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Soyjak.party

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Soyjak.party
soyjak.party
Type of site
Imageboard
Available inEnglish
Country of originUnited States
OwnerQuote (May 9, 2025–present)
Created bySoot
AdvertisingNo
CommercialNo
RegistrationNone (except for staff)
LaunchedSeptember 20, 2020
Current statusActive
Written inPHP

Soyjak.party, also known as the Sharty[1] or the 'party[2], is an anonymous English-language imageboard website primarily dedicated to the creating and posting of soyjaks. Launched by pseudonymous 4chan user "Soot" on September 20th, 2020, the site hosts boards dedicated to a wide variety of topics, including video games, television, anime, sport, technology, politics and art, among others.

Soyjak.party was created as an offshoot of the Question and Answers (/qa/) board on 4chan, and was initially "intended to be a joke", according to the founder, Soot.[3] The website noticeably grew in popularity in late 2021, after 4chan closed its /qa/ board, which, despite its name (Questions and Answers), served as the de facto home of the 4chan soyjak community.[4]

Soyjak.party has often been the subject of controversy, including being linked to the 2025 Antioch High School shooting, and the 2025 4chan hack.[5] Due to the explicit nature of the site, it has been described as a "far-right reactionary imageboard filled with crude racist and antisemitic humor" by the Anti-Defamation League.[6] The site has its own slang terms, including "gem" and "gemerald" to describe good things, "coal" and brimstone" to describe bad things, and "NAS" (not-a-soyjak) to describe things unrelated to soyjaks.[7]

Background

[edit]

The majority of posting on Soyjak.party takes place on its many boards, such as /soy/, /qa/, /pol/ and /raid/.[8] on which users have the ability to share media and create threaded discussions.[9]

As of November 2025, the site's homepage lists 21 boards. The site includes a global ruleset, in addition to rulesets based on the topics of each individual board.[10]

/soy/
This is the usually most active board.[a] /soy/, Soyjaks, Pepes, Gigachads and Wojaks are required to make a new thread.[11]
Soyjak Wiki
A user-generated wiki, with over 2,603 content pages and 303,564 edits[12], running MediaWiki about soyjak.party. Located at soyjakwiki.org.
Soybooru
A booru with soyjaks uploaded by users. Located at soybooru.com.
Soyjak IRC
An IRC server located at irc.soyjak.st, with a Kiwi IRC web client at webirc.soyjak.st.

History

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The site was launched as soyjak.party on September 20, 2020, by pseudonymous 4chan user, Soot. He created a post advertising the new imageboard, saying:

basedjak.party
basedjaks must be in every thread
[13][b]

The site was an offshoot of the /qa/ board on 4chan, launching with only 7 boards initially. The site's popularity greatly increased near the end of 2021 as a result of the closure of the /qa/ board on 4chan.[4] With all the new users, the site administration got too much for Soot, and Soot sold the site to Yuri "Kuz" Kuznetsov for $2,000. Kuz claims to be a Russian businessman, born in 1988. He created "KolymaNET", a now-dissolved network of imageboards. Members of the site leaked his IP address, and found it to be based in Tennessee. Some members of the soyjak.party claim he was lying about his identity, and believe he is American.[7]

After April 2023, Kuz resigned. He transferred ownership to a user named Doll (Stylised as DOLL). He bought the imageboard, the booru and the wiki for under $11,000. In his time as admin, he attempted to ban pedo rings, reverse Kuz-era changes and crack down on posts on the main board, /soy/, that didn't have soyjaks in them.[7]

Doll would eventually get exhausted of fighting CSAM spam and the cost to run the site, so he resigned and gave the ownership to a user, "Froot".[7]

On November 21st, 2024, the site's domain changed from soyjak.party to soyjak.st.[citation needed]

Controversies

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Throughout the site's history, Soyjak.party has been the subject of numerous controversies including general internet raids, alleged links to mass-shooters, and website hacking incidents.

2025 Antioch High School shooting

[edit]

In the aftermath of the 2025 Antioch High School shooting, investigators uncovered a virtual diary written by the assailant, Solomon Henderson. Included in this diary were references to Soyjak.party, with Solomon admitting himself to be a frequent user of the site. Due to this, the Anti-Defamation League made references to Soyjak.party in an article about the assailant, describing it as "a far-right reactionary imageboard filled with crude racist and antisemitic humor."[6][14]

2025 4chan hack

[edit]

On April 14, 2025 4chan was hacked by an anonymous user with the hack being announced on Soyjak.party.[15] Source code and user logins of those who registered with emails were acquired by the user and leaked online, as well as the deprecated /qa/ board being restored.[16] Among the information leaked about users included the full identity of site staff members and moderators. On Soyjak.party the hacker created a thread in which he documented the attack, alleging, among other things, that he had "admin" level access, the site hadn't been updated since 2016, and that he had obtained the identities of numerous admins.[17] A user of Soyjak.party claimed that the hacker had had access to 4chan's systems for over a year.[1]

References

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  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "4chan Breach Exposes Internal Chaos, Data in Major Hack by Rival Soyjak Party". cryptonews.net. 2025-04-15. Retrieved 2025-11-24.
  2. ^ Gatlan, Sergiu. "Infamous message board 4chan taken down following major hack". BleepingComputer. Retrieved 2025-11-24.
  3. ^ Spears, Ricky (July 10, 2024). "The Soyjak Party: A Deep Dive into the Meme Culture Phenomenon". Ricky Spears.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Weedston, Lindsey (2024-07-12). "The Sad Origins And Redemption Of The Soyjack Meme". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 2025-11-02.
  5. ^ Croft</a>, <a href="/authors/daniel-croft" title="View all articles from Daniel Croft">Daniel (2025-04-16). "4chan 'hack' claimed by rival imageboard Soyjak Party". www.cyberdaily.au. Retrieved 2025-11-02.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "Antioch, Tenn., Shooter Inspired by Broad Extremist Beliefs and Previous Mass Killers".
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Rango, G. B. (May 21, 2025). "The Soyjakkers Who Hacked 4chan". www.piratewires.com. Archived from the original on July 18, 2025. Retrieved 2025-12-06.
  8. ^ soyjak.party's post per hour section on it's homepage
  9. ^ "MSN". www.msn.com. Retrieved 2025-11-02.
  10. ^ https://soyjak.st/rules.html
  11. ^ https://soyjak.st/rules.html#:~:text=The%20inclusion%20of%20Soyjaks
  12. ^ https://soyjakwiki.org/Special:Statistics
  13. ^ https://desuarchive.org/qa/thread/3484141/
  14. ^ Phillips, John M. (2024-10-30). "Unsound Minds - Folio 2.0 / EU Jacksonville". Retrieved 2025-11-02.
  15. ^ Cunningham, Andrew (2025-04-15). "4chan has been down since Monday night after "pretty comprehensive own"". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2025-11-02.
  16. ^ Dellinger, A. J. (2025-04-15). "Internet Cesspool 4chan Is Down After Alleged Hack, Rival Forum Users Claim Credit". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2025-11-02.
  17. ^ "4chan down, major hack suspected". Cybernews. 15 April 2025.

Notes

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  1. ^ Determined by the Post Per Hour count on the main page of soyjak.party.
  2. ^ On 4chan, the word "soyjak" gets filtered to "basedjak".