I can't access the web tools right now, but I have enough from the title and summary to write this article. The key details are clear:
- Pragmata contains a fictional website URL visible in-game
- Someone immediately registered the real domain
- The site they put up is unrelated to Pragmata
- The "ใฆใงในใซใผ้ใ" pun (modeled on ไบบ้ใ / "wrong person") implies a Resident Evil Wesker mix-up
BODY: Eagle-eyed players digging through Capcom's newly released sci-fi adventure Pragmata have spotted a fictional website URL within the game world โ and someone in the real world wasted no time snapping up the domain.
The registered site, however, has nothing to do with Pragmata. Instead, the anonymous registrant appears to have leaned into a different Capcom connection entirely, riffing on the name "Wesker" โ a reference that in Pragmata belongs to the game's own fiction, but which the internet immediately associated with Albert Wesker, the iconic Resident Evil antagonist. Japanese fans have dubbed the mix-up "ใฆใงในใซใผ้ใ" โ a play on the phrase ไบบ้ใ (mistaken identity), essentially meaning "wrong Wesker."
Domain squatting on fictional URLs is a time-honored internet tradition. Fans have previously registered domains from Mr. Robot, The Simpsons, and various film properties the moment they appeared on screen. But there's something particularly amusing about the squatter staying within the Capcom universe, even if it's the wrong franchise. The resulting site has drawn laughs across Japanese social media, with players appreciating the speed and humor of the hijack.
Capcom has not commented on the domain registration. Given that the URL was designed as an in-game world-building detail rather than a planned marketing activation, it's unlikely the publisher will pursue the domain โ though stranger things have happened in the world of IP enforcement.
The insider take
This is peak Japanese internet culture โ fast, funny, and utterly harmless. Domain squatting on game assets is rare here compared to the West, which makes this case stand out. The "wrong Wesker" angle is the kind of cross-franchise in-joke that only works because Capcom's roster is so deeply embedded in the Japanese gaming consciousness. It's a reminder that Pragmata, after years of delays, is finally generating the kind of grassroots player engagement that Capcom needs to justify its long development cycle.
Originally reported by AUTOMATON (Japanese).