A phrase said to mock/give advice to someone that lost and isnβt good.
1 βI lost a thousand dollars last night in Poker.β
2 βlol git gud you dumb hobo
6π 4π
A lame ass excuse Dark Souls players use to criticize players who do not enjoy their beloved franchise.
Curious Gamer: Damn this game is so damn hard, it doesn't even allow you to adjust to the difficulty. How do I get past these 6 enemies who've just appeared not even 15m into the game?
Random Person: git gud
Curious Gamer: Not helpful.
Random Person 2: u just suck ass at Dark Souls and have no idea how to play games. git gud
Curious Gamer: ...
git gud or git rekt
159π 238π
Guy 1: fuck i got a D on my Science test
Guy 2: git gud noob
23π 47π
A phrase commonly used in Counter Strike or League of Legends, informing them that they need to get better at the game.
You stupid bottom fragger, you need to git gud
49π 128π
Words to live by, after hearing this one must increase their skill
5π 10π
(Get-Ι‘oΝod-ΛkaZHoΝoΙl) 1. A Term Coined from, Hidetaka Miyazaki's "Dark Souls" PvP community. 2. An elitist mentality easily conveyed by the original"Dark souls" tutorial level. "Everything you need to know to win is right in front of you, just find the knowledge and use it to f*cking wreck sh*t.
Don't you understand basic Macroeconomics? Git Gud Casul. (or) I just beat the sh*t out of you in this video game! Git Gud Casul!
20π 3π
The "Git Gud" Fallacy is when a clearly unfair scenario is written off as nothing more than a skill-gap. The fallacy takes place in cases where an individual is naturally better off (meaning they didn't work to be better off with skill or effort) than the person they're facing up against.
For example:
Individuals (A) and (B) aren't capable of having an income and have $0.00 to their name. Somehow, they become contenders in a yacht-buying contest:
Individual (A) receives no money to buy yachts, but the individual (B) receives 1-billion dollars - no strings attached - to spend on the contest...
Who will have to exert more effort to win: Person (A) with no money, or person (B) with 1-billion dollars?
If you think this sounds unfair, then that's the point.
Now, if someone were to say something like, "Well, person (A) should have made better financial decisions so they could beat person (B)," or "Person (A) should've done this, that, or the other thing," that someone would not only be victim blaming, but they would be ignoring the clearly unfair situation and essentially telling the unfortunate person to "GiT GuD," rather than acknowledging that the match-up was never fair in the first place.
"That character is so OP."
"Nah, you just have to learn to fight against them. They're a noob-destroyer."
"If it takes THAT much more effort and skill to learn to fight against THEM SPECIFICALLY, and no other character takes that much concentration to counter, then don't you think they're just OP?
"Bruhhh, lol... just git gud."
"Don't fall for the Git Gud Fallacy..."
(Oh, and not to get too philosophical, but that gif below is a good example of this fallacy because Spongebob is ironically flexing "git gud" into the muscles he didn't work for.)
14π 7π