozens of responses, notably from self-proclaimed chemists recommending various solvents and asking follow-up questions as to the dimensions of the "bottle." The page gathered at least 47 replies before Zhihu took it down for "violating the relevant internet laws and regulations." In a later Zhihu turret-rushing, recorded in April 2020, someone asked, "If you lived in Hitler's Germany, would you resist?" Among the 39 replies, one user wrote, "I don't even dare right now."