Orc City
Also known as: The Orc Meme · The Black Crown Meme
Orc City is a remixable joke format born from a backfired roast on X (Twitter) in July 2025. After indie fantasy author John A. Douglas criticized Hideo Kojima's character naming in Metal Gear Solid 2, users dug up the overwrought opening of Douglas's self-published novel *The Black Crown* and turned its "Orc city smoldered" prose into an endless stream of parody posts. The meme spread rapidly over the Fourth of July weekend, producing everything from photoshopped screencaps to fake historical headlines about life in Orc City.
Overview
Orc City jokes revolve around the fictional setting from John A. Douglas's fantasy novel *The Black Crown*, which opens with a passage describing a smoldering orc city destroyed in war. The prose leans heavily on classic fantasy tropes: noble elves, savage orcs, knuckle-deep pools of blood and ash, and a haughty elvish king who declares, "There is nothing more reviled than the Orc." Users seized on the dramatic, self-serious tone and remixed it into absurd contexts, treating "Orc City" as if it were a real place with its own culture, history, and politics1. There's no fixed template. The meme takes the form of fake travel quotes, edited movie stills, historical parodies, satirical news headlines, and straight-up shitposts about orc life4.
On July 3, 2025, fantasy author John A. Douglas (@J0hnADouglas) posted a tweet mocking Hideo Kojima's villain design in Metal Gear Solid 2. Douglas wrote: "Whenever someone glazes Hideo Kojima, remember he once made a boss character that's a lardass in a bomb disposal suit riding around on rollerblades and sipping wine from a wine glass with a straw. His name? Fat Man. 'Genius.'" The post pulled in over 7 million views and 4,500 likes within two days4.
Kojima fans bit back fast. X user @capybaroness quote-retweeted Douglas with a screenshot of the opening lines of his novel *The Black Crown*, captioning it "this is how this guy's book starts"1. The passage describes an orc city in ruin after a war, with lines like "The ground soaked in a knuckle's depth of blood and ash" and the elvish king's pronouncement about orcs being reviled. The quote-retweet exploded, pulling in over 15.4 million views and 6,100 retweets1. As the Aftermath put it, Douglas's criticism was already missing the point: people like Kojima precisely for the bizarre levity he injects into serious games, and "Fat Man" is clearly a reference to the nuclear bomb dropped on Nagasaki3.
Pop culture critic Razorfist also weighed in, pointing out how correct Douglas was about Metal Gear's naming conventions while showing another absurd Kojima character name, "Die Hard-man," as an example of the writing fans were defending2.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
Orc City memes don't follow a single template. The common thread is treating "Orc City" and its lore (elves, orc wars, the elvish king) as if they're real and inserting them into existing meme formats, cultural references, or fake historical scenarios. Typical approaches include:
Travel quote parodies — Take a famous quote about a city or country and replace the location with Orc City. The Anthony Bourdain format is a popular vehicle.
Fake headlines — Write satirical news or historical headlines involving Orc City politics, wars, or culture (the JFK/elf ears edit is a prime example).
Existing meme templates — Drop Orc City references into Starship Troopers, Cyberpunk, Coolsville, or any format that involves places or conflict.
Direct text posts — Write dramatic, overwrought prose in the style of Douglas's opening, applied to mundane situations.
Glossary/worldbuilding parodies — Invent absurd fantasy slang in the style of the book's "Orcpunched" glossary entries.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Douglas's original Fat Man tweet wasn't even wrong. Fat Man is indeed a rollerblading bomb disposal expert who sips wine through a straw. The issue was that Kojima fans consider that absurdity a feature, not a flaw.
The @capybaroness response post outperformed Douglas's original by more than double in raw views, hitting 15.4 million.
Douglas embraced the meme instead of fighting it, posting his own Orc City jokes and gaining followers in the process.
The elvish king's line "There is nothing more reviled than the Orc" became a standalone copypasta, applied to everything from workplace drama to sports rivalries.
The Aftermath's Gita Jackson used the meme as a vehicle to eulogize old Twitter culture, calling Orc City one of the last great spontaneous joke cascades on the platform.
Derivatives & Variations
Anthony Bourdain Orc City quotes
— Advice parody images featuring Bourdain with dramatic Orc City travel wisdom. @NewEngOfficial's version was one of the biggest early posts[1].
John Elf Kennedy
— @hedgebrush's JFK-with-elf-ears assassination headline, blending American history with Orc City lore[1].
Cyberpunk 2077 Orc City
— @Awesomespen's Keanu Reeves edit applying the game's "you can be anyone" ethos to Orc City[4].
Orc City caste system posts
— Users created fake infographics and charts depicting the social hierarchy of Orc City[1].
"We Built Orc City" song parodies
— Riffs on "We Built This City" by Starship, swapping in rock trolls for rock and roll[2].
Glossary expansion
— Users invented their own absurd fantasy slurs and terminology in the style of Douglas's "Orcpunched" and "Spear ear" entries[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
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- 4Orc City - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5