That would be merely an airdrop, the answer by achow101 is the correct one.
While one may argue that the result is mostly the same, hardforks are still usually deployed by having nodes follow the canonical Bitcoin consensus until a certain block is reached, after which a protocol change and subsequently the hardfork is triggered. Sometimes successfully, such as was the case with BCH despite a slow startup, sometimes not so successfully, as was the case with B2X that stopped working due to a bug in the forking logic.
The question was about forks and did not mention hard forks and
so far as I understand things Segwit2x used this process and is called
a fork in most articles that I read and the dev teams seems to be very
pro-active in fixing some of the problems with the code that they have
copied.
Indeed B2X could be a pump and dump for all I know but I have not come
across news of this "bug in the forking logic" that you mentioned so maybe
you can provide a link please.
Looks to me that B2X fork is still going ahead on the 15th
https://bitscreener.com/coins/segwit2xI will be happy to receive these air-drop coins and Bitcoin Gold if Coinbase
gets it's act sorted out and gives me what they own me so that I can play
without having to give miners $25 just for sending a $1 test coin to me wallet.
We should carry on our debate about hubs being mini banks in the lightning
network and yes I know, Segwit2x is going to use LN too which is a big cross
against them as is trying to bolt on "Smart Contracts" but we will see.