Larping is short for “live-action role-playing.” It means dressing up as a fantasy or sci-fi character, stepping into their shoes, and acting out their story in real time with other people doing the same.
In everyday life you’ll hear friends joke, “Stop larping as a CEO,” when someone keeps talking like they run a big company. Others use it to describe fans meeting in a park with foam swords, or coworkers who pretend they’re hackers because they changed their desktop theme to green-on-black. It’s a light way to say, “You’re playing pretend.”
Meaning & Usage Examples
Meaning: Pretending to be someone else—often in costume—for fun, storytelling, or playful exaggeration.
- “We spent Saturday larping as elves in the woods.”
- “He’s just larping as a barista; he still burns every latte.”
Context / Common Use
The word pops up in three main places: weekend fantasy battles, online gaming chats, and casual teasing among friends. If someone calls you out for “larping,” they’re saying you’re acting a role that doesn’t quite match reality.
Is larping only for fantasy fans?
No. People larp everything from knights to space marines to coffee-shop owners. Any role can work.
Is it the same as cosplay?
Not quite. Cosplay is mainly wearing the costume; larping adds acting and story.
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