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Chinamaxxing

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Is this a 'very Chinese time in your life'? Chinamaxxing trend boosts China's soft power
www.bbc.com

12 hours ago

Koh Ewe

AFP via Getty Images Women wearing traditional costumes pose for photographs in front of a Chinese temple
AFP via Getty Images

Being Chinese is now in vogue
Ni hao, we're all Chinese now.
Or at least that's what they claim on TikTok, where a trend called "Chinamaxxing" has taken off in the West.

Chinese wellness practices, once associated with the tacky and geriatric, have suddenly found themselves in vogue, largely among Americans.

From warm apple-boiled water to indoor slippers and longevity exercises, people are sharing videos of themselves "learning to be Chinese". Many come with the Fight Club-inspired caption "you met me at a very Chinese time in my life", or the hashtag #newlychinese.

As Donald Trump shakes up the world order, the Chinese Communist Party has welcomed this boost to the country's image.

Chinamaxxing is certainly adding more gloss to the recent flourish of Chinese soft power. Over the past year we've seen the world clamour for Labubu dolls, wait in line at brand new stores to buy Mixue bubble tea and Luckin coffee, and scroll through their friends' holiday feeds in the "cyberpunk city" of Chongqing.

Some say Chinamaxxing stems from young Americans' disenchantment with their own country, although it's unclear how much that is really driving the trend.

But like so many internet trends, this one hardly paints the full picture. It's a celebration of memes and fleeting moments that make up just one slice of Chinese life. Beyond that are young people who, like their American counterparts, are also worried about their future in a sluggish economy and a fast-changing world.

A very Chinese time in our lives​

Some Chinese youth may find it strange that parts of their culture - long seen as "uncool" in the Western imagination - are now the object of fascination. Some may find it offensive that Westerners on TikTok are facetiously claiming they've been "diagnosed as Chinese".

But others say Chinamaxxing strikes a different note from derogatory jokes like "bing chilling" - where the punchline is ex-wrestler John Cena's stilted Mandarin pronunciation - or the "social credit" meme that mocks the Chinese government's restrictions on personal freedoms.

This time, Chinese people are in on the joke - not the butt of it.

One of the most influential figures behind the Chinamaxxing meme is Sherry Zhu, a Chinese-American TikTok content creator who regularly shares traditional wellness tips with her "Chinese baddies".

"Tomorrow you're turning Chinese," she tells her 740,000 TikTok followers. "And I know that sounds intimidating, but there is no point in fighting it now."

Getty Images An elderly man rides a bicycle past a Mixue Ice Cream & Tea shop on November 4, 2025, in Zhengding, Shijiazhuang, Hebei Province, China.
Getty Images

Mixue, an ice-cream and tea chain, now has thousands of stores across the globe

Few could have seen this coming.
Then a stunned world watched Beijing put its cities into hellish lockdowns. Reports emerged of residents running out of food and pleading for help from inside their sealed-off neighbourhoods. The restrictions ended only in early 2023 after rare protests. By then expats had left China in droves, many of them saying too much had changed.

There was also an exodus from Hong Kong, where Beijing's control was reshaping the city. This, along with China's growing power and assertiveness, strained the relationship with the West, even as the world's reliance on the Chinese economy became clear.

Meanwhile, China's investments in tech, infrastructure and exports began to pay off - and became more visible as it reopened post pandemic, relaxing visa rules to bring back tourists.

It was hard to miss: glitzy skyscrapers, a sprawling high-speed rail network, highways packed with electric vehicles, and a boom in green energy, robotics and artificial intelligence. Chongqing - a humid southwestern metropolis which once made global headlines for a corruption scandal and murder - turned popular and cool.

NurPhoto via Getty Images People crowding on a bridge overlooking a cluster of traditional-looking Chinese buildings, glowing in golden light.
NurPhoto via Getty Images

Tourists are flocking to China's "cyberpunk city" of Chongqing
There have been other, smaller triumphs. Young people around the world are snatching Adidas Tang-style jackets off the shelves, bingeing on Chinese micro-dramas and experimenting with powdery make-up looks flaunted by Chinese girls and women on Douyin, China's version of TikTok.

"As a Chinese person who has been online throughout years and years of heavy Sinophobia, it felt refreshing to have the mainstream opinion finally shift regarding China," Claire, a Chinese-Canadian TikTok user, tells BBC Chinese.

The 22-year-old, who shares political content on TikTok and would only reveal her first name for that reason, says, for her, the "critical juncture" was last year.

That was when she noticed a shift in attitudes about China. A wave of Americans arrived on RedNote, a popular Chinese social media app, ahead of a TikTok ban in the US.
Within days memes became the currency of these American "TikTok refugees" as two worlds that rarely interact because of China's internet firewall were brought closer.

A dimming American Dream​

"These young people have watched their physical reality remain frozen while China built entire cities," says Afra Wang, a tech writer and podcaster.

"When you can't build high-speed rail but you can scroll through videos of Chinese infrastructure, of course the future starts to look Chinese."

For observers like her, it's no coincidence that Chinamaxxing comes as the American Dream seems to be dimming.

Americans who came of age after the Iraq War, the 2008 global financial crisis or even the 6 January 2021 Capitol riot face a job market disrupted by globalisation and then AI, Wang says: "American exceptionalism was never something they lived."

What do people in China think of Chinamaxxing? Not much, it seems. The trend has stirred limited reactions on Chinese social media.

Rather, in the eyes of Chinese people, America, once seen as a beacon of success, has lost its shimmer. Not least because tensions between the two sides have made it harder for Chinese students who want to study or work there.

"During America's Chinamaxxing moment, China is experiencing its own America-minimising moment," Wang says.

On parts of Chinese social media, there are dystopian references to the "US kill line", a Chinese gaming term that refers to the perilous descent into poverty in the US. The idea, which took root quickly among users and influencers, is that America is a tough place to survive because a single stroke of bad luck can derail your life.

The term's popularity on social media is helped by the fact that it has been embraced by Chinese state media and the government. They have sought to portray the US as a decaying superpower because of inequality, a weak social safety net and a broken healthcare system.

According to a commentary in state-owned Xinhua, the "kill line" meme "underscores how far the lived reality can drift from the ideals once broadcast to the world".

Beyond the memes​

It's little wonder that Chinese authorities are pleased with Chinamaxxing.

"Chinese lifestyles increasingly gain global appeal, offer a steadier way of being," reads the headline of a Global Times piece about the trend.

When asked about it at a press briefing earlier this month, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said a "unique blend of history and modernity" is making China increasingly appealing to foreigners.

He was "happy" to see foreigners experiencing the "everyday life of ordinary Chinese people".

Propping up breakneck delivery speeds are gig workers scrambling to hit deadlines. Many can relate to the hustle: in 2023, Beijing courier Hu Anyan's memoir about the relentless nature of gig work became a national bestseller.

"When I think of my American friends and tech people wandering through Shenzhen in awe, I also think of my own experience in Shenzhen," Wang says. "Drinking a six yuan latte from Luckin Coffee, delivered on a scooter by someone like Hu Anyan, whose labour makes 'cool China' visible while remaining almost invisible themselves."

Perhaps, if the fascination with China's successes continues, more of Chinese life will surface. But for now apple tea seems to be where it's at.

"Ever since I started boiling apples in my tea water my period cramps have completely gone," reads a comment on RedNote from an American user - one of the TikTok refugees still lingering on the app.
"We have so much still left to learn being Chinese."

Additional reporting by Eunice Yang from BBC Chinese
 

Why Gen Z is ‘Chinamaxxing’​


Published

Feb 10, 2026 at 12:39 PM EST

There’s a new viral trend among Gen Zers: “Chinamaxxing.”

The new lifestyle trend sees a romanticization of life in China, from praising Chinese culture to adopting elements of Chinese culture into their daily lives.

Why It Matters​

The relationship between the U.S. and China is one that has long been adversarial. Last year, tensions heightened over trade, but a one-year trade truce between President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping was brokered in October. Despite these concerns that clashes will come into play over trade, Taiwan and cyber remain prominent. The online cultural romanticization of China is indicative of a departure from these tense political relations.

GettyImages-2260878382.jpg

What To Know​

For those uninitiated, or those aged over 30, the term “maxxing” is applied by Gen Zers to different words to mean maximizing or taking something to extremes, with popular examples in the lexicon including the terms “looksmaxxing” and “strengthmaxxing.”

In this instance, the term “Chinamaxxing” refers to the appreciation or adoption of Chinese culture. The terms “very Chinese” and “becoming Chinese” have also circulated online, as has the term “you met me at a very Chinese time in my life.”

Some elements of “Chinamaxxing” are focused on wellness. For example, a workout routine, posted to X with the text “POV: you started using Chinese longevity biohacks to reset your energy,” has been viewed over 100,000 times.

Other features of the trend that are circulating online include cooking rice and drinking warm water. The trend has also prompted an interest in Chinese fashion. A video, shared by the creator @wettowel71, shows him looking at a garment and has the text overlay “Is Chinesemaxxing a vibe?” has been viewed over 700,000 times. Other videos have focused on speaking about Chinese fashion designers.

The trend has perhaps been propelled by the upcoming Lunar New Year, which is in February, and this year, signals the arrival of the year of the horse. Ahead of the Lunar New Year, there has been a significant amount of advice videos shared about how to enter the new year as your best self, and what to ‘shed,’ as the Year of the Snake comes to an end.

For some, the trend has signified a shift in how the U.S. is perceived, and is evidence of young people looking for a new superpower. Zing Tsjeng, a journalist, said in a TikTok video filmed for The I Paper, “Being American no longer commands the same cultural cachet. Now social media users are looking towards other countries like China.”

There has been a romanticization of Chinese culture, which could signal discontent over life in America and the West more broadly. This includes social media users marvelling at people’s apartments and at the high-speed rail system.

Of this, Daniel Ahmad, the Director of Research & Insights at Niko Partners and a video games analyst, wrote on X in a post viewed over 290,000 times “Chinamaxxing is one of the many ways that Gen Z and millennial populations in the West, primarily the US, are lamenting worsening material conditions and state capacity, while viewing China's ongoing development and ascent through a part aesthetic, part orientalist lens. Almost a coping mechanism.”

There has been some criticism levelled at the trend. Irish TikTok creator @heyamiliaa posted a video with the text overlay, “Anyone else feel kind of weird about the “Chinamaxxing” tend? It isn’t explicitly x3nophonic… but it doesn’t feel right. Why is engaging with Chinese culture a big joke to you? Certainly doesn’t feel like appreciation.”

What People Are Saying​

Daniel Ahmad, the Director of Research & Insights at Niko Partners and a video games analyst, wrote on X in a post viewed over 290,000 times: “It's easy to fall into the trap of seeing China as a utopia, or the greatest evil, but a real analysis focuses on successes, mistakes, flaws, and material outcomes. There must be a belief that decline is reversable, and that we can learn from what works and ignore what doesn't to advocate for change.”

Jing Theory, a TikTok Creator and Founder & CEO of Fly By Jing, in a TikTok video: “Chinamaxxing is not just a meme. It exposes how the hierarchy of taste is beginning to shift. For most of my life growing up in the West, Asian existence was filtered through the Western gaze. That gaze decided what was beautiful and what was backward, what was sophisticated and what was cheap, and what was worthy of curiosity versus ridicule.”

What Happens Next?​

Lunar New Year falls on February 17th.
 
Or at least that's what they claim on TikTok, where a trend called "Chinamaxxing" has taken off in the West.

Now do you understand why TikTok (Douyin) and other similar Tiong short video sites are propaganda weapons? :cool:

Also, look at Koh Ewe shilling for Kamala Harris on Time magazine back in 2024. :whistling:

https://time.com/7020042/trump-harris-china-explainer-trade-tariffs-taiwan-war-human-rights/


https://sg.linkedin.com/in/koh-ewe-7160a7192
https://x.com/hellokoyu
https://www.instagram.com/hellokoyu
https://muckrack.com/koh-ewe
 
Last time when I was a little boy, Angmomaxxing was trend. Then when I was a teenager, Japmaxxing was trend. When I was a young adult, Koreamaxxing was trend. Now the trend is Chinamaxxing. Lol :laugh:

What's new maxxing next? I wonder...
 
Last time when I was a little boy, Angmomaxxing was trend. Then when I was a teenager, Japmaxxing was trend. When I was a young adult, Koreamaxxing was trend. Now the trend is Chinamaxxing. Lol :laugh:

What's new maxxing next? I wonder...
Maybe this maxxing nonsense has gone on since time immemorial, from Persian Empire, Roman Empire, Ottoman Empire etc etc...
 
Last time when I was a little boy, Angmomaxxing was trend. Then when I was a teenager, Japmaxxing was trend. When I was a young adult, Koreamaxxing was trend. Now the trend is Chinamaxxing. Lol :laugh:

What's new maxxing next? I wonder...
You allowed the korean to get away. So no korean maxxing. Points deducted.
 
Even I see nowadays Grandpa @glockman also change his tune and praise CCP. He is Chinamaxxing in his own defined ways :laugh:
I started chinamaxxing big time one year ago. And I have no regrets. It's the way things are supposed to be, my only regret is not realising it sooner. The new century belongs to our beloved China. And those anti-china white dick suckers are dumbfucks to the max! The Dragon has awaken, giving hope to the world :biggrin: 中国万岁:thumbsup:

sbfchina.jpg
 
it means knocking up as many atbs as possible. some for free, some (chiobus) for $69 a pump, and some (laukwaybus) for $6.9 a dump.
 
I started chinamaxxing big time one year ago. And I have no regrets. It's the way things are supposed to be, my only regret is not realising it sooner. The new century belongs to our beloved China. And those anti-china white dick suckers are dumbfucks to the max! The Dragon has awaken, giving hope to the world :biggrin: 中国万岁:thumbsup:

View attachment 236355
Why you paint your hand red and draw 5 stars? You kisiao liao! :FU: :roflmao:
 
I started chinamaxxing big time one year ago. And I have no regrets. It's the way things are supposed to be, my only regret is not realising it sooner. The new century belongs to our beloved China. And those anti-china white dick suckers are dumbfucks to the max! The Dragon has awaken, giving hope to the world :biggrin: 中国万岁:thumbsup:

View attachment 236355
Many dont realise the US is a really a ruthless big power. Its Interest comes first.
Sinkie is being treated nicely for that reason. It serves its interest.
It has no qualms using its influence to starve countries to death. Syria, iran, cuba, venezuela are good example. And then uses the media to denounce those government as incompetence and corrupt hence economic misery.
 
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