Viral “zombie vape” videos of young Malaysian men appearing dazed and disoriented after vaping have intensified concern that drug-laced liquids are spreading through the country’s booming e-cigarette market.
The clips, shared widely on social media over the past month, showed local men slumped on the ground or behaving erratically after allegedly inhaling piu-piu or piao-piao (online slang for drug-laced vape liquids).
At least two viral cases triggered arrests and fresh police warnings regarding people “vaping excessively and carrying out shameful acts”.
Advertisement
“The trend not only gives a negative image to the younger generation but is feared to become a medium for normalising the culture of substance abuse and an unhealthy lifestyle,” Bukit Aman narcotics director Hussein Omar Khan said in a statement on Tuesday.
He added that some vape products were suspected of being mixed with dangerous substances or synthetic drugs that could threaten users’ safety.
Advertisement
Police arrested three people, including a suspected supplier, and seized a bottle of vape liquid believed to contain ketamine, after a video showed two men in an intoxicated daze at a residential parking space in Selangor.

