
"I tried to bond with my grandson by watching an episode," said 68-year-old retired teacher Rajesh Mehta. "But after five minutes, I felt like my brain was being flushed."
The series, created by Georgian animator Alexey Gerasimov, depicts a dystopian conflict between singing toilets and humanoid figures with electronic devices for heads. Its rapid-fire visuals and nonsensical plotlines have left older generations perplexed, with some fearing that society is regressing into a state of digital gibberish.
"At this rate, our future conversations will consist solely of 'beep beep boop boop,'" lamented 45-year-old software engineer Priya Sharma.
Psychologists have noted a growing phenomenon dubbed "Skibidi Syndrome," where excessive exposure to the series leads to decreased attention spans and an aversion to traditional narratives. "It's a cultural shift," explained Dr. Anjali Rao. "The younger generation is drawn to content that defies logic and structure."