@ign: Chainsmoker Cat is getting a lot of attention but not all of it is positive #chainsmokercat #chainsawman #anime

IGN Entertainment
IGN Entertainment
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Region: US
Wednesday 08 July 2026 01:18:12 GMT
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kccarrot
KC :
radioactive fanbase
2026-07-08 02:19:56
2357
mortyhare
mortyhare :
when a anime about cat girls isn’t about cat girls being fan service:
2026-07-08 22:37:04
106
yunoffxiv
@Yuno_ffxiv :
why does it feel like it was made by Ai
2026-07-08 01:32:46
542
oliiuxx
🚬 ⚯͛ :
i love itt
2026-07-11 16:48:58
0
unt2378
unt :
diddy tensei has conpetition 😭
2026-07-11 11:59:55
0
jaciob_natsui27
jaciob_natsui27 :
I genuinely don't understand the hate for the anime. it's hella funny tbh
2026-07-08 01:41:23
137
aceadrenaline
Ace🌸 :
referenceslop
2026-07-08 22:41:49
20
_......____......__
️ :
the toilet one was from trainspotting
2026-07-10 21:39:17
0
whatsmandoingsixnine
Gray :
yeah this show is gross but it's genuinely hilarious
2026-07-08 10:53:08
148
tia4401
tia44 :
i watched it yesterday and i actually liked it
2026-07-08 05:33:03
32
pancakez68
🌈PANCAKEZ🎸 :
Chat should i watch it
2026-07-08 01:46:58
7
userj2n4rxswhb
Idk :
Worst anime ever
2026-07-08 23:50:39
14
almightyboost
Almighty :
Please for the LOVE OF GOD, learn what Infamous means. Infamy is a general NEGATIVE reputation. By calling it Infamous you imply it’s a NEGATIVE reputation but the opening got a platinum record bro
2026-07-08 17:52:08
12
blueultra3
A Cult of Elbows :
I think it’s hilarious
2026-07-08 01:44:28
8
daw.yu.hsieh
Daw Yu Hsieh :
It's a PSA anime on not to smoke 🤣
2026-07-08 03:47:31
11
dark_1098
Meow :
I will watch this bs anime if they reference supernatural.
2026-07-08 01:48:39
5
pruplecrayen
jvko :
Ready or not mentioned
2026-07-08 06:03:27
6
.alan.c_
.Alan.C_ :
Nah ts peak
2026-07-08 14:28:01
0
cwrpsedollie
cwrpse ´ཀ` :
unfortunately i really liked it
2026-07-08 21:20:15
4
underwearlover222
underwearlover222 :
It’s funny but really sad imo
2026-07-09 07:31:45
3
dawsonvangilder
Stitchwaka :
Need it dubbed
2026-07-08 15:08:01
0
sans_undertal
sans :
sensitivity max sticker
2026-07-08 09:19:24
0
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You wake up with a dry throat. A stuffed nose. A stiff neck. Every morning the same low-grade wrongness, and you blame the season or your pillow. Meanwhile the fan runs all night, aimed straight at the bed. The thing that helps you fall asleep is quietly setting up how you'll wake. You've never once connected the two. A doctor laid out exactly why you should. That fan is doing four things to the air around you. A constant stream of moving air dries the moisture from your nose and throat. Dry membranes can't trap dust and allergens, so they settle straight into your airways. The cold draft on one fixed spot makes the muscles there contract and tense for hours. And circulating air lifts dust mites and pollen off every surface — aimed at your face. You sleep through all of it and inherit the result at sunrise. Which is exactly why the congestion clears within an hour of getting up. You simply walked out of the airflow that was causing it. The relief you feel falling asleep and the stiffness you feel waking up are not two unrelated things. They're the same device, eight hours apart. Most people never link the symptom to the fan because the comfort feels harmless. Harmless at midnight doesn't mean harmless by morning. And because the relief is immediate, the cost stays invisible for years. You treat the congestion with sprays and pills while the cause runs all night. You don't have to give up the cooling at all. Point it at a wall, not at you. Let it move the air, not blast your face. The thing helping you fall asleep was the same thing wrecking how you woke up.
You wake up with a dry throat. A stuffed nose. A stiff neck. Every morning the same low-grade wrongness, and you blame the season or your pillow. Meanwhile the fan runs all night, aimed straight at the bed. The thing that helps you fall asleep is quietly setting up how you'll wake. You've never once connected the two. A doctor laid out exactly why you should. That fan is doing four things to the air around you. A constant stream of moving air dries the moisture from your nose and throat. Dry membranes can't trap dust and allergens, so they settle straight into your airways. The cold draft on one fixed spot makes the muscles there contract and tense for hours. And circulating air lifts dust mites and pollen off every surface — aimed at your face. You sleep through all of it and inherit the result at sunrise. Which is exactly why the congestion clears within an hour of getting up. You simply walked out of the airflow that was causing it. The relief you feel falling asleep and the stiffness you feel waking up are not two unrelated things. They're the same device, eight hours apart. Most people never link the symptom to the fan because the comfort feels harmless. Harmless at midnight doesn't mean harmless by morning. And because the relief is immediate, the cost stays invisible for years. You treat the congestion with sprays and pills while the cause runs all night. You don't have to give up the cooling at all. Point it at a wall, not at you. Let it move the air, not blast your face. The thing helping you fall asleep was the same thing wrecking how you woke up.

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