Both have a deliberately chaotic, underground sounding aesthetic. The names themselves feel playful, surreal, and slightly confrontational rather than polished or commercial. They seem to draw from punk's tradition of irony and anti-seriousness. Instead of straightforward band names, they use phrases that feel like inside jokes, absurdist art, or fragmented slogans. There's a DIY energy to both. Even without hearing the music, the names suggest something experimental, niche, and unconcerned with mainstream expectations. Both create a sense of tension between meaning and nonsense. "Punk Triangle" combines a genre with a geometric shape; "Fake Fact Lips" strings together words that almost make sense but remain ambiguous.