Beldam Posting

2024Reaction image / speech bubblingsemi-active
Beldam Posting is a 2024 reaction image meme using speech bubble edits of Beldam from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door to mock those denying Vivian's trans identity.

Beldam Posting is a meme trend centered on Beldam, a villain from *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door*, who bullies her sister Vivian with transphobic remarks. The memes took off in May 2024 as fans anticipated the Nintendo Switch remake's confirmation of Vivian as a transgender woman, with users creating speech bubbling edits and copium reaction images featuring Beldam to clown on people who denied Vivian's trans identity.

TL;DR

Beldam Posting is a meme trend centered on Beldam, a villain from *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door*, who bullies her sister Vivian with transphobic remarks.

Overview

Beldam is one of the three Shadow Sirens in *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door*, and she's awful to her younger sister Vivian. In the original Japanese release, Beldam's cruelty had a specifically transphobic edge, mocking Vivian's gender identity. When the 2004 English localization stripped that context out, it became a long-running point of discussion in the Paper Mario fandom3.

The meme format works on a simple irony: people online who deny Vivian's trans identity are behaving exactly like Beldam, the game's villain. Fans started using Beldam's in-game sprites in speech bubbling edits and copium-style reaction images to point this out, turning the character into a shorthand for "you're siding with the bad guy"3.

The roots of Beldam Posting trace back to the original *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door* on GameCube in 2004. In the Japanese script, Vivian's gender identity as a trans woman was part of the text, but the English localization removed those references entirely1. This created years of fan debate about Vivian's "true" identity, with Beldam's in-game dialogue sitting at the center of it.

When Nintendo announced a Switch remake, speculation ramped up about whether the new localization would restore Vivian's identity. The remake, reviewed and released in May 2024, did exactly that. Vivian now says things like "it took me a while to realize I was their sister…not their brother" in English, making her trans identity explicit even in the localization1.

The meme format itself crystallized on Twitter/X in the weeks before and immediately after the remake's launch in May 20243.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter / X
Key People
@Reecee_yt, @jsketch12, community-created from *Paper Mario: TTYD*
Date
2024
Year
2024

The roots of Beldam Posting trace back to the original *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door* on GameCube in 2004. In the Japanese script, Vivian's gender identity as a trans woman was part of the text, but the English localization removed those references entirely. This created years of fan debate about Vivian's "true" identity, with Beldam's in-game dialogue sitting at the center of it.

When Nintendo announced a Switch remake, speculation ramped up about whether the new localization would restore Vivian's identity. The remake, reviewed and released in May 2024, did exactly that. Vivian now says things like "it took me a while to realize I was their sister…not their brother" in English, making her trans identity explicit even in the localization.

The meme format itself crystallized on Twitter/X in the weeks before and immediately after the remake's launch in May 2024.

How It Spread

In the lead-up to the remake's release, Paper Mario fans were already making Beldam jokes. X user @LubbaSMG2 posted about how the fandom loves making memes about Beldam, pulling over 1,000 likes in four days.

Then May 21st, 2024 hit, and Beldam Posting exploded. @Reecee_yt posted a copium-style reaction image of Beldam with the caption "Made a new Beldam reaction image for people in denial about the recent news, feel free to use it," racking up over 5,000 likes in a single day. The same day, @jsketch12 shared a speech bubbling edit casting Beldam as the internet users complaining about Vivian in the remake, which pulled over 11,000 likes in 24 hours.

The format spread fast as users adopted the Beldam speech bubble template to respond to anyone denying Vivian's trans identity. @LuigiSidekick posted a video compiling multiple users replying to a single denial tweet with the Beldam speech bubbling meme, gathering over 9,000 likes in a day. The joke was clear: if you're mad about Vivian being trans, you're literally Beldam, the villain.

How to Use This Meme

Beldam Posting typically takes two forms:

Speech Bubbling: Take a Beldam sprite from the game and add a speech bubble containing text that mirrors the kind of denial or complaints people post about Vivian's trans identity. Reply to someone dismissing Vivian's identity with the edit, implying "this is you right now."

Copium Reaction Image: Use the Beldam copium template (created by @Reecee_yt) as a reply image when someone posts denial about Vivian being trans, or more broadly when someone refuses to accept confirmed information about a game or character.

Both formats work best as quote tweets or replies rather than standalone posts. The humor comes from the context: Beldam is the villain who misgenders and bullies Vivian in-game, so comparing someone to Beldam is a pointed insult wrapped in a Paper Mario reference.

Cultural Impact

The localization history behind Beldam Posting touches on a broader pattern in Japanese-to-English game translation. Academic research on video game localization has documented how cultural adaptation often involves significant changes to character identities, dialogue, and visual presentation to suit target audiences. The original TTYD localization's removal of Vivian's trans identity fits this pattern, where localizers made choices about what Western audiences were "ready for" in 2004.

The remake's decision to restore Vivian's identity two decades later made *Paper Mario: TTYD* part of a larger conversation about trans representation in Nintendo games. A My Nintendo News review specifically praised the change, noting that "having a game set in the Mario universe that isn't afraid to dabble with more serious subjects is part of what makes The Thousand-Year Door so special".

Beldam Posting gave fans a ready-made, in-universe tool to engage with the backlash. Instead of arguing directly, they could just post a picture of the game's villain and let the comparison speak for itself.

Fun Facts

Vivian's trans identity was present in the original 2004 Japanese release but absent from English, German, and other Western localizations for 20 years.

The remake kept Vivian's revelation subtle. She never uses the word "transgender" directly but implies it through dialogue about being called her siblings' "brother" before realizing she was their sister.

Beldam is technically Vivian's older sister in the Shadow Sirens trio, making the in-game dynamic a case of sibling bullying that maps neatly onto real-world family rejection narratives.

The biggest single day for Beldam Posting was May 21st, 2024, when at least three separate viral posts each cleared thousands of likes within 24 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

Beldam Posting

2024Reaction image / speech bubblingsemi-active
Beldam Posting is a 2024 reaction image meme using speech bubble edits of Beldam from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door to mock those denying Vivian's trans identity.

Beldam Posting is a meme trend centered on Beldam, a villain from *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door*, who bullies her sister Vivian with transphobic remarks. The memes took off in May 2024 as fans anticipated the Nintendo Switch remake's confirmation of Vivian as a transgender woman, with users creating speech bubbling edits and copium reaction images featuring Beldam to clown on people who denied Vivian's trans identity.

TL;DR

Beldam Posting is a meme trend centered on Beldam, a villain from *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door*, who bullies her sister Vivian with transphobic remarks.

Overview

Beldam is one of the three Shadow Sirens in *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door*, and she's awful to her younger sister Vivian. In the original Japanese release, Beldam's cruelty had a specifically transphobic edge, mocking Vivian's gender identity. When the 2004 English localization stripped that context out, it became a long-running point of discussion in the Paper Mario fandom.

The meme format works on a simple irony: people online who deny Vivian's trans identity are behaving exactly like Beldam, the game's villain. Fans started using Beldam's in-game sprites in speech bubbling edits and copium-style reaction images to point this out, turning the character into a shorthand for "you're siding with the bad guy".

The roots of Beldam Posting trace back to the original *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door* on GameCube in 2004. In the Japanese script, Vivian's gender identity as a trans woman was part of the text, but the English localization removed those references entirely. This created years of fan debate about Vivian's "true" identity, with Beldam's in-game dialogue sitting at the center of it.

When Nintendo announced a Switch remake, speculation ramped up about whether the new localization would restore Vivian's identity. The remake, reviewed and released in May 2024, did exactly that. Vivian now says things like "it took me a while to realize I was their sister…not their brother" in English, making her trans identity explicit even in the localization.

The meme format itself crystallized on Twitter/X in the weeks before and immediately after the remake's launch in May 2024.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter / X
Key People
@Reecee_yt, @jsketch12, community-created from *Paper Mario: TTYD*
Date
2024
Year
2024

The roots of Beldam Posting trace back to the original *Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door* on GameCube in 2004. In the Japanese script, Vivian's gender identity as a trans woman was part of the text, but the English localization removed those references entirely. This created years of fan debate about Vivian's "true" identity, with Beldam's in-game dialogue sitting at the center of it.

When Nintendo announced a Switch remake, speculation ramped up about whether the new localization would restore Vivian's identity. The remake, reviewed and released in May 2024, did exactly that. Vivian now says things like "it took me a while to realize I was their sister…not their brother" in English, making her trans identity explicit even in the localization.

The meme format itself crystallized on Twitter/X in the weeks before and immediately after the remake's launch in May 2024.

How It Spread

In the lead-up to the remake's release, Paper Mario fans were already making Beldam jokes. X user @LubbaSMG2 posted about how the fandom loves making memes about Beldam, pulling over 1,000 likes in four days.

Then May 21st, 2024 hit, and Beldam Posting exploded. @Reecee_yt posted a copium-style reaction image of Beldam with the caption "Made a new Beldam reaction image for people in denial about the recent news, feel free to use it," racking up over 5,000 likes in a single day. The same day, @jsketch12 shared a speech bubbling edit casting Beldam as the internet users complaining about Vivian in the remake, which pulled over 11,000 likes in 24 hours.

The format spread fast as users adopted the Beldam speech bubble template to respond to anyone denying Vivian's trans identity. @LuigiSidekick posted a video compiling multiple users replying to a single denial tweet with the Beldam speech bubbling meme, gathering over 9,000 likes in a day. The joke was clear: if you're mad about Vivian being trans, you're literally Beldam, the villain.

How to Use This Meme

Beldam Posting typically takes two forms:

Speech Bubbling: Take a Beldam sprite from the game and add a speech bubble containing text that mirrors the kind of denial or complaints people post about Vivian's trans identity. Reply to someone dismissing Vivian's identity with the edit, implying "this is you right now."

Copium Reaction Image: Use the Beldam copium template (created by @Reecee_yt) as a reply image when someone posts denial about Vivian being trans, or more broadly when someone refuses to accept confirmed information about a game or character.

Both formats work best as quote tweets or replies rather than standalone posts. The humor comes from the context: Beldam is the villain who misgenders and bullies Vivian in-game, so comparing someone to Beldam is a pointed insult wrapped in a Paper Mario reference.

Cultural Impact

The localization history behind Beldam Posting touches on a broader pattern in Japanese-to-English game translation. Academic research on video game localization has documented how cultural adaptation often involves significant changes to character identities, dialogue, and visual presentation to suit target audiences. The original TTYD localization's removal of Vivian's trans identity fits this pattern, where localizers made choices about what Western audiences were "ready for" in 2004.

The remake's decision to restore Vivian's identity two decades later made *Paper Mario: TTYD* part of a larger conversation about trans representation in Nintendo games. A My Nintendo News review specifically praised the change, noting that "having a game set in the Mario universe that isn't afraid to dabble with more serious subjects is part of what makes The Thousand-Year Door so special".

Beldam Posting gave fans a ready-made, in-universe tool to engage with the backlash. Instead of arguing directly, they could just post a picture of the game's villain and let the comparison speak for itself.

Fun Facts

Vivian's trans identity was present in the original 2004 Japanese release but absent from English, German, and other Western localizations for 20 years.

The remake kept Vivian's revelation subtle. She never uses the word "transgender" directly but implies it through dialogue about being called her siblings' "brother" before realizing she was their sister.

Beldam is technically Vivian's older sister in the Shadow Sirens trio, making the in-game dynamic a case of sibling bullying that maps neatly onto real-world family rejection narratives.

The biggest single day for Beldam Posting was May 21st, 2024, when at least three separate viral posts each cleared thousands of likes within 24 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions