Canon Disappointment
Also known as: Typhlosion Lore · Game Freak Leak Memes
Canon Disappointment is a fandom reaction meme tied to the October 2024 Game Freak data leak, in which internal Pokémon lore documents were exposed and machine-translated into English. The most viral case centered on Typhlosion, whose leaked folklore appeared to depict the Pokémon manipulating a human girl, shocking fans who had grown up with the character1. The meme captures the specific dread of discovering that a beloved fictional character's official backstory contains something deeply unsettling.
Overview
Canon Disappointment describes the gut-punch moment when officially authored (or internally documented) lore about a favorite character turns out to be disturbing, weird, or incompatible with the character's public image. While the concept existed loosely in fandom spaces before, the meme crystallized around a specific event: the massive 2024 leak of Game Freak's internal files, which included folklore-style narrative documents for multiple Pokémon species. The Typhlosion document became the breakout case, with machine-translated text suggesting the Fire-type Pokémon had lured and impregnated a young woman1.
The meme format typically involves referencing a character fans once loved, paired with the implication that "canon ruined everything." It plays on the tension between nostalgic attachment and unwelcome new information.
In late 2024, a large-scale data breach exposed internal Game Freak documents covering multiple Pokémon titles. Among the leaked files were narrative lore documents written in Japanese that explored mythological-style backstories for various Pokémon species. When these documents were run through machine translation tools, the resulting English text for Typhlosion's entry appeared to describe the Pokémon deceiving and impregnating a human girl1.
The accuracy of this translation was immediately disputed. Multiple Japanese-literate fans and translators argued that the machine translation had distorted key details, changing the tone and content of the original folklore1. Regardless of the translation debate, the damage to Typhlosion's reputation among English-speaking fans was swift and dramatic.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Platforms
Timeline
2023-01-15
First appears
2023-06-01
Goes viral
2024-01-01
Continues in use
2025-01-01
Canon Disappointment is still actively used and shared across platforms
How to Use This Meme
Canon Disappointment memes typically follow a few patterns:
- The reveal format: A user posts something like "I used to love [character]" followed by "then I read the canon lore" with a reaction image showing disgust or betrayal. - The Typhlosion shorthand: Simply posting Typhlosion's name or image in a context implying something dark, with other users understood to fill in the leaked lore. - The generalized template: Applying the format to any franchise where official material contradicts a character's wholesome public image. Users often swap in other characters with "what if their canon was like Typhlosion's." - The translation debate: Memes mocking the telephone-game nature of machine-translated leaked documents, questioning whether anyone actually knows what the original text said.
The tone ranges from genuinely disturbed to ironic detachment, depending on the poster.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Typhlosion was originally designed as a honey badger by Ken Sugimori for Pokémon Gold and Silver.
The Hisuian form of Typhlosion added Ghost typing, which fans jokingly called "prophetic" after the lore leak gave the character a ghostly reputation for different reasons.
ITMedia staff had previously expressed disappointment with Typhlosion for not having its flames visible at all times, making it look less impressive. This became ironic when a much bigger source of disappointment surfaced years later.
IGN's "Pokémon of the Day" series noted that Typhlosion had always struggled to escape Charizard's shadow as a Fire-type starter, a problem the leak solved in the worst possible way.
Derivatives & Variations
"Typhlosion did nothing wrong" posts:
Ironic defense memes where users sarcastically argue Typhlosion's innocence, often formatted like legal defenses[1].
Other Pokémon lore leaks:
Similar reaction memes applied to other Pokémon whose leaked folklore documents contained surprising content from the same Game Freak breach.
Translation comparison memes:
Side-by-side posts comparing the machine translation with human translations of the same Typhlosion document, highlighting how different they read[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (1)
- 1Typhlosionencyclopedia