Two viral game clips
Short clips from Persona 3 Reload—'Color Your Night'—and a separate Yoru fakeout highlight have gained traction, with the Persona clip at about 3.8k likes and the Yoru moment at roughly 3.2k likes. (x.com, x.com)
Two short game clips are moving across X at the same time: one built around a Persona 3 Reload music cue, the other around a VALORANT Yoru fakeout. (x.com, x.com) The Persona clip uses “Color Your Night,” a track from the 2024 Persona 3 Reload soundtrack by Atlus Sound Team. Apple Music lists it as track 16 on the 62-song album, and YouTube Music shows the song with tens of millions of plays. (music.apple.com, music.youtube.com) Sega released Persona 3 Reload on February 2, 2024, as a remake of the 2006 role-playing game Persona 3. Sega’s official site describes it as a modern reimagining, and contemporaneous release coverage from IGN matches the February 2 date. (sega.com, ign.com) “Color Your Night” is tied to the game’s nighttime exploration, which helps explain why short clips built around it travel easily even outside Persona fandom. Fan reference pages describe it as the night outing background track in Reload, replacing an older song from the original version’s night segments. (megamitensei.fandom.com, music.apple.com) The Yoru clip lands for a different reason: it turns a deception mechanic into a punch line. Riot Games describes Yoru as a duelist built on “deception and aggression,” and his Fakeout ability sends out a decoy that can bait reactions. (playvalorant.com, valorant.fandom.com) That fakeout tool has been adjusted repeatedly, which kept Yoru in circulation long after his 2022 rework. Riot’s March 2025 patch notes raised Fakeout’s cost from 100 to 200 credits, saying the ability was giving too much value for its price. (playvalorant.com, gfinityesports.com) Put together, the two clips show two reliable routes to gaming virality in 2026: a recognizable soundtrack moment and a readable competitive fake. One works because viewers know the song in seconds; the other works because viewers understand the trick the instant it snaps shut. (music.youtube.com, playvalorant.com) Neither post needs much setup to travel. A three-second music cue and a one-beat mind game are enough to carry the clip on their own. (x.com, x.com)