TL;DR: Japanese Apex players on Gamee already know more about Singapore than you’d expect. Razer is recognized as a Singapore brand. Singapore is in their school curriculum.
- What happened in the viral video?
- SociallyIneptWeeb (Singapore) used Gamee to find Japanese Apex teammates. His cover got blown in 60 seconds — and what followed was 14 minutes of genuinely surprising cultural exchange.
- What’s the surprising takeaway?
- Japanese players already know Singapore. They study it in school. They recognize Razer as a Singapore-founded brand. The cultural ground floor between Singapore and Japan is much lower than most SEA gamers assume.
- How long until you can match into a Japanese squad from SG?
- ~30 seconds during JP peak hours (7pm–1am SGT). 40–80ms ping on Apex Tokyo server.
- Cost?
- Free. Matching, voice, chat, play, friend-add — all free.
The Third Singaporean-on-Gamee Video — And the Most Surprising Reveal Yet
In March 2026, SociallyIneptWeeb uploaded the third installment of what is now unofficially a series: “I somehow queued into a Japanese Onee-san in Ranked.” Current stats: 44,679 views, 2,302 likes — 5.1% like rate.
The setup is classic series formula: download Gamee, join a Japanese VC room, attempt to pass as Japanese using two years of self-study. At the 1:22 mark the chapter is literally titled “Caught” — the Japanese teammate notices the accent immediately. Just like the two previous videos.
Mii-chanThree videos. Three “caught” moments. Three completely wholesome Japanese squads. At this point it’s not luck — it’s just how Gamee actually works.
The Real Reveal: Japanese Apex Players Already Know About Singapore
Around the 5:20 mark — in the middle of inventory management mid-match — the Japanese teammate casually drops something most Singaporeans don’t know about Japan:
「授業でシンガポールが出てくるんですか?」
— from the video, ~5:20
(Singapore comes up in your classes?)
「では、文化の違いを日本はこういう感じだけど…」
(Yes — they teach us cultural differences, like how Japan does X but Singapore does Y…)
Japanese students learn about Singapore in social studies class. Multicultural society. Urban planning. Food culture. Singapore is taught in Japan as a model case study. So when you VC into a Japanese squad as a Singaporean, you’re not exotic — you’re a country they’ve already studied.
This is the genuine reveal of the video, and it lands harder than the “caught” moment.
Bonus Cultural Reveal: They Knew Razer Was Singaporean
Later in the same conversation, Rain mentions he uses a Razer mouse. The Japanese teammate’s reply is instant: “日本にもレーザーありますね” — “Japan has Razer too.” She knew the brand. She knew it was Singapore-founded. She knew their products were sold in Japan.
Combine this with the social studies curriculum point and the picture sharpens: the cultural information flow between Singapore and Japan goes both directions, but the Japanese side seems to know more about Singapore than vice versa. If you’re a Singaporean gamer hesitating to join Japanese servers because you think you’d be the random foreigner — that’s not actually the situation. You’d be the foreigner whose country they studied last term.
The Reverse Lesson: What is ALT?
At 6:32 the cultural exchange flips. Rain asks about “ALT” thinking it’s a gaming term. The Japanese teammate explains it’s actually Assistant Language Teacher — foreign English teachers placed in Japanese schools. Hers, she mentioned, was from Germany.
Why this matters for you: Japanese players grew up with foreigners in their classroom. The patience and warmth they show toward foreign gamers trying their best Japanese isn’t politeness — it’s familiarity. They’ve already done this conversation with their German ALT teacher when they were 12.
The Language Reality Check (with pronunciation guide)
Rain has been studying Japanese for ~2 years. The first thing his teammate says about it is “イントネーション(intonation)が難しいですよね” — kindly acknowledging the hardest part is pitch accent, not vocabulary. Then they compliment his English intonation. This is the conversational energy of Gamee. You don’t need fluent Japanese — you need 15 phrases and the willingness to try.
🟢 Bare minimum phrases (5)
| Japanese | Romaji (pronunciation) | English |
|---|---|---|
| お願いします | onegai-shimasu (oh-neh-gah-ee shee-mahs) | “Please” — join VC opening line |
| すみません | sumimasen (soo-mee-mah-sen) | Sorry / Excuse me |
| ありがとうございます | arigatō gozaimasu (ah-ree-gah-toh go-zah-ee-mahs) | Thank you (formal) |
| ナイス! | naisu (nye-soo) | Nice! |
| お疲れ様 | otsukare-sama (oh-tsoo-kah-ray-sah-mah) | “GG” — end of match |
⚔️ Combat callouts (heard in this video)
| Japanese | Romaji (pronunciation) | English |
|---|---|---|
| 一人やった | hitori yatta (hee-toh-ree yah-tah) | Downed one |
| 三人ですね | san-nin desu ne (sahn-neen dehs neh) | “There’s three of them” |
| 来る来る | kuru kuru (koo-roo koo-roo) | They’re coming! |
| こっち | kocchi (koh-chee) | This way / Over here |
| ナイス | naisu (nye-soo) | Nice |
| 逃げます | nigemasu (nee-geh-mahs) | I’m running |
| 後ろ | ushiro (oo-shee-roh) | Behind! |
🍰 Cultural conversation starters
| Japanese | Romaji (pronunciation) | English |
|---|---|---|
| 授業で〇〇出てきますか? | jugyō de ◯◯ dete kimasu ka | “Does ◯◯ come up in your classes?” |
| どこから来ましたか? | doko kara kimashita ka | “Where are you from?” |
| 海外に行ったことありますか? | kaigai ni itta koto arimasu ka | “Have you been overseas?” |
| 美味しい | oishii (oy-shee) | Delicious |
| 食べたい | tabetai (tah-beh-tye) | I want to eat |
| めっちゃ | meccha (meh-cha) | Very / a lot (casual) |
GGReal talk nya~: drop “どこから来ましたか?” (where are you from?) early. The cultural conversation will run itself for the rest of the match.
The Snack Diplomacy at 13 Minutes
By the 13-minute mark the conversation has shifted from Apex to food. The Japanese teammates’ recommendations:
- 浅草 (Asakusa) in Tokyo — “朝草と言ったらいもようかん” (“If you say Asakusa, you say imo-yōkan — sweet potato yokan”). “めっちゃ美味しい” — really good.
- Italy / Germany cookies — they passed through these in the snack discussion too.
- シンガポールチップス — Rain returned the favor with Singapore snack recommendations. The squad VC briefly became a snack-diplomacy summit.
This is the Gamee experience: a Japanese-only app, a Singaporean foreigner, a random squad in ranked, and somehow the conversation lands on Tokyo confectionery shops.
👉 Previously in the series: Singapore × Japan Apex Duo and Singapore Gamers Tested Japan’s Hidden App (Gamee)
So What’s Actually Going On with Gamee?
- It is: Japan’s #1 dedicated app for finding gaming teammates and friends. 10,000+ App Store reviews. Average 4.6★.
- It isn’t: A dating app. AI auto-bans inappropriate behavior. 24/7 human moderation. Strict 13+ age policy.
- Free for everything that matters: matching, voice chat, text chat, playing together, friend-adding.
- User ratings visible on every profile so you can pre-screen who you team with.
- VC rooms with live counts let you drop into an active squad in under a minute.
- Available in Singapore on both iOS App Store and Google Play.
How to Match into Your Own Wholesome JP Squad — Step by Step
- Download Gamee from the Singapore iOS App Store or Google Play.
- Sign up — no Japanese needed for the signup itself.
- Use a katakana name like レイン (Rain) — signals you’ll try Japanese. Japanese players love it.
- Pick Apex Legends from the game list.
- Browse VC rooms — look for “Apex” + “Trios” + your rank. Tap the one with active player counts.
- Join and say “お願いします!”
- Best window from SG: 7pm–1am SGT (8pm–2am JST) for peak Japanese activity.
Mii-chanApproach every Gamee VC as a fellow gamer first, full stop. Be friendly, be a good teammate, and the cultural conversation will happen on its own.
The Closing Line That Sums Up the Series
The video ends after roughly two hours of squad time. The sign-off is identical to the previous two videos in the series:
「本当にありがとうございました」
— from the video, ~14:00
(Thank you so much.)
「ありがとうございました」「ありがとうございました」「ありがとうございました」
(Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.)
「バイバイ」
(Bye-bye.)
Three videos, three squads, three identical heartwarming goodbyes. This isn’t viral content luck — it’s what Gamee actually does.
FAQ
Do Japanese schools actually teach about Singapore?
Yes — the video explicitly confirms this. The Japanese player says “we learned about Singapore in class.” Singapore appears in Japanese social studies / world geography curriculum as a model multicultural society. Expect “oh, I learned about Singapore in class!” reactions when you reveal where you’re from.
Do Japanese gamers really know Razer is from Singapore?
The video shows they do. The Japanese teammate immediately recognized Razer as a Singapore-founded brand when Rain mentioned his mouse. Singapore gaming culture (especially Razer’s brand) has clearly traveled into Japanese gamer awareness.
Do I need to be good at Apex?
No. The squads on Gamee organize by rank and goal. Pick VC rooms tagged near your actual rank, be honest about your skill level, and you’ll find teammates at your level — or better players willing to carry you.
Is Gamee safe? How does moderation work?
Gamee enforces a 13+ age policy and runs 24/7 AI plus human moderation. Inappropriate behavior, harassment, and dating-app misuse result in auto-ban. Every user profile shows community ratings so you can pre-screen teammates before joining their voice chat.
Do I need Japanese fluency to use Gamee?
No. Apex’s ping system handles in-game callouts. The 18 phrases above (greeting + combat + cultural starters) cover 95% of typical VC moments. Japanese players are typically encouraging when foreigners are clearly trying.
What’s the ping like from Singapore?
Apex’s Tokyo server runs 40–80ms from Singapore — comfortable for ranked play.
またやろう (Let’s Play Again)
Three videos in, the pattern is clear: Singapore gamer + Japanese-only app + 30-second VC room + culturally rich, wholesome conversation. The only way to find out which version of this experience you’ll get is to actually try it. Download below.
More from Gamee Blog:
- Singapore Gamers Tested Japan’s Hidden App (Gamee) — Here’s What Happened — the 95K-view video where SociallyIneptWeeb tried to sneak past a near-Predator JP player.
- Singapore × Japan Apex Duo: How to Find JP Players Like This Viral Video — the first article in this series, with the 16-minute random-match story.
GGSingapore Apex players, the Tokyo server is one tap away nya~. お疲れ様!

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