• @MrJameGumb
    link
    English
    1610 months ago

    This was a thing when I was in elementary school which would have been the very early 90s. This creepy redneck kid told me about and said it was “like a magic trick”. When I asked how it worked he pushed me against a wall and started strangling me, until I punched him in the eye lol

  • db2
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1410 months ago

    That predates the internet by a fair margin.

    • 󠁀@󠁀FUCKEROP
      link
      English
      710 months ago

      It was one of the early internet challenges. It was just renamed and popularized again in 2021.

      • @W1Z_4RD
        link
        English
        310 months ago

        I remember this becoming a thing at my jr high school in the late 80’s in rural NV, well before there was any internet access in the town at all… this is nothing new.

  • decadentrebelM
    link
    English
    6
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    Isn’t this just auto-erotic asphyxiation… but done by kids?

    Also, I’m glad I don’t TikTok. I’m insulated from this stupidity, lol.

    • Helldiver_M
      link
      fedilink
      3
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      In the linked article, they say that this is distinct from erotic asphyxiation:

      Reasons for practice are distinct from erotic asphyxiation. Steve Field, chairman of the Royal College of General Practitioners in London,[4] claims that the fainting game is pursued primarily by children and teens “to get a high without taking drugs.” Children “aren’t playing this game for sexual gratification.” It is frequently confused with erotic asphyxiation, which is oxygen deprivation for sexual arousal. Unlike erotic asphyxiation, practice of the fainting game appears to be uncommon in adulthood.[5]