Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More
Spiralling out of exhaustion, entering a villain era, being "crispy," and more. Here's RADII's latest dive into China Gen Z's latest choice terms.

From the exhaustion of doing absolutely nothing to aggressively entering a “Villain Era,” we present our latest four Chinese internet buzzwords defining youth culture today.

Gen Z on the Chinese internet is continually reinventing how they express the highs, lows, and hilarious absurdities of modern life. The latest trending buzzwords, presented by RADII, reveal a massive cultural shift toward recognizing deep emotional exhaustion, rejecting out-of-touch mindsets, and finding humor in sudden physical fragility. Here is a breakdown of the latest slang taking over feeds.


The exhaustion of doing nothing. Replaying a conversation from three days ago, rehearsing arguments nobody will ever hear, worrying about outcomes that never arrive. The engine runs all night, and the car never leaves the garage.


The internet’s prescription for 内耗: Think of it as China’s villain era, minus the aesthetic. Say the annoying thing. Ask the awkward question. Make your problem someone else’s problem for once.


Northeastern slang for an out-of-touch older man, now doing heavier work. When netizens started calling classic films 老登电影 (laodeng cinema), the word became a way to flag any taste that stopped updating decades ago. Age isn’t really the crime here. Refusing to notice the world moved on is.


Literally “crispy-skinned,” the way China‘s young people describe their own alarmingly fragile bodies. It started as hospital anecdotes about college students and became a whole generation’s running joke about falling apart early.

Cover image via Recraft/RADII.

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Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

1 min read

Spiralling out of exhaustion, entering a villain era, being "crispy," and more. Here's RADII's latest dive into China Gen Z's latest choice terms.

From the exhaustion of doing absolutely nothing to aggressively entering a “Villain Era,” we present our latest four Chinese internet buzzwords defining youth culture today.

Gen Z on the Chinese internet is continually reinventing how they express the highs, lows, and hilarious absurdities of modern life. The latest trending buzzwords, presented by RADII, reveal a massive cultural shift toward recognizing deep emotional exhaustion, rejecting out-of-touch mindsets, and finding humor in sudden physical fragility. Here is a breakdown of the latest slang taking over feeds.


The exhaustion of doing nothing. Replaying a conversation from three days ago, rehearsing arguments nobody will ever hear, worrying about outcomes that never arrive. The engine runs all night, and the car never leaves the garage.


The internet’s prescription for 内耗: Think of it as China’s villain era, minus the aesthetic. Say the annoying thing. Ask the awkward question. Make your problem someone else’s problem for once.


Northeastern slang for an out-of-touch older man, now doing heavier work. When netizens started calling classic films 老登电影 (laodeng cinema), the word became a way to flag any taste that stopped updating decades ago. Age isn’t really the crime here. Refusing to notice the world moved on is.


Literally “crispy-skinned,” the way China‘s young people describe their own alarmingly fragile bodies. It started as hospital anecdotes about college students and became a whole generation’s running joke about falling apart early.

Cover image via Recraft/RADII.

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Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More
Spiralling out of exhaustion, entering a villain era, being "crispy," and more. Here's RADII's latest dive into China Gen Z's latest choice terms.

From the exhaustion of doing absolutely nothing to aggressively entering a “Villain Era,” we present our latest four Chinese internet buzzwords defining youth culture today.

Gen Z on the Chinese internet is continually reinventing how they express the highs, lows, and hilarious absurdities of modern life. The latest trending buzzwords, presented by RADII, reveal a massive cultural shift toward recognizing deep emotional exhaustion, rejecting out-of-touch mindsets, and finding humor in sudden physical fragility. Here is a breakdown of the latest slang taking over feeds.


The exhaustion of doing nothing. Replaying a conversation from three days ago, rehearsing arguments nobody will ever hear, worrying about outcomes that never arrive. The engine runs all night, and the car never leaves the garage.


The internet’s prescription for 内耗: Think of it as China’s villain era, minus the aesthetic. Say the annoying thing. Ask the awkward question. Make your problem someone else’s problem for once.


Northeastern slang for an out-of-touch older man, now doing heavier work. When netizens started calling classic films 老登电影 (laodeng cinema), the word became a way to flag any taste that stopped updating decades ago. Age isn’t really the crime here. Refusing to notice the world moved on is.


Literally “crispy-skinned,” the way China‘s young people describe their own alarmingly fragile bodies. It started as hospital anecdotes about college students and became a whole generation’s running joke about falling apart early.

Cover image via Recraft/RADII.

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

NEWSLETTER

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Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

1 min read

Spiralling out of exhaustion, entering a villain era, being "crispy," and more. Here's RADII's latest dive into China Gen Z's latest choice terms.

From the exhaustion of doing absolutely nothing to aggressively entering a “Villain Era,” we present our latest four Chinese internet buzzwords defining youth culture today.

Gen Z on the Chinese internet is continually reinventing how they express the highs, lows, and hilarious absurdities of modern life. The latest trending buzzwords, presented by RADII, reveal a massive cultural shift toward recognizing deep emotional exhaustion, rejecting out-of-touch mindsets, and finding humor in sudden physical fragility. Here is a breakdown of the latest slang taking over feeds.


The exhaustion of doing nothing. Replaying a conversation from three days ago, rehearsing arguments nobody will ever hear, worrying about outcomes that never arrive. The engine runs all night, and the car never leaves the garage.


The internet’s prescription for 内耗: Think of it as China’s villain era, minus the aesthetic. Say the annoying thing. Ask the awkward question. Make your problem someone else’s problem for once.


Northeastern slang for an out-of-touch older man, now doing heavier work. When netizens started calling classic films 老登电影 (laodeng cinema), the word became a way to flag any taste that stopped updating decades ago. Age isn’t really the crime here. Refusing to notice the world moved on is.


Literally “crispy-skinned,” the way China‘s young people describe their own alarmingly fragile bodies. It started as hospital anecdotes about college students and became a whole generation’s running joke about falling apart early.

Cover image via Recraft/RADII.

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Feature image of RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

RADII Buzzwords: Spiralling, Villain Era, The Boomer, and More

Spiralling out of exhaustion, entering a villain era, being "crispy," and more. Here's RADII's latest dive into China Gen Z's latest choice terms.

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