English

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Etymology

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From frag +‎ -able.

Adjective

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fraggable (comparative more fraggable, superlative most fraggable)

  1. (video games, slang) Able to be fragged (killed).
    • 2006, Jon Dovey, Helen W. Kennedy, Game Cultures: Computer Games As New Media:
      We are in a familiar FPS dungeon world with massively armoured avatars toting huge weapons, but the soundtrack is not quite what we might expect:
      'Hello there Razor, you're looking sharp.'
      'Hi Anarchy, you're more fraggable than ever and I'm not the only one who thinks so.'
    • 2007, Yehuda Kalay, Thomas Kvan, Janice Affleck, New Heritage: New Media and Cultural Heritage:
      For example, games are highly interactive but a dangerous beast when used for virtual heritage: content is fraggable, destroyed rather than created, and the social position of the participants is continually threatened rather than established.