Lore isn’t just for games like The Elder Scrolls or films like The Lord of the Rings—online, it has evolved into something entirely new.
The Old English word made the shortlist for Oxford University Presss’ 2024 Word of the Year (though it ultimately lost to brain rot). Oxford defines lore as “a body of (supposed) facts, background information, and anecdotes relating to someone or something, regarded as knowledge or required for full understanding or informed discussion of the subject in question.” Historically, the term has been tied to teaching and knowledge-sharing, with roots stretching back nearly a thousand years.
Today, however, lore has evolved into internet slang for the dramatic—and sometimes traumatic—details that define a person’s identity. “When your mum casually drops lore like it’s nothing serious but it’s genuinely some of the most insane stuff you’ve ever heard,” reads one post on TikTok. “Me the second I get to college when i get to lore drop my whole life to my new roommate,” reads another.
For some reason, the Account Planning Group of Canada offers a handy breakdown of the concept on TikTok. In the video, a Gen Z creator explains three key uses of lore: having lore (possessing a mysterious or intriguing backstory), dropping lore (revealing a previously unknown life event), and dad lore—the joke that fathers will casually reveal insane anecdotes from their past, leaving their children struck by how little they truly know about them.
@apgcanada Watch until the end to learn how to use “lore” in your next meeting! Have you heard all 3 of these uses of “lore” before? #lore #genz #strategy #marketing
♬ son original – APG Canada
Social media thrives on oversharing, and TikTok has made personal storytelling more common than ever. Influencers seamlessly incorporate lore drops into “get ready with me” videos, using their makeup routines as a backdrop for revealing deeply personal stories. A 2022 survey found that one in three Gen Z young adults has shared their mental health struggles on social media. When a potential TikTok ban loomed in late January, creators rushed to disclose their most closely held lore—fearing they might never get another chance.
“It’s a word of the heart and not the head,” Peter Sokolowski, Merriam-Webster’s editor at large, told The Wall Street Journal’s Ashley Wong. “Lore conveys emotion somehow, in that organic way, and that’s just a beautiful kind of repossession of this word.”
But, as one TikTok user pointed out, the trend has a darker side: “When you realize the lore you dropped actually happened and isn’t a funny little treat to share with the group & it has altered your personality and perspective forever and you won’t ever be the same.”
Login to add comment
Other posts in this group

Despite a ">triumphant world premiere at Cannes last May, the politically unsparing Donald Trump biopic The Apprentice was stuck in

Countless hours, days—perhaps even weeks—of my life have been spent creating Sims characters, building them houses, marrying them off, and making babies. Now, there’s a new life-simulatio

A bitcoin investor who bought a SpaceX flight for himself and three polar explorers blasted

Spatial intelligence is an emerging approach to deploying AI in the physical world. By combining mapping data with artificial intelligence, it aims to deliver “smart data” tied to specific locatio

Ukraine’s war with Russia—sparked by Russia’s invasion in the spring of 2022—is now entering its fourth year. So t

After yet another round of protests disrupted

Scientists have developed a device that can translate thoughts about speech into