4Chan Alien Sighting Hoax

2025Hoax / Viral Disinformationdead

Also known as: Egg UFO Hoax · 4chan Egg UAP · Antarctic Egg UFO

4Chan Alien Sighting Hoax is a 2025 hoax of AI-generated images and videos depicting an egg-shaped Antarctic UAP that originated on 4chan and went viral before being debunked.

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax refers to a series of fabricated images and videos posted anonymously on 4chan in early 2025, claiming to depict an "egg-shaped" UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) discovered in an Antarctic ice cave. The posts went viral across Reddit, X, and Discord, riding a wave of UFO hype following a disappointing televised segment by self-described whistleblower Jacob Barber. Skeptics quickly identified the images as AI-generated or rendered in a game engine, but not before they racked up hundreds of thousands of views and reignited debates about internet literacy and UFO grifting.

TL;DR

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax refers to a series of fabricated images and videos posted anonymously on 4chan in early 2025, claiming to depict an "egg-shaped" UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) discovered in an Antarctic ice cave.

Overview

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax centered on a batch of images showing what appeared to be a smooth, egg-shaped object nestled inside an icy cave, accompanied by green-tinted video footage and an elaborate backstory. The anonymous poster described the object as being "of ancient origin" and claimed it had been recovered from Antarctica in 20222. The images had a cinematic quality that initially fooled some viewers but ultimately looked too polished, with textures and lighting patterns that pointed toward digital fabrication. The hoax landed at a moment when UFO discourse was already running hot in both mainstream media and conspiracy-oriented corners of the internet, giving it an unusually large audience for a 4chan LARP.

On a Monday morning in late January 2025, an anonymous user or users on 4chan posted a series of videos, images, and an accompanying narrative claiming the material depicted an egg-shaped UAP found inside an Antarctic ice cave in 20222. The original poster engaged with the thread, answering questions and elaborating on the backstory. Because 4chan users post anonymously, it was impossible to verify whether follow-up replies came from the same person or from others playing along2.

The timing was deliberate. Just two days earlier, on Saturday, former U.S. Air Force employee Jacob Barber had appeared on NewsNation to discuss his claims of participating in a covert UFO retrieval program2. The broadcast showed grainy, green-tinted footage of a white object allegedly tethered to a helicopter. Most viewers found the footage unconvincing2. The 4chan posts appeared to piggyback on this disappointment, offering higher-quality visuals that resembled the NewsNation material but with more dramatic staging.

Around the same period, a separate thread on 4chan's /pol/ board referenced a deleted post labeled "24489 Taken Aprox 24 miles north west of Luke Airforce Base Phoenix Az. Lab H4C," which the poster claimed was being suppressed and dismissed as an alien hoax1. Whether these threads shared an author or were part of a coordinated effort is unknown, but they reflected the same pattern of anonymous users leveraging 4chan's architecture to circulate unverifiable UFO claims.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan
Creator
Unknown)
Date
2025
Year
2025

On a Monday morning in late January 2025, an anonymous user or users on 4chan posted a series of videos, images, and an accompanying narrative claiming the material depicted an egg-shaped UAP found inside an Antarctic ice cave in 2022. The original poster engaged with the thread, answering questions and elaborating on the backstory. Because 4chan users post anonymously, it was impossible to verify whether follow-up replies came from the same person or from others playing along.

The timing was deliberate. Just two days earlier, on Saturday, former U.S. Air Force employee Jacob Barber had appeared on NewsNation to discuss his claims of participating in a covert UFO retrieval program. The broadcast showed grainy, green-tinted footage of a white object allegedly tethered to a helicopter. Most viewers found the footage unconvincing. The 4chan posts appeared to piggyback on this disappointment, offering higher-quality visuals that resembled the NewsNation material but with more dramatic staging.

Around the same period, a separate thread on 4chan's /pol/ board referenced a deleted post labeled "24489 Taken Aprox 24 miles north west of Luke Airforce Base Phoenix Az. Lab H4C," which the poster claimed was being suppressed and dismissed as an alien hoax. Whether these threads shared an author or were part of a coordinated effort is unknown, but they reflected the same pattern of anonymous users leveraging 4chan's architecture to circulate unverifiable UFO claims.

How It Spread

The 4chan posts jumped platforms within hours. On X, user @BillyKrzyza reposted several of the egg images with his own analysis, claiming he was "99.2% sure these photos of this egg are REAL." The post pulled in 209,700 views by midweek. Another X user, @DailyUFOPosts, called the 4chan material "huge. Massive to moving disclosure forward".

On Reddit, user PyrolsSpai posted the images to the site's UFO community, where the thread picked up 2,900 upvotes and 1,500 replies. The comments split sharply between believers and debunkers. User ConclusionStreet4008 wrote: "It's insane how everyone believes this. It's clearly fake. Are people that desperate?". User halflife5 was more blunt: "4chan is trolling again please just look at this. It's so obviously an AI generated picture and it's only happening because people were clowning on the news nation video".

The debunking effort gained traction when Reddit user gardenofsmegma posted a zoomed-in crop of one image, pointing out that the cave surface textures looked computer-generated. "Look at the details of the rocks in the cave," they wrote. "I'm guessing this is something that was created in Unreal Engine with a filter over it". That post earned 2,800 upvotes. User ParemsanCheese92 noted that each image had a different background, a telltale sign of AI generation rather than photographs taken at a single real location.

The hoax also circulated through Discord servers frequented by UFO-sighting enthusiasts, though specific metrics from those communities were not publicly reported.

How to Use This Meme

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax is not a meme template in the traditional sense. It's typically referenced in three ways:

- Debunking posts: Users share zoomed-in details of the images to demonstrate AI artifacts or game-engine textures, often paired with commentary about internet literacy. - Reaction content: Screenshots from the original threads or credulous X posts are shared as examples of how easily fake UFO content spreads, usually with captions mocking the "99.2% real" analysis. - Callback jokes: When new UFO footage or conspiracy claims surface, users invoke the egg UFO hoax as shorthand for "4chan is trolling you again." Common phrasing includes variations of "is this another egg situation" or simply posting egg emojis.

Cultural Impact

The hoax landed during a politically charged moment for UFO discourse in the United States. Just days before the 4chan posts appeared, Donald Trump Jr. stated on his *Triggered* podcast that the White House was "working on" UAP investigations and called on Elon Musk to assist with research. Congress had held formal hearings on reported UFO sightings in 2023, and in December 2024, the FAA confirmed that a pilot had reported "unidentified lights" after leaked audio went viral.

This context made the hoax more potent than a typical 4chan troll job. A significant portion of Americans already believed that governments were concealing proof of alien life, and the egg images arrived when credible-seeming UFO content was actively being discussed in mainstream political settings. The speed at which the fabricated images were laundered from an anonymous imageboard into earnest analysis on X illustrated how UFO content moves through what amounts to a disinformation supply chain: anonymous post, credulous amplifier, mass audience.

The debunking also highlighted a growing tension in online communities between UFO believers hungry for evidence and skeptics who see each new "leak" as another round of the same cycle. Newsweek covered the incident, noting that "every time new UFO content emerges, the images and evidence are dissected by the large online audience passionate for searching for hints of alien life".

Fun Facts

Some of the 4chan replies claimed the NewsNation footage featuring Jacob Barber was also real, effectively trying to rehabilitate the already-discredited broadcast by associating it with the higher-quality fakes.

The /pol/ thread about the Luke Air Force Base post accused unnamed parties of actively trying to suppress the material, framing the "hoax" label itself as a coverup.

Reddit user gardenofsmegma's debunking post showing Unreal Engine-like textures earned nearly as many upvotes (2,800) as the original credulous post (2,900).

The anonymous poster described the alleged Antarctic object as being "of ancient origin," a narrative detail common in science fiction but rarely found in actual military or scientific reports.

Frequently Asked Questions

4Chan Alien Sighting Hoax

2025Hoax / Viral Disinformationdead

Also known as: Egg UFO Hoax · 4chan Egg UAP · Antarctic Egg UFO

4Chan Alien Sighting Hoax is a 2025 hoax of AI-generated images and videos depicting an egg-shaped Antarctic UAP that originated on 4chan and went viral before being debunked.

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax refers to a series of fabricated images and videos posted anonymously on 4chan in early 2025, claiming to depict an "egg-shaped" UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) discovered in an Antarctic ice cave. The posts went viral across Reddit, X, and Discord, riding a wave of UFO hype following a disappointing televised segment by self-described whistleblower Jacob Barber. Skeptics quickly identified the images as AI-generated or rendered in a game engine, but not before they racked up hundreds of thousands of views and reignited debates about internet literacy and UFO grifting.

TL;DR

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax refers to a series of fabricated images and videos posted anonymously on 4chan in early 2025, claiming to depict an "egg-shaped" UAP (unidentified anomalous phenomena) discovered in an Antarctic ice cave.

Overview

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax centered on a batch of images showing what appeared to be a smooth, egg-shaped object nestled inside an icy cave, accompanied by green-tinted video footage and an elaborate backstory. The anonymous poster described the object as being "of ancient origin" and claimed it had been recovered from Antarctica in 2022. The images had a cinematic quality that initially fooled some viewers but ultimately looked too polished, with textures and lighting patterns that pointed toward digital fabrication. The hoax landed at a moment when UFO discourse was already running hot in both mainstream media and conspiracy-oriented corners of the internet, giving it an unusually large audience for a 4chan LARP.

On a Monday morning in late January 2025, an anonymous user or users on 4chan posted a series of videos, images, and an accompanying narrative claiming the material depicted an egg-shaped UAP found inside an Antarctic ice cave in 2022. The original poster engaged with the thread, answering questions and elaborating on the backstory. Because 4chan users post anonymously, it was impossible to verify whether follow-up replies came from the same person or from others playing along.

The timing was deliberate. Just two days earlier, on Saturday, former U.S. Air Force employee Jacob Barber had appeared on NewsNation to discuss his claims of participating in a covert UFO retrieval program. The broadcast showed grainy, green-tinted footage of a white object allegedly tethered to a helicopter. Most viewers found the footage unconvincing. The 4chan posts appeared to piggyback on this disappointment, offering higher-quality visuals that resembled the NewsNation material but with more dramatic staging.

Around the same period, a separate thread on 4chan's /pol/ board referenced a deleted post labeled "24489 Taken Aprox 24 miles north west of Luke Airforce Base Phoenix Az. Lab H4C," which the poster claimed was being suppressed and dismissed as an alien hoax. Whether these threads shared an author or were part of a coordinated effort is unknown, but they reflected the same pattern of anonymous users leveraging 4chan's architecture to circulate unverifiable UFO claims.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan
Creator
Unknown)
Date
2025
Year
2025

On a Monday morning in late January 2025, an anonymous user or users on 4chan posted a series of videos, images, and an accompanying narrative claiming the material depicted an egg-shaped UAP found inside an Antarctic ice cave in 2022. The original poster engaged with the thread, answering questions and elaborating on the backstory. Because 4chan users post anonymously, it was impossible to verify whether follow-up replies came from the same person or from others playing along.

The timing was deliberate. Just two days earlier, on Saturday, former U.S. Air Force employee Jacob Barber had appeared on NewsNation to discuss his claims of participating in a covert UFO retrieval program. The broadcast showed grainy, green-tinted footage of a white object allegedly tethered to a helicopter. Most viewers found the footage unconvincing. The 4chan posts appeared to piggyback on this disappointment, offering higher-quality visuals that resembled the NewsNation material but with more dramatic staging.

Around the same period, a separate thread on 4chan's /pol/ board referenced a deleted post labeled "24489 Taken Aprox 24 miles north west of Luke Airforce Base Phoenix Az. Lab H4C," which the poster claimed was being suppressed and dismissed as an alien hoax. Whether these threads shared an author or were part of a coordinated effort is unknown, but they reflected the same pattern of anonymous users leveraging 4chan's architecture to circulate unverifiable UFO claims.

How It Spread

The 4chan posts jumped platforms within hours. On X, user @BillyKrzyza reposted several of the egg images with his own analysis, claiming he was "99.2% sure these photos of this egg are REAL." The post pulled in 209,700 views by midweek. Another X user, @DailyUFOPosts, called the 4chan material "huge. Massive to moving disclosure forward".

On Reddit, user PyrolsSpai posted the images to the site's UFO community, where the thread picked up 2,900 upvotes and 1,500 replies. The comments split sharply between believers and debunkers. User ConclusionStreet4008 wrote: "It's insane how everyone believes this. It's clearly fake. Are people that desperate?". User halflife5 was more blunt: "4chan is trolling again please just look at this. It's so obviously an AI generated picture and it's only happening because people were clowning on the news nation video".

The debunking effort gained traction when Reddit user gardenofsmegma posted a zoomed-in crop of one image, pointing out that the cave surface textures looked computer-generated. "Look at the details of the rocks in the cave," they wrote. "I'm guessing this is something that was created in Unreal Engine with a filter over it". That post earned 2,800 upvotes. User ParemsanCheese92 noted that each image had a different background, a telltale sign of AI generation rather than photographs taken at a single real location.

The hoax also circulated through Discord servers frequented by UFO-sighting enthusiasts, though specific metrics from those communities were not publicly reported.

How to Use This Meme

The 4chan Alien Sighting Hoax is not a meme template in the traditional sense. It's typically referenced in three ways:

- Debunking posts: Users share zoomed-in details of the images to demonstrate AI artifacts or game-engine textures, often paired with commentary about internet literacy. - Reaction content: Screenshots from the original threads or credulous X posts are shared as examples of how easily fake UFO content spreads, usually with captions mocking the "99.2% real" analysis. - Callback jokes: When new UFO footage or conspiracy claims surface, users invoke the egg UFO hoax as shorthand for "4chan is trolling you again." Common phrasing includes variations of "is this another egg situation" or simply posting egg emojis.

Cultural Impact

The hoax landed during a politically charged moment for UFO discourse in the United States. Just days before the 4chan posts appeared, Donald Trump Jr. stated on his *Triggered* podcast that the White House was "working on" UAP investigations and called on Elon Musk to assist with research. Congress had held formal hearings on reported UFO sightings in 2023, and in December 2024, the FAA confirmed that a pilot had reported "unidentified lights" after leaked audio went viral.

This context made the hoax more potent than a typical 4chan troll job. A significant portion of Americans already believed that governments were concealing proof of alien life, and the egg images arrived when credible-seeming UFO content was actively being discussed in mainstream political settings. The speed at which the fabricated images were laundered from an anonymous imageboard into earnest analysis on X illustrated how UFO content moves through what amounts to a disinformation supply chain: anonymous post, credulous amplifier, mass audience.

The debunking also highlighted a growing tension in online communities between UFO believers hungry for evidence and skeptics who see each new "leak" as another round of the same cycle. Newsweek covered the incident, noting that "every time new UFO content emerges, the images and evidence are dissected by the large online audience passionate for searching for hints of alien life".

Fun Facts

Some of the 4chan replies claimed the NewsNation footage featuring Jacob Barber was also real, effectively trying to rehabilitate the already-discredited broadcast by associating it with the higher-quality fakes.

The /pol/ thread about the Luke Air Force Base post accused unnamed parties of actively trying to suppress the material, framing the "hoax" label itself as a coverup.

Reddit user gardenofsmegma's debunking post showing Unreal Engine-like textures earned nearly as many upvotes (2,800) as the original credulous post (2,900).

The anonymous poster described the alleged Antarctic object as being "of ancient origin," a narrative detail common in science fiction but rarely found in actual military or scientific reports.

Frequently Asked Questions