(noun): 1. A person who participates in delusional activities.
(noun) 2. A person who creates false stories particularly about other people, not in a way of gossiping, but in a group of other individuals. These stories could be about the Delusionist (D) and the Subject (S) going on a date, participating in some sort of event, etc, etc.
(noun) 3. a fan fiction writer who goes with secluded group of people in a secret room to discuss their own delusions (fan fiction) usually about other people both the author and other people are familiar with.
The word is based off of the delusionists of the Komi Can’t Communicate anime and manga series.
(noun) 2. A person who creates false stories particularly about other people, not in a way of gossiping, but in a group of other individuals. These stories could be about the Delusionist (D) and the Subject (S) going on a date, participating in some sort of event, etc, etc.
(noun) 3. a fan fiction writer who goes with secluded group of people in a secret room to discuss their own delusions (fan fiction) usually about other people both the author and other people are familiar with.
The word is based off of the delusionists of the Komi Can’t Communicate anime and manga series.
Girl 1: “When I was in middle school, me and my friends were delusionists.”
Girl 2: “Me too, not only that, but we were chuunibyou!”
Girl 1: “Thank goodness I wasn’t one..” (She was.)
Girl 2: “Me too, not only that, but we were chuunibyou!”
Girl 1: “Thank goodness I wasn’t one..” (She was.)
by IAdoreAllThingsChips January 5, 2024
Get the Delusionist mug.(noun): 1. A person who participates in delusional activities.
(noun) 2. A person who creates false stories particularly about other people, not in a way of gossiping, but in a group of other individuals. These stories could be about the Delusionist (D) and the Subject (S) going on a date, participating in some sort of event, etc, etc.
(noun) 3. a fan fiction writer who goes with secluded group of people in a secret room to discuss their own delusions (fan fiction) usually about other people both the author and other people are familiar with.
The word is based off of the delusionists of the Komi Can’t Communicate anime and manga series.
(noun) 2. A person who creates false stories particularly about other people, not in a way of gossiping, but in a group of other individuals. These stories could be about the Delusionist (D) and the Subject (S) going on a date, participating in some sort of event, etc, etc.
(noun) 3. a fan fiction writer who goes with secluded group of people in a secret room to discuss their own delusions (fan fiction) usually about other people both the author and other people are familiar with.
The word is based off of the delusionists of the Komi Can’t Communicate anime and manga series.
Girl 1: “When I was in middle school, me and my friends were delusionists.”
Girl 2: “Me too, not only that, but we were chuunibyou!”
Girl 1: “Thank goodness I wasn’t one..” (She was.)
Girl 2: “Me too, not only that, but we were chuunibyou!”
Girl 1: “Thank goodness I wasn’t one..” (She was.)
by IAdoreAllThingsChips January 5, 2024
Get the Delusionist mug.Related Words
When a woman's makeup looks horrific to the general public but not to themselves.
In many instances, the amount she cakes on is in direct correlation to the degrees of her insecurity. So much so, they embody a feigned sense of confidence despite the glaring reality they look like Pennywise.
Sadly, a woman's girl friends will never be truthful to her when she exhibits clear symptoms of this condition. Since critiquing them warrants getting your car keyed, tires slashed and a minimum of 400 death threats sent the same hour, the most effective method of curing a delusional woman is either intensive psychotherapy or directions to the nearest circus.
In many instances, the amount she cakes on is in direct correlation to the degrees of her insecurity. So much so, they embody a feigned sense of confidence despite the glaring reality they look like Pennywise.
Sadly, a woman's girl friends will never be truthful to her when she exhibits clear symptoms of this condition. Since critiquing them warrants getting your car keyed, tires slashed and a minimum of 400 death threats sent the same hour, the most effective method of curing a delusional woman is either intensive psychotherapy or directions to the nearest circus.
Miriam: did you see Sara's face last night?
Bella: yeah omg! She looked AWFUL.
Miriam: right?? That girl must be suffering Delusions of Contour. Let's book a therapist for her.
Bella: yeah omg! She looked AWFUL.
Miriam: right?? That girl must be suffering Delusions of Contour. Let's book a therapist for her.
by bredsheeran81 October 25, 2024
Get the Delusions of Contour mug.A co worker who is not the boss who acts like they are the boss, prison guard, and chief bean counter.
by Liberation Theology November 25, 2024
Get the Delusions of Grant Recipient Grandeur mug.A specific instance of Delusionbait—a post whose sole function is to frame the target as delusional, mentally ill, or disconnected from reality. Delusionposts are recognizable by their clinical vocabulary deployed as weapons: "psychotic," "delusional," "schizo," "mania," "hallucination," "disconnected from reality." They often mimic concern ("I'm genuinely worried about you") while functioning as attacks. The Delusionpost may screenshot the target's words with captions like "this person needs serious help" or "textbook delusional thinking." It requires no engagement with content, no understanding of context, no evidence beyond the baiter's certainty that experiences they don't share must be pathological. The Delusionpost doesn't argue—it commits.
"He posted about his spiritual experiences in a meditation group. Someone took screenshots and made a Delusionpost on another platform: 'Look at this person genuinely believing they talked to spirits. This is what untreated mental illness looks like, and we're supposed to be normalizing this?' The post got thousands of likes. Not one person asked about his actual experience. The diagnosis was enough."
by Abzugal February 24, 2026
Get the Delusionpost mug.A form of Digitalsplaining where the perpetrator “explains” to the target that their beliefs, experiences, or perspectives are delusional—often accompanied by armchair diagnoses (“you’re schizophrenic,” “you need a psychiatrist,” “you’re mentally ill”). The splainer adopts a pseudo‑clinical tone, framing their dismissal as concern or education. The goal is to pathologize the target, making them doubt their own sanity while positioning the splainer as the rational, objective authority. Delusionsplaining is a favorite tactic in debates about spirituality, trauma, and non‑mainstream knowledge, where labeling someone “delusional” serves as a shortcut for engaging with their actual claims.
Example: “When she shared her meditation practice, he replied with a long thread ‘explaining’ that she was exhibiting signs of delusion and should seek professional help—delusionsplaining, using mental‑health language to silence without argument.”
by Abzugal April 1, 2026
Get the Delusionsplaining mug.A rhetorical tactic that combines the goalpost‑moving and proofposting dynamics with accusations of delusion. The perpetrator sets an impossible standard of evidence (often requiring “proof” that the target’s experiences are not delusional) and then, when the target fails to meet it, declares that the failure itself proves the target’s delusion. Delusionposting creates a no‑win situation: any attempt to provide evidence is dismissed as “delusional,” and any refusal is taken as admission. It is commonly used against people discussing spirituality, trauma, or any experience outside strict materialist orthodoxy.
Example: “She offered documentation, personal testimony, and even peer‑reviewed studies; he dismissed each as ‘delusional reasoning.’ When she stopped, he posted ‘see, she can’t defend herself.’ Delusionpost: a trap disguised as a debate.”
by Abzugal April 1, 2026
Get the Delusionpost mug.