It’s an outdated cliché that video game nerds know absolutely nothing about the female anatomy (because they’ve never seen a woman naked). It’s a lame joke rooted in decades-old jocks vs. nerds stereotypes, and it’s probably time we move past it, right?

I’d say yes, but gamers on Twitter are at this moment seriously upset over the “censorship” of female characters’ “vagina bones.”

Vagina bones. Let that one sink in for a minute. Roll it around on your tongue. It might be the most beautiful two-word phrase in video gaming.

Vagina Bones is the cellar door of video game Twitter. — chris person (@Papapishu) May 17, 2016

How did we get here, so far afield from women’s actual body parts—which include beloved classics like pubic bones, the mons pubis, and the labia, but do not, according to medical professionals, include “vagina bones”?

Let’s return to the beginning, when a gamer noticed some disturbing differences between the Japanese and Western versions of Tokyo Mirage Sessions #FE. He decided to report it to Censored Gaming, a Twitter and YouTube account that makes note of “censorship” in games—mainly, any change that makes the women in the games less nude.

In this case, not only did some of this female character’s cleavage vanish, but “they also removed her vagina bones.”

Holy shit! That sounds painful and gruesome.

@CensoredGaming_ #TokyoMirageSessions Not only did they remove her cleavage, but they also removed her vagina bones. pic.twitter.com/lrTXuU99tZ — Sebban (@Sebban_E) May 13, 2016

This lack of anatomical knowledge was swiftly and mercilessly mocked, and “vagina bones” grew into a legit meme overnight.

Ring ring ring ring ring ring ring, vagina-bones, vagina-bones. — Devin Kelly 🏳️‍🌈 (@DevinKelly20) May 14, 2016

Waiting for a video where a gamergater steals a prop skeleton from their high school biology class to prove vagina bones exist — YES…HA HA HA…Y͟E͟S͟! (@NotFaulty) May 17, 2016

please. vagina bones was my father's name. — mathew (@pillowfort) May 17, 2016

I learned about the "Vagina Bones" controversy so you wouldn't have to. The best part is the one who started it is like a dog on the freeway — Jason Scott (@textfiles) May 17, 2016

"Men have vagina bones too! It is so! Do not repress my truth!!" I scream as I am forcibly ejected from the Gamestop — mcc (@mcclure111) May 16, 2016

[old man voice] "i was there when vagina bones first happened. when some idiot on /a/ saw an anime girl and didnt know what a pelvis was–" — [email protected] spoilers (@tanjiros) May 14, 2016

*sees image of video game woman's crotch* Holy shit, the vagina bones…they're gone! — YES…HA HA HA…Y͟E͟S͟! (@NotFaulty) May 14, 2016

im they guy video game companies pay if they want to remove vagina bones from their 3D women. I make $4000 dollars an hour — YES…HA HA HA…Y͟E͟S͟! (@NotFaulty) May 14, 2016

vagina bones

vagina bones

they've been stolen out of your homes

social justice warriors

it's their fault

curse those curs

look out! etc. — jon rosenberg🚫🧛‍♂️ (@jonrosenberg) May 14, 2016

God took a rib out of Adam and from that he created the vagina bones from which Eve was formed — YES…HA HA HA…Y͟E͟S͟! (@NotFaulty) May 17, 2016

Of course, Censored Gaming still retweeted the original “vagina bones” complaint, and some gamers, sincere in their outrage, were upset that the jokes were distracting from the true scandal here: vidyagame cens0rsh1pz!

Her what?! lol… But seriously this kind of thing bothers me – it's perfectly fine on comics for kids, but not.. — Rasputin's Capuchin (@Orangutangerine) May 13, 2016

https://twitter.com/SerenveCraft/status/731166672267042816

tfw your point will now be ignored by censorship-apologists because of bad wording. — (-_-) (@CyberBrigadier) May 14, 2016

I’m rolling my eye-bones so hard at all of this.

It’s important to note, though, that “vagina bones” has a storied history in nerd circles. Circa 2011 or 2012, an anime fan translation group wrote a hilariously bad subtitle for the series Yumekui Merry.

ggsubs

“Couldn’t you have found a swimsuit that shows off Merry’s vagina bones a little better?”

The mistranslation is infamous on anime forums like 4chan‘s /a/, so it’s possible that @sebban_e was referencing it in his awkward censorship complaint.

Or maybe not.

It's amazing what can happen when you use two words together. You get laughs, confused looks, anger and tips of taking anatomy classes. — Sebban (@Sebban_E) May 14, 2016

Either way, the old meme is mainstream and getting a second act on Twitter, all because of his careful attention to… vagina bones.