In multiplayer online gaming, the term "Smurf" (noun) is used to refer to an experienced player who creates a new account for the purposes of being matched against inexperienced players for easy wins. Where does this usage of the word come from?
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1might want to try on gaming.stackexchange.com– tenfourMar 21, 2011 at 13:53
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4So, in other words, the experienced player would be called a Smurf? In this example, "Wow, I just got owned in that match. The opponent has a low score, but clearly knows how to win. He must be a smurf."– JYeltonMar 21, 2011 at 16:27
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1@JYelton yes, I believe that would be a proper usage of the term.– GWLlosaMar 21, 2011 at 17:04
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Of note (but not worthy of an answer): The person you describe can also be referred to as a "ringer" or "shark."– MrHenMar 21, 2011 at 18:14
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Yelton - sure, that's absolutely correct. "I got crushed by a new player! But it was actually SomeFamousPlayerName, who was smurfing! Whoa! At least I got to meet SomeFamousPlayerName! She is amazing you should have seen the moves!" it's that simple.– FattieAug 14, 2015 at 12:23
3 Answers
This definition of smurfing comes from 1996 and the game Warcraft II when certain well-known players made up new names, pretend to play badly, then beat the other players. They picked the names PapaSmurf and Smurfette.
It was used in alt.games.starcraft, and defined in April 1999 as:
someone who makes a new account then pretends they are a newbie.
An origin was offered in the same group in February 1999:
How prevalent do you think fake newbies are? You know, good players who
lure real newbies in for an easy win. Why do they get their jollies from
doing something so stupid?I think it's interesting to note, however, that this kind of
thing was started in Warcraft II days by Shlonglor and his buddies,
who seem to be demi-gods for some people. They called it smurfing and
Shlonglor's stated reason for it was because they couldn't find anyone
who wanted to play them. So they started picking on newbies and having
great fun 'smurfing' them, that's the name they gave it. He went on to
say how there quickly developed the habit of smurf-smurfing, great fun
he said. Yeah, and who's the one suffering from all this fun the
experienced are having? The newbie, of course. If it isn't the most
inconsiderate behaviour I've ever seen..
A Warcraft II: Glossary defines:
Smurfing
A slang term coined by Warp! and Shlonglor to mean good or famous players using fake names to hide from people then attempting to beat other players. It is only a "Smurf" if those players win.
The earliest definite use of smurfing I found was in alt.games.warcraft in August 1996:
heheh, when a really good player is depressed or is looking for fun whipping the living hell out of a newbie, he adopts a fake name and then joins game and ACTS like a newbie, then he thouroughly destroys everyone in the game. this bizzare act is called smurfing, when he said "don't step on any smurfs" he meant don't get so caught up u find a smurf, and then get the living hell beat out of you :)
There was also a reference in alt.games.warcraft that some experienced players were "probably smurfs" in July 1996.
More description:
it was started by Shlonglor, who is more than a SC player (he works for Blizzard as their webmaster). He was one of the all-time War2 gurus and was extraordinarily famous due to his war2 page ... still one of the best gaming pages ever created (although it's no longer anywhere on the net ... he took it down when he began to work for Blizzard).
Anyhoo, there came a point in Shlonglor's fame where no one but a few select individuals would play him; everyone, hearing his name, would do one of the following things: cower in fear, worship like mad, or repeatedly challenge like a newbie. In the midst of this it was virtually impossible for him to get a game.
SO ... Shlonglor and his roommate at the time, Warp, came up with a stroke of genius: make up a false name that no one would recognize and go beat the * out of newbies.
For whatever reason, the names they chose were "Papa Smurf" and "Smurfette."
From hence came the term "Smurfing."
(Shaf, 1999)
A quote by Shlonglor from 2003:
-(1996) I was the originator of the term "Smurf" or "Smurfing" to signify a famous person playing games under a fake name. Before that point, everyone stuck with whatever nickname they had and never considered changing their name or playing under fake names. It began when me and Warp! played under fake names "Smurfs" and fooled all our friends. I made a page about it and it caught on big time. Pretty soon everyone played under made-up names and you had no idea who you were playing. This practice continues to happen a TON today and you still hear about Smurfing/Smurfs which all dates back to me, my site, and my Smurf page.
And an extract from an August 1996 game report ("The Smurfs vs Spiderman(Zima), Red Barron, and Void(idiot)") by Warp!:
Well, I finally played a game worth writing a story about. It was a five player game on Garden of War with medium resources. The players involved were Shlonglor (playing as PapaSmurf), Myself (playing as Smurfette), RedBaron, Void, and Spiderman (who we later discovered was the same person as Zima/Cpl_Will). Shlonglor and I were teammates as were RedBaron, Void, and Spiderman.
And then by Shlonglor, this may be the earliest description:
First let me explain the Smurf thing. Warp and I enjoy making up names and playing people at war2. We make them think we really suck and then beat them up. But the joke was on me because Zima pulled my own trick on me. He played as Spiderman making me think he sucked. Beaten at my own game! So sad. Well we have lots of fun playing as smurfs. We talk in smurf. We smurf us some ass at war 2. I guess that is totally childish, but it sure is fun.
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3Hugo, normally I would say "why such a long answer for a definition that can be given in a few words, and maybe one link to any of the very many long explanations of the etymology of this on the web". That's what I would normally say. But here I say "I deeply congratulate you for taking the tie to fully explain the word, given the amazingly random guesses at it elsewhere on the page!"– FattieAug 14, 2015 at 12:24
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4I can confirm Hugo is correct. Shlonglor used to smurf people while playing Warcraft2 on Kali: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kali_(software) and popularized the term on his website.– fizlokiJul 23, 2016 at 23:41
I'm not sure I agree with Robusto's answer. I think the term smurfing, as applied to gaming, has more to do with the indistinguishability of the individual Smurfs. Other than Papa Smurf, Grumpy Smurf, Brainy Smurf, and Smurfette, you can't really tell the Smurfs apart by any physical characteristic other than their names. Mostly, they are an amorphous blob of blue bodies in white underpants. That to me suggests how the verb smurfing came about: When a player goes smurfing on an account, that player is purposely choosing to hide his public characteristics -- e.g., his past win-loss record, league ranking, disconnect tells, and network reputation -- for nefarious reasons, and the only thing that distinguishes him is the name he chooses to adopt. He is faceless but for his name, just like most of the Smurfs are.
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5I don't agree with @Robusto's answer either but I can't say I agree with either answer as they both appear to be wild guesses :/ But the images alone put a smile on my face :))– tenfourMar 21, 2011 at 14:03
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If I'm not mistaken, it's only the American version of 'Smurfs' that makes any distinction between smurfs other than Papa Smurf and Smurfette. Many of the gags in the original 'strip-books' relied on smurfs not being able to tell each other apart, by looks or voices. Mar 21, 2011 at 19:07
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The upvotes on this answer are a great example of how, on this site, upvotes are often, the best word is perhaps "bizarre".– FattieAug 14, 2015 at 12:21
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It wold be fascinating, sort of, to know if any of the upvotes were given after Hugo answered the question. (As an aside, who the heck doesn't know what smurfing is? How old would you have to be .. like born before, what, 1955???! Geesh!)– FattieAug 14, 2015 at 12:26
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I thought it was because of the "Smurf Attack" where spoofed packets were used. Therefore, spoofing, or hiding one's identity has become generally known as "smurfing" on-line.
However, I have no idea how the "Smurf Attack" itself originally got the name... :-)
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1This was my first thought, but it feels like a stretch. Sending pings to the broadcast address isn't much like beating down newbies. Mar 21, 2011 at 15:33
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1@nmichaels I see the emphasis as being more on the hiding of identity portion than dishing out of beat-downs. :-) Mar 21, 2011 at 16:31
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It has utterly no connection to this. It's a straightforward, well-known activity in gaming, explained in the correct answers.– FattieAug 14, 2015 at 12:20
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Not very well known I'd say, since I'm a gamer and had never heard it used in that context before. Aug 14, 2015 at 14:02
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I thought Smurf Attack came from saturating someone's bandwidth with very small packets, (just SYN packets, or ICMP, I don't remember which). Overwhelming in numbers, not in size as seen on the picture in english.stackexchange.com/a/17218/1943 . But coming from Smurfing sounds also plausible as the gaming term was popular back then and Smurf also used IP spoofing. Apr 29, 2021 at 21:24