Soulslike Player Messages
Also known as: Soapstone Messages · Souls Messages · Orange Soapstone Messages
Soulslike Player Messages are the cryptic, often hilarious in-game notes left by players across FromSoftware's Dark Souls, Bloodborne, and Elden Ring series. Originating with the first Dark Souls in 2011, the mechanic lets players compose messages from a limited vocabulary of preselected words, which then appear in other players' game worlds. The creative constraints of the system turned it into a breeding ground for innuendo, trolling, and genuine camaraderie, producing iconic phrases like "Amazing Chest Ahead" and "Try Finger But Hole" that became some of gaming's most enduring inside jokes.
Overview
In every FromSoftware Soulsborne game, players can place glowing messages on the ground for others to discover. The catch: you can't type freely. Instead, you pick from a curated list of word templates and fill in blanks, creating messages like "Be wary of left" or "Try jumping." This rigid vocabulary was designed for gameplay hints, warning other players about ambushes or hidden paths. But players quickly realized the limited word bank could be bent toward comedy, innuendo, and outright deception2.
The messages appear as faintly glowing orange text on the ground in other players' worlds. Anyone who reads your message can rate it with an "appraise" button. In several games, getting a positive appraisal restores a charge of your Estus Flask (healing item), giving players a direct gameplay incentive to write messages that others will enjoy2. This reward loop pushed the community toward crafting the funniest, most cleverly placed notes possible.
The first Soulslike player message to break out virally came from Dark Souls, released in 2011. One of the game's toughest boss fights, against Ornstein and Smough, leads to a chamber where the towering Princess Gwynevere greets the player. Gwynevere's character design is notably voluptuous, and players immediately placed messages reading "Amazing Chest Ahead" at the entrance to her chamber. While the phrase was a legitimate template intended for treasure chests containing good loot, its double meaning in front of Gwynevere was unmistakable2.
A screenshot of this message was uploaded to the NeoGAF Dark Souls forums on October 18, 2011 by a user named Ced, marking one of the earliest documented instances of the joke spreading beyond the game itself2.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
To leave a Soulslike player message, you use the in-game item (Orange Soapstone in Dark Souls, Tarnished's Wizened Finger in Elden Ring) which opens a template menu. You select a phrase structure, then fill in words from a dropdown list.
Common approaches:
- Innuendo placement: Find an NPC or environmental feature in a suggestive pose and place "Try Finger But Hole" or similar nearby - Mislabeling: Call any non-dog creature "dog" (Elden Ring tradition) - Fake hints: Write "Hidden path ahead" next to a solid wall, or "Try jumping" at a fatal drop - Genuine help: Warn about ambushes ("Be wary of right"), mark treasure ("item ahead"), or indicate illusory walls that actually exist - Existential commentary: Place reflective messages at scenic overlooks or before difficult bosses ("Don't give up!")
The key to a good message is location. The same phrase hits differently depending on context. "You don't have the right" in front of a locked door is funny. "You don't have the right" after a boss kills you for the fiftieth time is devastating.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Getting your message appraised positively in Dark Souls restores an Estus Flask charge, meaning the funniest players in the game are literally harder to kill.
Elden Ring removed weapon durability, which was a quiet mercy for players who hit walls checking for fake "illusory wall" messages. In older games, this trolling could actually break your weapon.
The word list in each game is carefully curated by FromSoftware. Players can't type freely, so every innuendo is technically built from developer-approved vocabulary.
The "Fort, Night" Fortnite joke crossed language barriers in an unexpected way. English speakers got the pun immediately, while Japanese players were genuinely confused and discussed a potential crossover.
Some players treat message writing as a metagame unto itself, strategically placing messages in high-traffic areas like boss fog gates and bonfire rooms to farm appraisals and keep their healing topped up.
Derivatives & Variations
"Amazing Chest Ahead"
— The original viral message, placed near Gwynevere in Dark Souls (2011). Became shorthand for the entire message culture[2].
"Try Finger But Hole"
— The most iconic innuendo message, evolved from Dark Souls 2's "Try Tongue But Hole" and became the series' signature joke by Dark Souls 3[2].
"Dog" labeling
— An Elden Ring tradition of calling every non-dog animal "dog," from turtles to crabs to donkeys[1].
"You don't have the right"
— Placed at locked doors throughout Elden Ring, simultaneously a troll and a cryptic hint[1].
"Fort, Night"
— An Elden Ring wordplay message referencing Fortnite that confused Japanese players into expecting a crossover event[1].
Illusory wall trolling
— Fake "hidden path ahead" messages at solid walls, a tradition spanning all Souls games that became a meme format on r/EldenRing[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2Soulslike Player Messages - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 3Glossary of video game termsencyclopedia