When Did Onyx Storm Theories Reddit Propose The Villain'S Origin?

2025-09-04 22:13:58 193

5 Answers

Charlotte
Charlotte
2025-09-07 14:58:26
Curiosity got me down the rabbit hole before, and I liked mapping the timeline like a detective. Start by identifying the moment the show's creators revealed hints about the villain; the fan speculation almost always follows that like clockwork. Then, on Reddit, check posts around that date: use subreddit search with exact phrases in quotes, filter by 'new' to see raw chronology, and by 'top' to find the theory that resonated. I also cross-reference Google results with the site:reddit.com operator which surfaces older threads Pushshift might miss.

A trick I use is looking for a long-form post that aggregates evidence — those are the ones that get reused and quoted as the origin of the theory. If the original was a short comment, it can be stealthy; in that case, try searching the usernames of early posters and scanning their comment history for that timeframe. Last time I did this, the consolidated 'Onyx Storm' origin theory clearly took shape within a weekend of the reveal, which matched the spike in upvotes and crossposts.
Charlotte
Charlotte
2025-09-08 16:37:57
Funny coincidence — I actually went hunting for this the other day. From what I could piece together, fans on Reddit started floating the 'Onyx Storm' theory almost immediately after the episode/trailer that hinted at the villain's backstory dropped. In most fandoms, the first wave of origin theories hits within 24–72 hours; threads multiply, crossposts appear in other subreddits, and one or two longform posts usually try to stitch together textual clues, leaked art, and developer interviews.

If you want the exact moment the community first proposed that origin, open the subreddit, sort by 'new' and then switch to 'top' with the time filter set to 'past month' or 'all time' to catch the big posts. Tools like Pushshift and Google site searches (site:reddit.com "'Onyx Storm' villain" or similar) are lifesavers for pinning down timestamps. When I chased it down, the earliest concrete thread I could find was a short theory post followed by a more detailed breakdown a day later — classic fan pattern. Feels like a scavenger hunt, honestly.
Peyton
Peyton
2025-09-10 00:09:08
When I dug through the discussion a while back, I noticed the pattern most clearly: speculation about the villain's origin under the 'Onyx Storm' banner appeared almost as an immediate response to a narrative reveal. People often post impression fragments first — quick takes and screencaps — and then a few power users synthesize everything into a cohesive origin theory a day or two after. To verify a specific posting date I usually search the subreddit using keywords like 'origin', 'villain', and 'Onyx Storm', then filter by 'new' to see chronologically and by 'top' to find the posts that got traction.

If the original post has been deleted or nuked, Pushshift or the Wayback Machine can sometimes reveal the timestamp of the first comprehensive theory. Also, check crossposts and Twitter embeds; they often preserve the original Reddit URL and timestamp. When I last looked, the most-discussed hypothesis that people refer to as the canonical 'Onyx Storm' origin seemed to consolidate within 48 hours after the relevant episode, which is pretty typical for a hot theory on Reddit. Try messaging mods if you want the earliest archived link — they sometimes keep records.
Ulysses
Ulysses
2025-09-10 08:52:17
Honestly, the first moment I noticed 'Onyx Storm' origin talk was buried in a lively comment thread — the sort of place you’d never expect a theory to start. People toss out little guesses immediately, but the origin narrative that everyone references tends to be polished a day or two later. If you want to locate the initial claim, search the subreddit for exact phrase matches like 'Onyx Storm origin' and then sort by oldest; sometimes the first mention is in a throwaway comment rather than a headline post.

If that fails, check archives and look for Twitter screenshots of Reddit posts; those often carry the original post URL. When I tracked one down, it was rewarding to watch how a scatter of comments folded into a single, repeatable theory — kind of like watching a campfire story get refined. Share what you find if you want a second set of eyes.
Caleb
Caleb
2025-09-10 18:12:57
A quick, practical take: the 'Onyx Storm' villain-origin theory tends to show up within days of a major reveal. Fans throw out quick guesses within hours, but the full-origin post usually lands within 24–72 hours. If you want the exact day, I’d check the subreddit and sort by oldest in threads that mention 'Onyx Storm' and 'origin' — the post timestamp is the most direct evidence. Sometimes the very first instance is just a comment under a review or clip, not a standalone post, so dig into long discussion threads. I once found an origin theory buried three deep in a comments tree that lots of people later quoted as the source, so be prepared to comb through comments as well.
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