🎬 Entertainment✂️ Clipped word⚪ Neutral
Spiciness
SK

🧠캐해

/kae-hae/

Short for 캐릭터 해석, meaning character interpretation. It is used when fans analyze a fictional character, idol, or celebrity’s personality, behavior, speech style, or likely choices in a given situation.
캐해 meaning visual explanation
💖 Idol fandom𝕏 X / TwitterFirst seen 2010

origin · Source

캐해 appears to have spread from fandom and online communities as a clipped form of 캐릭터 해석. The exact first use is hard to pin down, but it became especially common in fan discussions around webtoons, dramas, anime, idols, and real-person fandom discourse during the 2010s.

ex)

2
  • "Your character interpretation is so accurate; that line really sounds like something he would say."
  • "My interpretation is different from the official one, but I still like this version."

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ex)

"The ending felt like total 캐붕 because the quiet character suddenly became reckless for no reason."

💬 Online community🌀 Multiple2000

origin캐붕 likely spread from Korean online fan and media-discussion communities as a clipped form of 캐릭터 붕괴. It is especially common in webtoon, animation, drama, game, and idol-character discussion, but the exact first use is hard to pin down.

ex)

"Stop wearing the mangbung lens; two people standing next to each other does not mean they are dating."

💖 Idol fandom🌀 Multiple2010

origin망붕 likely formed as an abbreviation of 망상 분자 and spread through idol fandoms, drama communities, and social media where people debated real-person shipping and overinterpretation of on-screen chemistry. The exact first use is unclear, so the year is approximate.

ex)

"He survived that explosion with one scratch? That is pure main character buff."

🌀 Multiple origins🌀 Multiple2010

originThe phrase likely grew from Korean game culture, where 버프 means a buff that improves a character’s abilities, and from fandom/content communities discussing 주인공 보정. Its exact first use is hard to pin down, but by the 2010s it was common in webtoon, drama, anime, game, and online review contexts.

ex)

"I got serious second male lead syndrome again; why is the main character not choosing him?"

🎬 Entertainment media🎭 K-drama2010

originThe expression appears to have spread through Korean drama, webtoon, and fandom communities as viewers discussed the familiar “second male lead syndrome” trope. The exact first use is hard to pin down, but it became especially natural in online reactions to romance dramas and webtoon adaptations during the 2010s.

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