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TikToker Claims Google Earth Proves That We Live In A Simulation

TikToker Claims Google Earth Proves That We Live In A Simulation

The evidence is stacking up

Claire Reid

Claire Reid

Once again someone reckons they've found some proof that we are all living in a simulation.

Yup, following on from the woman whose false memory made her believe we were in a simulation, a fellow TikTok user has shared a clip showing jumps and glitches in Google Earth that they think is proof we're all living in a simulation.

In the clip, TikToker @drag0n...google...earth slowly zooms in and as they does the map starts to get a bit glitchy and refuses to load - they say is proof enough that we are living in simulation.

Could it be a fault with Google Earth or clear evidence that we are living slap bang in the middle of a simulation? I'll let you decide.

In the comments not everyone was convinced, with one person replying: "Yes, this video is a simulation of Earth, but Earth is not a simulation."

Another said: "It's a bug on Google Maps."

Is it? Or is that what they want you to think?

While another warned: "Guys, don't believe Google Earth."

Last week, TikTok user Kylie Scott posted her 'evidence' that we are indeed all just living simulation.

After she questioned her followers on the Monopoly Man - did you remember him wearing a monocle? Can you picture that in your mind's eye? Well, he didn't.

Clearly astonished at her latest discovery, an enthusiastic Kylie says in the video: "I've been pacing around my house. For I don't know how long.

"I am having either a mental health emergency or I have found a glitch in the simulation.

"How do you remember the Monopoly man? He has a monocle, right?"

"That's how we all remember him.

"Apparently, he doesn't have a monocle.

"That doesn't make sense, does it. Look on the internet. No history of him ever wearing a monocle. That's not it."

The actual phenomenon is known as the Mandela Effect - a collective misremembering of common events.

First coined in 2009 by paranormal consultant called Fiona Broome, the term Mandela Effect emerged from another collective misremembrance: people thought the activist and intellectual Nelson Mandela had died in prison during the 1980s. Broome even claimed to remember watching his funeral on TV.

However, Mandela was actually freed in 1990 and he only died in 2013.

Featured Image Credit: TikTok/@drag0n...google...earth

Topics: Weird, TikTok