
Junko Posing
A TikTok dance chain where people loop four exaggerated poses inspired by Junko Enoshima's sprite animations in Danganronpa—after years labeled cringe, it came back in 2025–2026 as both sincere nostalgia and ironic "lost art" jokes.
More about this meme
Junko Enoshima's theatrical pose cycles in Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc became cosplay shorthand on TikTok in the late 2010s, with compilations archived on YouTube as early as 2019. Know Your Meme explains that the "Junko Posing" label covers a tight four-beat arm-and-face routine copied from her sprites, which spread widely before a backlash wave dismissed it as cringe.
The format rebounded in 2025–2026 when creators leaned into muscle-memory jokes and early-TikTok nostalgia: @yuriprincess44's November 18, 2025 "muscle memory" parody cleared about one million views in four months, and @fishyuna's February 22, 2026 "lost art form" post reached about two million views in five weeks. Variants such as the Burger King bathroom "Join Us for a Bite" lip-sync helped keep the choreography recognizable outside hardcore Danganronpa fans.
How to use this meme on a site
junkoposing.com can publish pose-diagram cards: mirrored silhouettes, safe-practice warmups, and links to official game pages so cosplayers learn the motion without scraping raw sprite rips.
junkoposeguide.com suits event mode—convention meetup maps, "film each other at 45 degrees" tips, and weekly highlight reels that require tagged consent from participants.
enoshimapose.com can pair lore explainers with the dance: who Junko is in-game, why the poses read as chaotic villain energy, and how to remix the format for comedy without spoiling trial twists newcomers have not played yet.
Check domain availability
- junkoposing.com
- junkoposeguide.com
- enoshimapose.com