As someone who writes, and writes a lot, there is zero chance one guy wrote all of the Q posts.
The sheer volume of posts (over 4000 during a 3 year period) is a lot. Think about it: you have to plan, you have to map the posts to make sure they follow the story you've been setting up, you have to research every post to line it up with a current events and hope they line up with future events, and then you have to actually make the time to post. That amount of research and posting adds to your time, which takes away from your day. Even if you work IT and were posting all day out of boredom, you would have to spend time after work posting, because the posts are at random times of the day, not just 9-5 work hours.
The complexity of the posts: It's not just some intricate fantasy story, you have to understand that connecting the posts to past and current events takes a lot of time. There's a lot of research that goes into writing a story, building a world, and making it make sense. Look at Game of thrones: the guys had over 10 years and still hasn't finished his sixth book. It's very complex building a world out, and this would be no different if it were just a LARP. You need to introduce characters, motivations, historical context, in an overarching battle plan
There's a lot of nuance to the posts, too. There's lots of code, military signals, political talk, a lot of stuff that the average normie wouldn't understand, nor even think to think about. Think of it like watching the NFL: I can game plan a game as someone who's watched a lot of nfl, and even if I played football I can make plans. But for me to see it and communicate it at the level of an elite player and coach would be completely different, which is what these posts are doing.
What I'm saying is I don't know if it's larp or not, but I do fully believe it's a psyop concocted and ran by a group of intelligent people. Whether a pro-america or anti-america psyop is the question.
I only came across Q weeks after the final post. It was only because a Lefty friend of mine asked "Did you hear about 'QAnon', they think Trump is blablabla?"
My initial, but short assessment was that "QAnon" was a psyops, most likely military, and most likely US. All the custom images, classified info, the research, the volume of posts, language/nuance, I estimated a team of people 5-15 working full time.
I left it at that, but some aspects were still bugging me, and after a few weeks had a more in depth look and then came across the Q proofs. I think I spent a solid 3-4 weeks researching everything. I was on holidays and spent maybe 15 hours a day watching videos/vlogs, reading, reviewing, etc. Not sure it was time well spent, but was fascinated at the time.
The posts as a whole are an amazing work of art, which I guess can be categorised as either "Information" or "proof, with proof being further categorised as proof of legitimacy and "plan".
I have a few outlandish theories of my own as to what this whole Q thing was about. Ultimately though, it recalibrated people to think critically. All of a sudden a large number of people are questioning information, are questioning motives, and are questioning intent.
As someone who writes, and writes a lot, there is zero chance one guy wrote all of the Q posts.
The sheer volume of posts (over 4000 during a 3 year period) is a lot. Think about it: you have to plan, you have to map the posts to make sure they follow the story you've been setting up, you have to research every post to line it up with a current events and hope they line up with future events, and then you have to actually make the time to post. That amount of research and posting adds to your time, which takes away from your day. Even if you work IT and were posting all day out of boredom, you would have to spend time after work posting, because the posts are at random times of the day, not just 9-5 work hours.
The complexity of the posts: It's not just some intricate fantasy story, you have to understand that connecting the posts to past and current events takes a lot of time. There's a lot of research that goes into writing a story, building a world, and making it make sense. Look at Game of thrones: the guys had over 10 years and still hasn't finished his sixth book. It's very complex building a world out, and this would be no different if it were just a LARP. You need to introduce characters, motivations, historical context, in an overarching battle plan
There's a lot of nuance to the posts, too. There's lots of code, military signals, political talk, a lot of stuff that the average normie wouldn't understand, nor even think to think about. Think of it like watching the NFL: I can game plan a game as someone who's watched a lot of nfl, and even if I played football I can make plans. But for me to see it and communicate it at the level of an elite player and coach would be completely different, which is what these posts are doing.
What I'm saying is I don't know if it's larp or not, but I do fully believe it's a psyop concocted and ran by a group of intelligent people. Whether a pro-america or anti-america psyop is the question.
I only came across Q weeks after the final post. It was only because a Lefty friend of mine asked "Did you hear about 'QAnon', they think Trump is blablabla?"
My initial, but short assessment was that "QAnon" was a psyops, most likely military, and most likely US. All the custom images, classified info, the research, the volume of posts, language/nuance, I estimated a team of people 5-15 working full time.
I left it at that, but some aspects were still bugging me, and after a few weeks had a more in depth look and then came across the Q proofs. I think I spent a solid 3-4 weeks researching everything. I was on holidays and spent maybe 15 hours a day watching videos/vlogs, reading, reviewing, etc. Not sure it was time well spent, but was fascinated at the time.
The posts as a whole are an amazing work of art, which I guess can be categorised as either "Information" or "proof, with proof being further categorised as proof of legitimacy and "plan".
I have a few outlandish theories of my own as to what this whole Q thing was about. Ultimately though, it recalibrated people to think critically. All of a sudden a large number of people are questioning information, are questioning motives, and are questioning intent.