Three analysts working with 38 North — Joseph S. Bermudez Jr., Jack Liu and Frank Pabian — published a note Wednesday suggesting that activity at the Punggye-ri Nuclear Test Site appeared to be slowing after two months of intensity. It wasn't just the volleyball, they noted. The North Koreans appeared to be no longer pumping water out of the tunnels used to test weapons, while vehicles and trailers near the entrance to these tunnels appeared to have been moved.

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However, the exact status of the site was unclear. The 38 North analysts suggested two possible explanations: that the site has transitioned to a "standby” status, which allows some recreation time, or that Pyongyang was attempting to deceive the international community about the status of the site through a variety of methods, including staged volleyball games.

Apparent volleyball games could be seen at the three separate locations in the camp, with another net possibly being set up in another area. Satellite imagery has shown volleyball being played at the camp as far back as 2006, according to 38 North, but there has never been evidence of three concurrent games before.

Volleyball is considered to be one of the most popular sports in North Korea, along with basketball, soccer and table tennis. Notably, it's popular with both men and women. The North Korean women's volleyball team won bronze medals twice in the 1972 Olympics and the 1970 Women's World Championship, though they have rarely qualified for either event since.

North Korea had been widely expected to test a nuclear weapon last weekend, marking a day officially known as the “Day of the Sun” — the April 15 anniversary of the 1912 birth of Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s founder. In the end, no nuclear device was tested, but during a parade on Saturday the totalitarian regime did display a number of missiles that could theoretically reach the United States, and it made a failed bid to launch a ballistic missile the next morning.

Whether volleyball games have continued at the site since Sunday is unclear, though 38 North says it plans to release more up-to-date satellite imagery this week.