The winning entry (1,200+ votes) was: “Uchi no otouto maji de dekain dakedo mi ni konai verified.”
The “it” is deliberately missing. That’s the bait. What won’t the huge younger brother come to see? A physical object? A performance? A metaphorical “it” from a previous tweet? uchi no otouto maji de dekain dakedo mi ni konai verified
The phrase “mi ni konai” (won’t come see) became a running gag in that thread. A lesser-known Vocaloid song by producer “Denki Gai no P” (released 2020) includes the lyric: “Uchi no otouto wa dekai rashii / Keredo mi ni konai / Shōmei dekinai” (“My little brother seems huge / But he won’t come see / I can’t prove it”) Fans began quoting the line in comment sections, adding “verified” sarcastically when the song’s MV failed to show any brother. Hypothesis C: The “Verified” Meme Blending (2021–2022) During the peak of Twitter’s paid verification chaos (late 2022), Japanese shitposters deliberately combined unrelated phrases + “verified.” A poll on the Japanese meme forum Oogiri asked: “What’s the most unverifiable thing you can put ‘verified’ after?” The winning entry (1,200+ votes) was: “Uchi no