QAA Podcast - The Tsuki Project (Premium E278) Sample
Episode Date: February 19, 2025“The Tsuki Project” was a once-active community of likeminded 4chan anons who longed to be transported into a better world. And they believed that by participating in this community formed around... the promises and lore of someone named Tsuki, they could enter into this better world after they died. This is a community that first formed in 2017 and has since dissipated into the online ether. It’s hard to say what the Tsuki Project was exactly. It has been described as anime suicide cult, a digital version of Heaven’s Gate, a hoax, a piece of interactive fiction, an Alternate Reality Game, or just a group of lonely, depressed people who were sucked into one person’s maladative daydreams. It was probably a swirl of all of those things. What exactly happened has to be pieced together from archived imageboard posts, websites that only survive as zip files, anime Wikis, and leaked screenshots from Discord servers. This is the story of the Tsuki project based on the surviving records. Subscribe for $5 a month to get all the premium episodes: http://www.patreon.com/QAA Editing by Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe, Jake Rockatansky, and Corey Klotz. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (https://instagram.com/theyylivve / https://sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (https://pedrocorrea.com) https://qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you.
If you're hearing this, well done, you've found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA podcast, Premium Episode 278, the Suki Project.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rakitansky, Liz Agar, and Travis View.
Today, we're going to dive into an old-fashioned internet rabbit hole.
That is the Suki Project, which is also known as system space.
This is a once active community of like-minded anonymous 4chan users who longed to transport into a better world.
And they believe that by participating in this community formed around the promises and lore of someone named Suki,
they could enter into this better world after they died.
So this community has long since dissipated into the online ether,
and it's hard to say what the Suki project was exactly.
It has been described as an anime suicide cult, a digital version of Heaven's Gate, a hoax,
a piece of interactive fiction, an alternate reality game, or just a group of lonely, depressed people
who were sucked into one person's maladaptive daydreams.
It was probably a swirl of all of those things.
Now, what exactly happened has to be pieced together from archived imageboard posts,
websites that only survive as zip files on the dark web, anime wikis, and leaked screenshots from
discord servers. You know, they say that the internet is forever, but in truth, some things on
the internet are actually, you know, are harder to piece together than some things that happened
many, many years ago. Yeah, like chatGBT dribble is forever, but like whatever went on on some
discord in 2017, that is lost. Yeah. Many people are probably very happy to hear that as well,
I'm sure. Yeah, our ancestors had to like chip away at stone and like use fine brushes to sort of
pull apart the sand to see images, you know, etched in tablets.
And we have to piece together broken Discord links, blurry JPEGs, tiny pieces of online chat boxes.
I mean, we've come a long way.
You have to go through a 4chan archive search that sends you to like 10 chatterbate websites,
even though you have ad block on it the second you click on it.
Also, yeah, just miserable search function, like four plebs, just as just miserable to navigate
and search through.
I imagine, I think it's Matt Dillon at the beginning of the fifth element where like the aliens are walking by and he's like sketching them horrified.
But like our situation, like sketching just like horribly like racist posts, anti-Semitic shit.
So I think the story of the Suki project is interesting for anyone who, you know, is really compelled to learn more about online cults or Chan culture.
But it's also a story that made me personally reflect on why I was initially attracted to like early forms.
of social media as a young boy and a teen in the 90s, you know, I like the idea that you could
like drop into like a local BBS server or a Usenet group about like, you know, any topic you're
interested in. Like, for example, I really liked The Simpsons. I didn't know anyone who wanted
to talk about the Simpsons, but there was a Usenet group full of people who were more obsessed
with the Simpsons than I was. And there were obviously, they were clearly adults and they
understood references that I didn't get, you know, I felt like it was enriching my experience.
And, you know, discovering that and discovering like there's just this large community of people
who had the kind of like same kind of like mind like me was very validating.
Yeah.
I feel like we've hit a critical mass of that now where it's like if you want to like fuck
toasters or whatever, you'll be able to find a community.
Like there must have been some point where it was good enough that there's all the
reasonable hobbies and communities you can find someone and it'll enrich your life.
And then it gets to a point where it's like, no, maybe.
there shouldn't be communities of people
encouraging each other to fuck toasters.
Yeah. See, I didn't know that that, I didn't know
that you could do that on the internet
when I was a teenager and had
internet in the house for the first time. I basically
understood like America
online, like chat rooms,
you know, chat rooms and
instant messages. And before that,
it was prodigy chat rooms
essentially. And then like in the
later years, like yeah, downloading like maybe
like one pixel like a pixelated
image of pornography.
Like I didn't know
that there were forums
where you could go
and like discuss like
you know
specific topics like
that and as far as I was concerned
like that part of the internet
didn't exist to me
it was just like going into like
chat rooms
and being like hey
and pretending to be like an older person
like sometimes
you know like somebody
like a police officer or something
just something that I thought was cool
you know
too much information
no no no no no
no that's that's a good
you know like perspective
I just didn't realize
that there was like
forums where it was like oh i could go to like like i didn't know that there probably would have
been like a ghostbusters forum where i could go talk about ghostbusters with like minded people
when i was a teenager with access to the internet yeah it's very easy like everyone knows everyone who
would be into that probably already knows they can like google yeah some community yeah people know
what the internet does now whereas like in a when like Travis and i like first got when i first
got it in my house like we didn't know the extent of like what it was able to do i remember asking
I remember showing it to my grandfather, we were like, this is the internet, you can connect to it,
you can ask it questions and stuff.
We had maybe like an Ask Jesus browser, and he was like, really?
And I was like, yeah, what do you want to know?
And he was like, Google Jewish basketball players from 1923.
Like that's what he was like, wanted to know, like, what Jews had played basketball
professionally.
I feel like we hit a critical mass in relation to that.
Yeah.
Which has resulted in 70-year-olds knowing what QAnon is.
the suki project began on the 4chan board r9k so this is probably i would say it's the third most notorious
board on 4chan so yeah the yeah the original board is also probably the most famous and notorious is
the b board random which is like you know known for being this chaotic vulgar and sometimes
creative laboratory of internet memes and uh the second most famous probably is the pole board
birthplace of Q, some other insider anon's also a famous sort of gathering place of like, you know, the
internet far right. But the culture of R9K is based around shared alienation of its users. The board
was originally developed to test a piece of moderation software called Robot 9,000, but it evolved
into a home for sharing painful anecdotes from socially awkward forechanters who self-deprecatingly
call themselves robots. My understanding is the difference between R9K and B is that a
But on R9K, you can't make the same post that someone else has already made.
So, you know, on B, they'll have like, this is a thread.
And you remake the thread continually, but you can't have that.
Okay, so it has to be some new weird shit that's no one, no one has said before.
And that's how they eventually got to this religion.
Yeah, eventually, you know, it's monkeys typing on a typewriter.
Posts on R9K are frequently made from young men and occasionally young women who express frustration about, you know, the hurdles of getting romantic attention, making friends.
generally or finding fulfilling work.
They romanticize the life of the Neat, the N-E-E-E-T.
That's an acronym for not in education, employment, or training.
They talk about like getting neat bucks to live a life of isolation,
pursuing solo hobbies, playing video games,
watching anime, and consuming pornography.
They often feel like society has rejected them,
and their pain is expressed in existential terms.
They convince themselves that their future only holds rejection
and tedious low-paying labor,
so they wonder if there's any point
in trying to better their lot.
In other words, it's full of people
who believe that they have nothing to lose in life,
and consequently, it's full of people
who are very receptive to the idea
that there's a simple way to exit this world
and enter another.
You've been listening to a sample
of a premium episode of the QAA podcast.
For access to the full episode,
as well as all past premium episodes
and all of our podcast miniseries,
go to patreon.com slash QAA.
Travis, why is that such a good deal?
Well, Jake, you get hundreds of additional episodes of the QAA podcast for just $5 per month.
For that very low price, you get access to over 200 premium episodes plus all of our miniseries.
That includes 10 episodes of Man Clan with Julian and Annie, 10 episodes of Pervers with Julian and Liv,
10 episodes of the Spectral Voyager with Jake and Brad, plus 20 episodes of Trickle Down with me, Travis View.
It's a bounty of content and the best deal in podcasting.
Travis, for once, I agree with you.
And I also agree that people could subscribe by going to patreon.com slash QAA.
Well, that's not an opinion.
It's a fact.
You're so right, Jake.
We love and appreciate all of our listeners.
Yes, we do.
And Travis is actually crying right now, I think, out of gratitude maybe?
That's not true.
The part about be crying, not me being grateful.
I'm very grateful.
Thank you.