I saw the clip at 2 a.m., my feed flooded with screenshots and a single, absurd sound loop. You laughed, then sent it to someone who works on skins, and the rumor thread erupted. I stayed up because the moment felt like the exact point a meme either dies or everything changes.
I’m going to walk you through what’s leaked, what actually matters, and why Epic Games might hesitate. You’ll get the sources I trust, the community heat map, and a clear sense of the most likely timeline — without the noise.
A streamer in Italy clipped it during a raid. Is Tung Tung Tung Sahur Coming to Fortnite?
Reliable leaker blortzen posted images and a short note on X suggesting a Tung Tung Tung Sahur skin or Sidekick is in development for Fortnite. I checked the leak’s spread across Reddit, Discord servers tied to Epic-sourced datamines, and several YouTube rumor channels — the footprint is small but consistent.
Is Tung Tung Tung Sahur coming to Fortnite?
The short answer: the assets exist in the wild and multiple sources point to Epic Games testing them internally. That’s not a store drop yet, but it’s far beyond a one-off mockup.
A café table argument started the explanation. What is Tung Tung Tung Sahur?
Tung Tung Tung Sahur began as a viral clip: a tall, carved wooden figure with human eyes and a looping percussion that sounds like hollow pipes being tapped. The name borrows the word “Sahur,” which is associated with the pre-dawn meal during Ramadan, but the meme has detached from that original meaning and now lives as pure absurdity across TikTok, X, and Telegram channels.
Who leaked the Fortnite Tung Tung Tung Sahur info?
The primary trail points to blortzen on X, a leaker with a track record of accurate Fortnite hints. I cross-referenced their post with image dumps circulating on datamine hubs and a short-lived test-build screenshot shared in a private Discord server — the elements line up.

A player in a comp match posted a meme reaction. What would a Fortnite collab actually look like?
If Epic ships this, expect either a full skin or a Sidekick/Buddy item with the looping percussion as an emote or background sound. Epic has previously turned odd viral stuff into cosmetic items — remember the Skibidi Toilet back bling. The company’s approach is pragmatic: if the item creates engagement and doesn’t open legal or cultural landmines, it’ll get a place in the item shop.
When might the skin release?
There’s chatter tying a Lantern Fest window to a possible drop, but that’s speculative. Given the leak timing and Epic’s usual cadence, a test in a seasonal patch is more likely than an immediate shop release.
The leak is a spark in a dry forest. That’s why even small test assets cause waves in community channels and content feeds.
A clip pinned to a pro player’s timeline stirred the chat. Community reaction and the cultural angle
Responses range from gleeful “this is hilarious” to defensive “don’t make this official.” One common line: “Please be wrong, please let this just be a rumor.” Another player bluntly predicted negative sales. Those reactions matter because Fortnite’s ecosystem is partly driven by creator sentiment and marketplace optics.
There’s also a sensitivity issue: the name’s Ramadan link can’t be ignored even if the meme no longer carries religious meaning for most viewers. Epic tends to avoid items that could be read as culturally tone-deaf; that’s part of why this feels uncertain.
The meme is a runaway carnival that refuses to stop at the gate.
A mod posted an image of the asset in a closed server. Should Epic add Tung Tung Tung Sahur to Fortnite?
I’ll be blunt: you and I both love oddball skins because they create memorable moments. But there’s a difference between memorable and careless. If Epic can secure rights, neutralize cultural friction, and package the item so it reads as playful rather than appropriative, it could work. If not, leaving it as an internet joke is the safer path.
Epic Games, publisher and playground maker, has shown it will take risks when community momentum and commercial upside align — that’s the same logic that turned celebrity drops and movie skins into steady revenue. You should watch Epic’s official channels, creator feeds on YouTube, and blortzen’s X account for the next tiny move: that will reveal whether this stays a rumor or becomes a paid skin.
A streamer clipped a reaction mid-match and the rumor began. Final thoughts and what to watch next
Short checklist I use when a leak like this appears:
- Source credibility: does the leaker have past hits? (blortzen does.)
- Asset spread: are dataminers and private servers showing the same files?
- Context risk: does the name or imagery carry cultural weight that could backfire?
If you want to track this yourself, follow Epic’s official Fortnite accounts, the biggest Fortnite content creators on YouTube and Twitch, and blortzen on X. That trio usually flags the moment a test build shifts to a public roll-out.
So — should Tung Tung Tung Sahur live in Fortnite, or remain a late-night meme? Which side would you pick and why?