noun
When a TV show or movie adaptation of an existing game, book, or franchise completely fumbles the bag by “doing its own thing,” ignoring core lore, redesigning creatures for no reason, letting studio execs meddle too hard, and then bleeding key cast members until the whole thing collapses under its own hubris.
Usually diagnosed right after fans say “just follow the source material” for the 400th time, and right before the lead actor quietly exits stage left.
Symptoms include:
Monsters or creatures that look nothing like their original versions
Writers proudly admitting they didn’t like or read the source material
Executive interference overriding internal logic and worldbuilding
Tone whiplash between seasons
A major actor leaving and everyone pretending it’s “creative differences”
Fanbase going from hyped to feral in under two seasons
When a TV show or movie adaptation of an existing game, book, or franchise completely fumbles the bag by “doing its own thing,” ignoring core lore, redesigning creatures for no reason, letting studio execs meddle too hard, and then bleeding key cast members until the whole thing collapses under its own hubris.
Usually diagnosed right after fans say “just follow the source material” for the 400th time, and right before the lead actor quietly exits stage left.
Symptoms include:
Monsters or creatures that look nothing like their original versions
Writers proudly admitting they didn’t like or read the source material
Executive interference overriding internal logic and worldbuilding
Tone whiplash between seasons
A major actor leaving and everyone pretending it’s “creative differences”
Fanbase going from hyped to feral in under two seasons
“I was excited for that game adaptation, but by season two the lore was shredded, the monsters were unrecognizable, and the lead bailed. Total Witcher Syndrome.”
by TheNinjaSandwich February 6, 2026
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