At first of the year, The Cut kicked off a brief talk cycle by declaring a new lifestyle trend: “friction-maxxing.”
The idea, in a nutshell, is that people got too embarrassed with apps, AIand other means of near-instant gratification – and would do better with increased friction in their daily lives, that is, those mundane challenges that require minor effort from them.
Whatever your feelings on this philosophy, the use of “maxxing” as a supposedly familiar or at least intelligible suffix to most readers of a mainstream media outlet is evidence of another trend: assimilation of incel terminology through the Wider Internet. The online ecosystem of incels, or “involuntarily celibate” men, is saturated with this kind of clinical jargon; its aggrieved participants isolate, isolate, and identify themselves through coded language within the group intended to confuse and repel outsiders. So how did non-incels (“normies,” as incels would call them) end up adopting and recontextualizing these loaded words?
Slang, whatever its origins, has a viral nature. It tends to break containment and mutate. The buzzword “woke,” as it relates to our current politics, comes from African-American vernacular English and once referred to an awareness of racial and social injustice. This usage dates back to ancient times. mid-20th centuryeven predating the civil rights movement. But the culture wars of this century have made “woke” a favorite derogatory term among right-wingers, who use it as a catch-all term for everything that happens. threat their ideology, like Black pilots Or gender neutral pronouns.
In 2014, the eruption of Player Portal The harassment campaign paved the way for a different linguistic realignment. An organized backlash against women working in the video game industry, and ultimately any sort of diversity or progressivism within that medium, revealed a vein of reactionary anger that would gain a louder voice during the 1990s. Donald Trumppresidential campaign of 2016. It was a period when many digital players got their first taste of troll nihilism and invectives that fuel forums with toxic messages such as 4chan and gave birth to a network of anti-feminists manosphere sites collectively known as the “PSL” community: PUAHate (a forum for speaking out about pickup artists; it was shut down shortly after the 2014 Isla Vista shootings perpetrated by Elliot Rodger, who frequented the forum), SlutHate (a hub for simple misogyny), and Lookism (where incels viciously criticize each other).
Lookism, named after the idea that prejudice against the less attractive is as common and pernicious as sexism or racism, is the only forum of the PSL trio that survives today, and while we don’t know who invented the idiom “maxxing,” it is the most likely source of the first verb with this construction. “Looksmaxxing”, which borrows from the concept of role-playing “min-maxing“, or elevating a character’s strengths while limiting their weaknesses, has become the preferred phrase for attempts to improve one’s appearance in search of sex. It could mean something as simple as a style makeover or as extreme as “bone crushing“, a supposed technique for achieving a more defined jawline by tapping it with a hammer.
If the 2000s introduced the jargon of “gaming” and “negging,” the 2010s ushered in language that expanded the Darwinian view of the dating pool as a cutthroat, strictly hierarchical marketplace. “AMOG,” an acronym for “alpha male of the group,” gave us “mogging,” a display in which a male exerts his physical superiority over a rival. An ideally male specimen might also be recognized as a “Chad”, who allegedly enjoys his choice of attractive partners, while a Chad among Chads is, of course, a “Gigachad”. Women were decried as “female humanoids,” then “femoids,” and finally simply “foids.”
With these building blocks in place, it was easy to generate endless recombinant forms. You can “maxx” almost anything: “jestermaxxing” is the age-old technique of seduction through humor, while “moneymaxxing” is the equally traditional strategy of accumulating wealth to elevate your dating prospects, and “gymmaxxing” involves a hardcore fitness regime. In the same way, men can “transform” themselves in various ways; the tallest can be found “high up,” the shortest, the well-coiffed “crowd” the bald, and the muscular ones regularly “frame” anyone with skinny shoulders or noodle arms. On top of that, you have esoteric phrases like “chadfishing,” which describes the practice of catfishing on dating apps with photos of conventionally good-looking men.
This ever-expanding glossary is absurd, and to some extent this may be deliberate. This stupidity obscures the bitter, dehumanizing contempt that incels feel toward women, sexually active men, and themselves. It is common among this cohort to encourage abandonment of hope (so-called “taking the black pill”) and suicide. Norms would never submit to such a harsh worldview, but as its outlandish nomenclature seeped into the groundwater of online discourse over the past decade, they acquired its semantics.
More recently, the spread of incel gibberish has been accelerated by the emergence of a 20-year-old Kick streamer known as Clavicular (real name: Braden Peters). Currently, the most visible proponent of “looksmaxxing,” Peters, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment, is open about the abuse. steroids and methamphetaminerubs shoulders with a lawyer white nationalist and a suspected human traffickerpeddles sexist clichésand throws everywhere the N word. For $49, it also offers entry to a “academy” which teaches young men how to “rise up” or transform into the sexiest version of themselves. Yet the whole conversation around the character Clavicular – apparently astroturfed by advertisers paying to stream clips of his exploits – drifting from videos with stupid captions like “Clavicular met a fraternity leader at ASU and was brutally mogged by him.” And “Clavicular was joking around when a group of Foids came over and spiked his cortisol levels..”
These trigger phrases, with incomprehensible variations of existing lexicon piled on for comic effect, activated the social media masses, who saw the opportunity to apply “maxxing” and “mogging” in every circumstance imaginable. Consequently, the sentence “Trump brutally sanctioned by SCOTUS for tariffmaxxing, a decision that is sure to increase the cortisol of the White House” is now truly readable for commentators poisoned by irony. Peters is therefore seen less as the symptom of a harmful and hopeless attention economy than as a entertainmentincluding by the people willing to reject his cruel means of glory and influence. His edgelord aura can be seen as a ridiculous character, or perhaps a satirical performance of genre optimization.
It should also be noted that Peters is a “incel-ebrity“imbued with the logic and rhetoric of incel society despite not being one himself; his constant access to women makes him an aspirational figure to those who are not.
There can be no clearer sign of the power of the subculture than the fact that everyone accepts its appalling conditions, whether joking or not. As an artificial phenomenon, the Clavicular saga, which now encompasses a “Chad ranking» and a cast of bizarre secondary antagonists who drew comparisons to anime– forces an engagement with something you’d be better off ignoring.
On the other hand, it is entirely possible that incels, true artists of resentment, take offense at the appropriation of their memes and seek to further distance themselves from the general population they so despise. They could very well invent a dialect so impenetrable that it will take another ten years for foreigners to assimilate and normalize it.
For the moment, however, their particular eugenics theory has resonated as a kind of verbal stimulation. How else can you put it: the established vernacular has been turned into a word.



























