Shikanokonokonokokoshitantan -09.mp4 -
Some viewers report mild nausea, phantom antler sensations behind their ears, or the sudden urge to bow before crossing a road. No physical harm has been documented. Yet.
In underground Japanese net art circles, -09.mp4 has been called “the most uncomfortable 3 minutes and 47 seconds of digital folk horror since Local 58 .” It was briefly hosted on a now-deleted Niconico Douga mirror under the tag “#shika_horror.” Viewer comments from the original upload (archived via Wayback Machine) include: “I laughed at first. Then I couldn’t sleep. The ninth deer is inside my router.” “Play this at half speed. The antlers are Morse code for ‘HELP’.” “My cat stared at the screen the entire time. My cat never watches anything.” ShikanokoNokonokoKoshitantan -09.mp4
At 2:14, the audio abruptly shifts to a slowed-down, pitch-shifted version of the original meme song. The tempo is so low that the cheerful vocals become a mournful drone. The lyrics, originally nonsense, now seem to form phrases in classical Japanese: “Shika no ko wa / nokonoko to / koshitantan…” “The fawn, carefree, crosses the threshold…” The video then reveals a live-action sequence: a person in a full deer costume (not the cute anime version, but a taxidermy-like suit with glass eyes) walking backward through a forest at night. The camera never shows their feet. Twigs snap in reverse. Fireflies move horizontally. Some viewers report mild nausea, phantom antler sensations
Despite its ambiguity (or because of it), ShikanokoNokonokoKoshitantan -09.mp4 has inspired dozens of fan edits, creepypasta narrations, and even a small indie game titled The Ninth Deer Does Not Bow . The original file’s hash (SHA-256: 9e4f2c1a7b8d3e0f6a5b4c3d2e1f0a9b8c7d6e5f4a3b2c1d0e9f8a7b6c5d4e3f ) is occasionally circulated in obscure Discord servers as a dare. In underground Japanese net art circles, -09
