Diff (Slang)
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About
Diff is an abbreviated slang form of the word "difference" that has been used in the gaming communities for trash-talking purposes. The word, paired with an indication of a players role (such as "tank diff" "dps diff," "jungle diff" etc.), is used to convey that the player on the trash talker's team is performing worse than the player in the same role on the opposing team. The word gained particular prominence in the League of Legends and Overwatch communities, and also has been used as a part of powerscaling memes.
Alternatively, "diff" has also been used as an abbreviated form of "difficulty", with the terms "high diff" and "low diff" in powerscaling memes indicating how difficult it would be for one character to beat another.
Origin
The slang word "diff," standing for skill difference, has been used in the League of Legends community at least since 2017. For example, on August 20th, 2017, League of Legends player Christian "IWDominate" Rivera used the word on Twitter[1] to discuss a recent match (shown below).
Spread
The term gained more prominence in the League of Legends community in late 2020s, mainly being used to trash talk teammates by implying that there's a skill difference between them and an opposing player in the same role on the other team. For example, on December 2nd, 2018, streamer jaehyung made a tweet[2] that gained over 30 retweets and 140 likes in four years (shown below, left). On April 8th, 2019, Redditor /u/kleankill tweeted an Abbacchio joins the kicking meme that received over 300 upvotes in the /r/LeagueOfMemes[3] subreddit in four years (shown below, center). On January 21st, esports caster Josh Leesman made a tweet[4] that received over 770 retweets and 10,000 likes in three years (shown below, right).
The term spread beyond the League of Legends community in 2020, achieving popularity in the Overwatch community as well (examples shown below). On January 8th, 2021, Urban Dictionary user Garry McDonalds-Burger added a definition for the term. The definition garnered over 430 thumbs up in two years.[5]
Additionally, the term gained popularity as a part of powerscaling memes, with "no diff," "low diff," "mid diff" and "high diff" being used to sum up the result of the battle. For example, on January 20th, 2022, TikTok[6] user singlephoenix posted a meme that gained over 9.7 million views and 1.3 million likes in one year (shown below, left). On September 30th, 2022, TikTok[7] user frankxemdb posted a meme that received over 864,000 views and 65,400 likes in eight months (shown below, right).
Various Examples
Search Interest
External References
[1] Twitter – @IWDominate
[2] Twitter – @NALanguage
[4] Twitter – @esportsjatt
[6] TikTok – @singlephoenix
[7] TikTok – @frankxemdb
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