#MandelaEffect: Were we on the same timeline? 🤔 or 🧐
How do you remember the following?
- Monopoly Man: Do you remember him with or without monocle?
- The Fruit of the Loom: Did the logo have a cornucopia or not?
- Disney's Snow White (1936): Did the Wicked Witch say "Mirror, Mirror on the Wall" or "Magic Mirror on the Wall"?
- Star Wars (1980): Is the quote ‘Luke, I am your father’ or ‘No, I am your father"?
- How do you spell: Kit-Kat or KitKat? Coca Cola or Coca-Cola?
- Micky Mouse in Steamboat Willy (1928): Does he wear suspenders?
I put what the current timeline affirms in the description below but before opening the comments, answer the ones above with your first instinct.
Mandala Effect Explained: A phenomenon where groups of individuals remember events or details differently from how they are recorded. From this perspective, the effect can be seen as evidence of subtle shifts between timelines, where the collective consciousness influences our perception of past events and realities.
This phenomenon is named after Nelson Mandela because it was first identified due to a shared false memory about him dying in prison during the 1980s, when in reality, he was released from prison in 1990 and later became the president of South Africa, passing away in 2013.
- Monopoly Man: Do you remember him with or without monocle?
- The Fruit of the Loom: Did the logo have a cornucopia or not?
- Disney's Snow White (1936): Did the Wicked Witch say "Mirror, Mirror on the Wall" or "Magic Mirror on the Wall"?
- Star Wars (1980): Is the quote ‘Luke, I am your father’ or ‘No, I am your father"?
- How do you spell: Kit-Kat or KitKat? Coca Cola or Coca-Cola?
- Micky Mouse in Steamboat Willy (1928): Does he wear suspenders?
I put what the current timeline affirms in the description below but before opening the comments, answer the ones above with your first instinct.
Mandala Effect Explained: A phenomenon where groups of individuals remember events or details differently from how they are recorded. From this perspective, the effect can be seen as evidence of subtle shifts between timelines, where the collective consciousness influences our perception of past events and realities.
This phenomenon is named after Nelson Mandela because it was first identified due to a shared false memory about him dying in prison during the 1980s, when in reality, he was released from prison in 1990 and later became the president of South Africa, passing away in 2013.