@chipsphere: His fish bought stuff from Nintendo eShop #fyp #pokemon #fish #nintendoswitch

ChipSphere
ChipSphere
Open In TikTok:
Region: US
Sunday 28 June 2026 02:16:51 GMT
406448
13827
93
900

Music

Download

Comments

ashefer64
AsheFer64 :
I’ve lost all respect for fish…
2026-07-14 05:17:44
35
mischajr6
☆Cosmic☆ :
is the owners fault because who will let aquatic pet play a game
2026-07-14 13:32:00
1
floonie2
floonie :
thank god he got it on camera 😭
2026-07-09 23:37:06
120
stompner
stompner :
Ya so like he swam and like gave ppl my card info
2026-07-14 16:32:16
1
israellover79
Israel lover :
If I was the owner
2026-07-09 18:26:09
22
norx7729
Roxanne :
Fish should've known better tbh
2026-07-14 04:12:09
1
flake.org4
Danny :
"hey so this insane thing happened yesterday..."
2026-06-28 17:30:31
477
f0ck.tik.tok
𖦰 :
fish wanted to play something else 😭
2026-06-29 02:39:08
48
cats91190
BlazingJaguar :
"accidentally"
2026-07-14 11:46:41
1
jethi_
Jethro :
obviously the fish fault
2026-07-09 17:28:46
15
user144905564
Frozenmarker794 :
Then Nintendo said”something smells fishy”
2026-06-29 18:05:20
31
kev7117
kev7117 :
Ya so my fish and used my card
2026-06-28 03:32:44
74
megs_01alt
ᴍᴇɢ’ꜱ ꜱᴇᴄʀᴇᴛ ᴀᴄᴄ :
I cant believe that fish would purposely spends the owner’s money 🤬
2026-07-13 20:44:50
0
nebula_stars777
Nebula :
Imagine explaining this to Nintendo: “Yo Nintendo, imma need a refund. Why? My pet fish bought stuff with my card”
2026-06-29 15:52:45
69
lucasisatoy__vr
Es2_v2_20 km/t :
Well it’s the fish tho
2026-07-10 00:52:58
0
user81572738209707
duscisbsj :
bro describing what happened to Nintendo
2026-06-30 01:31:54
9
burito_with_chicken
𝖑.𝕯 :
"Yeah you won't believe it, my fish did this"
2026-07-11 09:25:05
3
dragontamer89
DragonTamer :
People say it’s the fishes fault are just wrong because think about the owner. He literally openly decided hey I’m gonna give my fish the ability to play Pokémon, knowing that there’s ways for the game to accidentally crash is not the fish‘s fault the game crash and they were still playing because technically how was they supposed to know what was going on?
2026-07-13 20:09:38
0
rayyan462.a
Ray62🪖 :
hey Nintendo so can i get a refund I swear I didn't buy anything it wasn't me no it wasn't some kid actually fish bout all that for me while i was out can I pls get a refund
2026-07-10 07:43:01
1
gato.guy
Gato Guy :
So your not gonna believe this…
2026-07-12 04:03:12
2
mati.eu3
Mati :
uhh its cenzored so how did they show it
2026-07-11 00:32:10
1
To see more videos from user @chipsphere, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Lee Menil – 27 years old, born August 17, 1980. He grew up in a dysfunctional environment, abandoned by his parents and left in his grandmother's care. There's a great moment in Chapter 29 where Menil admits he'd like to know the truth from his parents—why they abandoned him. But he immediately cracks a joke to brush it off, because deep down, he already knows the answer. He was forced to raise his younger brother and sister (who, by the way, grew into caring and friendly adults, even if they don't fully appreciate Menil's role in their upbringing). To others, he's irresponsible, weak, and aimless. He's clever enough, but also foolish. Resourceful, yet clumsy. Simple and naive. But surprisingly, he's good at reading people's moods—something we notice often. Because of loneliness, poverty, anxiety, and his own weakness, he got hooked on casinos and betting. Even now, fully aware of his own worthlessness, he can't find the strength to quit. He feels anxious when he doesn't gamble, yet he hates himself for it at the same time. He's always been alone. His grandmother was busy working, his parents abandoned him. There was no parental figure in his life. No one taught him grammar or even basic table manners. He's never really had relationships—based on the brief flashbacks, he doesn't seem to have any close connections either. Nobody visited him in prison, and he has no one to call. His crew betrayed him, and once again, he felt unwanted and discarded. Menil suffers from low self-esteem, which is why he lets go of his own grievances, forgives others easily, and falls prey to manipulation (from Hyungje and other inmates). He struggles to learn from his mistakes, trusting people even though life keeps punishing him for it. He knows the truth about himself—that he's nothing special, that he has no way to make decent money, that he can't pick up a new skill. Initially, his goal is simply to survive prison, and afterward, to forget everything that happened there. He clings to any chance of getting money. He wants to fill the void and escape the feeling of being abandoned. He wants recognition—from his parents, his grandmother, even his younger siblings. He sees that they can manage fine without him, and that only makes him feel more useless. Though Menil doesn't display many good qualities or obvious talents, he's still nimble and quick on his feet. That very trait could prove useful to Jingu in the future, when he finally tries to stand up against his uncle—for example, by retrieving tapes from his uncle's house as evidence. He's a weak person, easily influenced—which Hyungje exploits effortlessly. Menil tries to fill the emptiness with chatter, and through his naivety, he brings a completely different atmosphere into the lives of Hyungje and Jingu. If you think back to the kind of people who shared a cell with them before Menil arrived, it's clear the mood was completely different. Jingu notices that Menil can't assert himself. Hyungje easily manipulates and bulldozes him, making him feel guilty and using that guilt to bind Menil to him. We do see some growth in him—he manages to build relationships with Hyungje and Jingu, and he becomes a central figure for Jingu. But he still lacks the development needed to stand up for himself even a little, to say no to gambling, or to say no to those who hurt him. He hasn't reached any real conclusions yet. His development remains stagnant. But he has changed the brothers' lives. His naivety and talkativeness are his biggest vulnerabilities—he talks too much and ends up in a situation where he gets assaulted, and he tells Hyungje about Aunt Nari even though Jingu told him not to. But he brings a human warmth into a place where it never existed before. Before Menil arrived, Cell 2 was an atmosphere of silence and violence. With his naivety, Menil brings a kind of life that the brothers never had. They easily fall for that lightness and innocence—something they were never allowed to have themselves. #slammerdogs
Lee Menil – 27 years old, born August 17, 1980. He grew up in a dysfunctional environment, abandoned by his parents and left in his grandmother's care. There's a great moment in Chapter 29 where Menil admits he'd like to know the truth from his parents—why they abandoned him. But he immediately cracks a joke to brush it off, because deep down, he already knows the answer. He was forced to raise his younger brother and sister (who, by the way, grew into caring and friendly adults, even if they don't fully appreciate Menil's role in their upbringing). To others, he's irresponsible, weak, and aimless. He's clever enough, but also foolish. Resourceful, yet clumsy. Simple and naive. But surprisingly, he's good at reading people's moods—something we notice often. Because of loneliness, poverty, anxiety, and his own weakness, he got hooked on casinos and betting. Even now, fully aware of his own worthlessness, he can't find the strength to quit. He feels anxious when he doesn't gamble, yet he hates himself for it at the same time. He's always been alone. His grandmother was busy working, his parents abandoned him. There was no parental figure in his life. No one taught him grammar or even basic table manners. He's never really had relationships—based on the brief flashbacks, he doesn't seem to have any close connections either. Nobody visited him in prison, and he has no one to call. His crew betrayed him, and once again, he felt unwanted and discarded. Menil suffers from low self-esteem, which is why he lets go of his own grievances, forgives others easily, and falls prey to manipulation (from Hyungje and other inmates). He struggles to learn from his mistakes, trusting people even though life keeps punishing him for it. He knows the truth about himself—that he's nothing special, that he has no way to make decent money, that he can't pick up a new skill. Initially, his goal is simply to survive prison, and afterward, to forget everything that happened there. He clings to any chance of getting money. He wants to fill the void and escape the feeling of being abandoned. He wants recognition—from his parents, his grandmother, even his younger siblings. He sees that they can manage fine without him, and that only makes him feel more useless. Though Menil doesn't display many good qualities or obvious talents, he's still nimble and quick on his feet. That very trait could prove useful to Jingu in the future, when he finally tries to stand up against his uncle—for example, by retrieving tapes from his uncle's house as evidence. He's a weak person, easily influenced—which Hyungje exploits effortlessly. Menil tries to fill the emptiness with chatter, and through his naivety, he brings a completely different atmosphere into the lives of Hyungje and Jingu. If you think back to the kind of people who shared a cell with them before Menil arrived, it's clear the mood was completely different. Jingu notices that Menil can't assert himself. Hyungje easily manipulates and bulldozes him, making him feel guilty and using that guilt to bind Menil to him. We do see some growth in him—he manages to build relationships with Hyungje and Jingu, and he becomes a central figure for Jingu. But he still lacks the development needed to stand up for himself even a little, to say no to gambling, or to say no to those who hurt him. He hasn't reached any real conclusions yet. His development remains stagnant. But he has changed the brothers' lives. His naivety and talkativeness are his biggest vulnerabilities—he talks too much and ends up in a situation where he gets assaulted, and he tells Hyungje about Aunt Nari even though Jingu told him not to. But he brings a human warmth into a place where it never existed before. Before Menil arrived, Cell 2 was an atmosphere of silence and violence. With his naivety, Menil brings a kind of life that the brothers never had. They easily fall for that lightness and innocence—something they were never allowed to have themselves. #slammerdogs

About