Hide Your Power Level

2008Catchphrase / Slangclassic

Also known as: Hiding Your Power Level · HYPL

Hide Your Power Level is a 2008 4chan catchphrase borrowed from Dragon Ball Z for concealing anime and gaming interests, later adopted by far-right movements to mask extremist ideology.

"Hide Your Power Level" is an internet slang phrase borrowed from the anime *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters measure combat strength through numerical "power levels." Starting on 4chan in the late 2000s, the phrase became shorthand for concealing one's depth of knowledge about anime, gaming, or other niche hobbies in mainstream social settings. The expression later took on a second, darker meaning when far-right online communities adopted it as a strategy term for masking extremist views to avoid social consequences.

TL;DR

"Hide Your Power Level" is an internet slang phrase borrowed from the anime *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters measure combat strength through numerical "power levels." Starting on 4chan in the late 2000s, the phrase became shorthand for concealing one's depth of knowledge about anime, gaming, or other niche hobbies in mainstream social settings.

Overview

In *Dragon Ball Z*, a "power level" is a numerical score representing a fighter's strength, often concealed to gain a tactical advantage. Internet users repurposed this concept as a metaphor for hiding the extent of one's obsession with niche hobbies, especially anime and manga. Someone who "hides their power level" can identify every character at a cosplay gathering but tells their friends they have no idea what's going on5.

The phrase operates on two levels. On one hand, it describes the socially savvy move of not volunteering your encyclopedic knowledge of *Naruto* at a dinner party1. On the other, it carries an implicit acknowledgment that certain interests carry social stigma, and revealing them could change how people perceive you2.

The phrase emerged from English-speaking anime fan communities on 4chan, likely on the /a/ (anime) and /jp/ (otaku culture) boards in the late 2000s. The metaphor was intuitive for anyone familiar with *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters routinely suppress their power levels to deceive opponents. Fans applied this same logic to real life: suppress your "power level" (depth of fandom knowledge) to avoid being labeled a weeaboo or social outcast5.

Urban Dictionary's entry defines it as what "actual geeks have to do in situations where their nerd knowledge and/or abilities would come in handy, but using them would reveal to everyone that they are a geek"5. A second definition on the same page narrows it further: "when you hide your obsession with anime, manga, and Japanese culture in general from the public eye"5.

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan
Creator
Unknown
Date
~2008
Year
2008

The phrase emerged from English-speaking anime fan communities on 4chan, likely on the /a/ (anime) and /jp/ (otaku culture) boards in the late 2000s. The metaphor was intuitive for anyone familiar with *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters routinely suppress their power levels to deceive opponents. Fans applied this same logic to real life: suppress your "power level" (depth of fandom knowledge) to avoid being labeled a weeaboo or social outcast.

Urban Dictionary's entry defines it as what "actual geeks have to do in situations where their nerd knowledge and/or abilities would come in handy, but using them would reveal to everyone that they are a geek". A second definition on the same page narrows it further: "when you hide your obsession with anime, manga, and Japanese culture in general from the public eye".

How It Spread

By 2010, the concept had spread beyond 4chan into the broader anime blogging community. A May 2010 post on the blog *We Remember Love* explored creative alternatives for expressing fandom without "scaring people away." The author described getting flip-flops customized in the colors of a *Macross* fighter jet and even embedding an anime character's name into his legal signature, arguing that the goal was to "be detectable by people who you permit to detect you: that is, people whose power levels match yours or exceed it".

Forum threads on sites like MaiOtaku asked users directly whether they hide their power level. Responses generally fell into a practical middle ground, with one user noting, "normally I don't bring it up to people unless I know they have the same interests. Maybe I might wear a subtle shirt or accessory".

The phrase took a sharper turn when it migrated to 4chan's /pol/ (Politically Incorrect) board and other far-right online spaces. In this context, "hiding your power level" stopped being about anime and started meaning the deliberate concealment of extremist political beliefs in normie settings. A /pol/ thread archived on 4plebs shows a user describing an entire school semester of suppressing pro-Nazi comments in a history class, framing it as hiding their power level.

Wikipedia's article on "Ghost skins" (white supremacists who blend into mainstream society) explicitly notes that "the term 'hiding your power levels,' originating from the anime *Dragon Ball Z*, is alternatively used by the online alt-right to reflect a similar concept". The FBI's 2006 Intelligence Assessment on white supremacist infiltration of law enforcement documented the "ghost skin" strategy years before the anime-derived phrase was applied to it.

Urban Dictionary eventually added a third definition reflecting this political dimension: "the act of hiding your power level is to conceal your true intentions from other people," describing how users in "far right/left communities" on Reddit and 4chan gradually introduce extremist ideas through jokes and desensitization.

How to Use This Meme

The phrase typically appears in three contexts:

Anime/hobby usage: Describe a situation where you recognized something nerdy but chose not to reveal your knowledge. "I saw someone with a *Jujutsu Kaisen* tattoo at work but hid my power level" or "Had to hide my power level when my date asked if I'd seen any good shows lately."

Self-aware confession: People often use it when they *failed* to hide their power level. "Accidentally revealed my power level when I corrected the barista's anime pronunciation."

As advice: Telling someone to tone down their visible enthusiasm. Often appears as a direct command: "Bro, hide your power level" when a friend is getting too openly nerdy in a social setting.

The concept can also be flipped. "Revealing your power level" means letting your true depth of knowledge show, whether intentionally or by accident.

Cultural Impact

The phrase bridged two very different online subcultures. In anime fandom, it became a lighthearted, self-deprecating way to talk about the social dynamics of being a fan. The *We Remember Love* blog post spawned a broader conversation about "stealth fandom," where fans find subtle, creative ways to signal their interests only to those who would recognize them.

In political discourse, the phrase gained scrutiny as researchers and journalists documented online radicalization tactics. The concept that extremists deliberately mask their beliefs to avoid detection and gradually normalize their views became a recognized pattern in studies of online radicalization. Wikipedia's documentation of the term alongside "ghost skin" placed it in a broader historical context of ideological concealment that predates the internet.

The dual meaning created an unusual situation where the same phrase could be completely innocent (an anime fan at a party) or deeply concerning (a white nationalist in a professional setting), depending entirely on context.

Fun Facts

One blogger embedded the anime character name "Char" into his actual legal signature on contracts and checks for two years, hiding it within the handwriting of his real middle name "Chan".

The FBI documented the underlying concept of ideological concealment in law enforcement as early as 2004, two years before the anime-derived phrase was widely used online.

The phrase works as a perfect metaphor because in *Dragon Ball Z*, hiding your power level is a *strategic advantage*, not a sign of weakness, which is exactly how internet users frame it.

Two Williamson County, Texas law enforcement officers were fired in 2001 after being discovered as KKK members who had been "hiding their power level" in the pre-internet sense of the term.

Derivatives & Variations

"Revealing your power level"

— The opposite: accidentally or intentionally showing how deep your knowledge goes. Used across anime forums when someone can't help but correct a meme's source[5].

"Power level" as standalone noun

— Used without "hide" to simply describe someone's depth of fandom. "That guy's power level is over 9000" combines two *Dragon Ball Z* references[5].

Stealth fandom fashion

— The *We Remember Love* blog popularized the idea of expressing fandom through subtle, deniable accessories like custom shoes or color-coded items that only fellow fans would recognize[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Hide Your Power Level

2008Catchphrase / Slangclassic

Also known as: Hiding Your Power Level · HYPL

Hide Your Power Level is a 2008 4chan catchphrase borrowed from Dragon Ball Z for concealing anime and gaming interests, later adopted by far-right movements to mask extremist ideology.

"Hide Your Power Level" is an internet slang phrase borrowed from the anime *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters measure combat strength through numerical "power levels." Starting on 4chan in the late 2000s, the phrase became shorthand for concealing one's depth of knowledge about anime, gaming, or other niche hobbies in mainstream social settings. The expression later took on a second, darker meaning when far-right online communities adopted it as a strategy term for masking extremist views to avoid social consequences.

TL;DR

"Hide Your Power Level" is an internet slang phrase borrowed from the anime *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters measure combat strength through numerical "power levels." Starting on 4chan in the late 2000s, the phrase became shorthand for concealing one's depth of knowledge about anime, gaming, or other niche hobbies in mainstream social settings.

Overview

In *Dragon Ball Z*, a "power level" is a numerical score representing a fighter's strength, often concealed to gain a tactical advantage. Internet users repurposed this concept as a metaphor for hiding the extent of one's obsession with niche hobbies, especially anime and manga. Someone who "hides their power level" can identify every character at a cosplay gathering but tells their friends they have no idea what's going on.

The phrase operates on two levels. On one hand, it describes the socially savvy move of not volunteering your encyclopedic knowledge of *Naruto* at a dinner party. On the other, it carries an implicit acknowledgment that certain interests carry social stigma, and revealing them could change how people perceive you.

The phrase emerged from English-speaking anime fan communities on 4chan, likely on the /a/ (anime) and /jp/ (otaku culture) boards in the late 2000s. The metaphor was intuitive for anyone familiar with *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters routinely suppress their power levels to deceive opponents. Fans applied this same logic to real life: suppress your "power level" (depth of fandom knowledge) to avoid being labeled a weeaboo or social outcast.

Urban Dictionary's entry defines it as what "actual geeks have to do in situations where their nerd knowledge and/or abilities would come in handy, but using them would reveal to everyone that they are a geek". A second definition on the same page narrows it further: "when you hide your obsession with anime, manga, and Japanese culture in general from the public eye".

Origin & Background

Platform
4chan
Creator
Unknown
Date
~2008
Year
2008

The phrase emerged from English-speaking anime fan communities on 4chan, likely on the /a/ (anime) and /jp/ (otaku culture) boards in the late 2000s. The metaphor was intuitive for anyone familiar with *Dragon Ball Z*, where characters routinely suppress their power levels to deceive opponents. Fans applied this same logic to real life: suppress your "power level" (depth of fandom knowledge) to avoid being labeled a weeaboo or social outcast.

Urban Dictionary's entry defines it as what "actual geeks have to do in situations where their nerd knowledge and/or abilities would come in handy, but using them would reveal to everyone that they are a geek". A second definition on the same page narrows it further: "when you hide your obsession with anime, manga, and Japanese culture in general from the public eye".

How It Spread

By 2010, the concept had spread beyond 4chan into the broader anime blogging community. A May 2010 post on the blog *We Remember Love* explored creative alternatives for expressing fandom without "scaring people away." The author described getting flip-flops customized in the colors of a *Macross* fighter jet and even embedding an anime character's name into his legal signature, arguing that the goal was to "be detectable by people who you permit to detect you: that is, people whose power levels match yours or exceed it".

Forum threads on sites like MaiOtaku asked users directly whether they hide their power level. Responses generally fell into a practical middle ground, with one user noting, "normally I don't bring it up to people unless I know they have the same interests. Maybe I might wear a subtle shirt or accessory".

The phrase took a sharper turn when it migrated to 4chan's /pol/ (Politically Incorrect) board and other far-right online spaces. In this context, "hiding your power level" stopped being about anime and started meaning the deliberate concealment of extremist political beliefs in normie settings. A /pol/ thread archived on 4plebs shows a user describing an entire school semester of suppressing pro-Nazi comments in a history class, framing it as hiding their power level.

Wikipedia's article on "Ghost skins" (white supremacists who blend into mainstream society) explicitly notes that "the term 'hiding your power levels,' originating from the anime *Dragon Ball Z*, is alternatively used by the online alt-right to reflect a similar concept". The FBI's 2006 Intelligence Assessment on white supremacist infiltration of law enforcement documented the "ghost skin" strategy years before the anime-derived phrase was applied to it.

Urban Dictionary eventually added a third definition reflecting this political dimension: "the act of hiding your power level is to conceal your true intentions from other people," describing how users in "far right/left communities" on Reddit and 4chan gradually introduce extremist ideas through jokes and desensitization.

How to Use This Meme

The phrase typically appears in three contexts:

Anime/hobby usage: Describe a situation where you recognized something nerdy but chose not to reveal your knowledge. "I saw someone with a *Jujutsu Kaisen* tattoo at work but hid my power level" or "Had to hide my power level when my date asked if I'd seen any good shows lately."

Self-aware confession: People often use it when they *failed* to hide their power level. "Accidentally revealed my power level when I corrected the barista's anime pronunciation."

As advice: Telling someone to tone down their visible enthusiasm. Often appears as a direct command: "Bro, hide your power level" when a friend is getting too openly nerdy in a social setting.

The concept can also be flipped. "Revealing your power level" means letting your true depth of knowledge show, whether intentionally or by accident.

Cultural Impact

The phrase bridged two very different online subcultures. In anime fandom, it became a lighthearted, self-deprecating way to talk about the social dynamics of being a fan. The *We Remember Love* blog post spawned a broader conversation about "stealth fandom," where fans find subtle, creative ways to signal their interests only to those who would recognize them.

In political discourse, the phrase gained scrutiny as researchers and journalists documented online radicalization tactics. The concept that extremists deliberately mask their beliefs to avoid detection and gradually normalize their views became a recognized pattern in studies of online radicalization. Wikipedia's documentation of the term alongside "ghost skin" placed it in a broader historical context of ideological concealment that predates the internet.

The dual meaning created an unusual situation where the same phrase could be completely innocent (an anime fan at a party) or deeply concerning (a white nationalist in a professional setting), depending entirely on context.

Fun Facts

One blogger embedded the anime character name "Char" into his actual legal signature on contracts and checks for two years, hiding it within the handwriting of his real middle name "Chan".

The FBI documented the underlying concept of ideological concealment in law enforcement as early as 2004, two years before the anime-derived phrase was widely used online.

The phrase works as a perfect metaphor because in *Dragon Ball Z*, hiding your power level is a *strategic advantage*, not a sign of weakness, which is exactly how internet users frame it.

Two Williamson County, Texas law enforcement officers were fired in 2001 after being discovered as KKK members who had been "hiding their power level" in the pre-internet sense of the term.

Derivatives & Variations

"Revealing your power level"

— The opposite: accidentally or intentionally showing how deep your knowledge goes. Used across anime forums when someone can't help but correct a meme's source[5].

"Power level" as standalone noun

— Used without "hide" to simply describe someone's depth of fandom. "That guy's power level is over 9000" combines two *Dragon Ball Z* references[5].

Stealth fandom fashion

— The *We Remember Love* blog popularized the idea of expressing fandom through subtle, deniable accessories like custom shoes or color-coded items that only fellow fans would recognize[2].

Frequently Asked Questions