Larp is short for “live-action role-play.” It means pretending to be a character—like a knight, vampire, or space explorer—and acting out that role in real life instead of just talking about it online.
People use it when they dress up for weekend fantasy battles, join mystery-dinner parties, or joke online: “He’s larping as a CEO in those LinkedIn posts.” It can be playful (“We’re larping pirates at the beach”) or sarcastic (“Stop larping as a fitness guru, you’ve never been to a gym”).
Meaning & Usage Examples
- “Let’s larp medieval villagers at the campground.”
- “She’s just larping as a startup founder—no product yet.”
- “The park was full of larpers wielding foam swords.”
Context / Common Use
Offline, larp means costumes, props, and in-person adventures. Online, it’s a quick jab at anyone acting a role they clearly don’t live: influencers, armchair experts, or forum heroes.
Is larp only for fantasy games?
No. While it started with dragons and elves, people now use it for any real-life role-play—even pretending to be a barista for TikTok.
Is larp an insult?
Not always. Offline it’s neutral: “I larp every Saturday.” Online it can tease: “Dude’s larping as a lawyer on Reddit.”
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