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How an Aspiring Streamer Ruined her Life Over a Skill Issue - Peaachxo VS NessieDoes
Mujin
What would you do if you lost in a video game? Would you scream, violently slam your desk, maybe even annihilate your controller out of rage? Well, no matter what you end up doing, all of these things are incredibly reasonable compared to what one streamer decided to do. You see, she got so triggered over dying in a video game live on stream that she went out of her way to contact a friend of hers, who just so happens to work at the game studio itself in order to wrongfully ban the streamer who killed her for an entire month without any proof.
All while making it a point to tarnish his reputation to their mutual friends. But wait, it gets even worse, because in parallel to all this, she would proceed to dox his personal information, like full name and address, so that she could eventually send the police after him. Guys, I wish I was exaggerating here, but this all actually happened because a streamer simply died in a video game.
And the best part is that much of this happened live on stream, where you can see the streamer in question lose her mind in real time while tilting harder than the Titanic. You simply don't see this every day, especially not when the game studio itself is somehow involved too. That's why I figured we had to talk about it. So without further ado, let's do this. Alright, so to truly understand the severity of the situation, we have to talk about
extraction shooters, a game genre that was pioneered by the game Escape from Tarkov. The objective was simple. You got dropped on a map with other players and your goals were to all loot as much gear as you possibly can. The main challenge though was that in order to successfully loot things you had to extract, and if you died, you lost everything, even the gear you brought in with you. Other players had the same goal, and you had proximity voice chat.
This meant that this game was perfect to extract the worst traits imaginable in a human being, which are greed and lies. And in that sense, it wasn't too different from survival games such as DayZ. The appeal was simple. When you had a lot of valuable loot and you came across other players, how would you deal with it?
Would you light them and then shoot them in the back of the head or would you fight them and risk losing everything? Regardless of what you chose, it would make you react and act in ways that you never thought were possible. Because at the end of the day, that's why people played these games, to feel a rush of adrenaline that you only feel when your life is in danger. So it came as no surprise that the pioneer of this genre, Escape from Tarkov, would make a lot of money. The game would start in closed beta in 2017 and then would finally release in 2025. Within a month on Steam, it sold a million copies, and that's knowing that many people
had already bought it in closed beta. This also meant that it single-handedly dominated the entire genre, there were no real competitors here. This is why when Ark Raiders was announced, people got very excited over the idea of a fresh game in the genre. What really helped this game as well were the content creators and insiders that played the game early and had nothing but good things to say about it. And while
yes it was incredibly hyped for a long time, and some people expected disappointment because of that, they ended up getting the absolute opposite. When the game came out on the 30th of October 2025, it was met with incredible success that no one could have ever expected. It managed to take Escape from Tarkov's formula and make it even more interesting. Other players were still a threat, but the concern of them killing you was way lower than the concern of getting killed by the very dangerous and smart enemies that are
around the world. This would force you to drop whatever hostilities you might have against another player and work together because they're just that dangerous. And speaking of other players, the most arguable change that this game made to the genre was an aggression based MMR, an aggression based ranking system. If you like to kill a lot of other players,
you are usually matched with other players with the same mentality. But if you never killed a player and worked aggressive, you were matched with nonaggressive players who wanted to work together. At the time of release, this wasn't really known to everyone. There were theories about it, but it definitely helped keep a huge chunk of their players from leaving. This is part of the reason as to why it was able to maintain such a large player base for over six months after release.
It was able to attract people who would have never considered playing extraction shooters. Like, for example, the streamer NessieDoes. He's someone who mostly streamed and made content around the game Sea of Thieves, in which he trolled or messed around with people in the game that, in his opinion, deserve it. Like hackers, for example. He would start playing Ark Raiders with the same goal, to make content to make videos out of it, in which he tricks or trolls other people. Which happens in pretty much every multiplayer game in which he interacts
with other players. However, at some point during early March, and while playing Arc Raiders with a friend, he'd have the very unfortunate event of coming across the streamer PeachXO. And now I'm sure that some of you watching might be surprised here, thinking things like, wait Mugen, this streamer has like 2000 followers, 22 average viewers, what damage could she possibly do to this bigger streamer called Nessie? Well if you've tried to apply to a job recently in this terrible job market, you'd understand
very quickly we don't live in a world of meritocracy anymore. It's all about nepotism, which means the people that you know. Take Twitch for example, one of the worst platforms in existence. They'll ban you for anything and you could be one of their top 0.1% streamers, you'll probably still have a hard time reaching a real human being there. But did you know that Twitch has something called the Ambassador Program? Where they pick out streamers that represent the entire brand and get a special badge and
contact with the staff? Yeah, well not to call anyone out, but there's literally people out there with one viewer that are a Twitch Ambassador. This means that these people have direct access to Twitch staff, while bigger streamers with thousands of viewers potentially don't. The point I'm making here is that you don't need a lot of viewership to have a lot of
influence that could potentially cause a lot of damage to someone. And that's exactly where PeachXO falls into place here, while also weaponizing a high ranking contact of hers that works at Embark Studios, the developer behind Ark Raiders. However, ironically, this would all eventually lead to her own total downfall. Ark Raiders' matchmaking system is very straightforward. You can queue up as a solo player, as a duo with a friend, or as a trio with two friends. The game will always prioritize queuing up solos with other solos, duos with other duos,
etc. However, like most multiplayer games, the server for Oceania are absolutely dead. So if you live in Australia or New Zealand, for example, yeah, it's going to take a long time to find a game. Even worse, if you queue up as a solo, you might encounter a duo. There simply aren't enough players to be able to match them to people queuing up just like them. The reason why I'm telling you this is because it's integral to what would happen next, because
around the first week of March, HXO would queue a solo game and encounter Nessie, which led to the event that permanently altered both of their lives. Watch for yourself.
Yo yo yo yo, oh my god, what's up, can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
I hear me? Can you hear me? I can hear you.
Okay, this is like really weird, but my friend is like completely stuck, and I want someone to knock him so I can like res him. And hopefully that knocks him out of the spot. He's literally just got completely stuck in this room.
But how is he your friend?
Oh, are you solo? I'm in a duo game. I'm duo queued with him. Wait, what? So I can't... If you're solo, I'm duo, I can't knock him. He's like in here, under these steps right here.
Why does this feel like a scheme?
These full traps there.
Oh, okay. Well, I have a defib, so I'll just do it.
Nice! I have a defib, dog. I'll do it. Hey! Alright, so look, classic trap in games like this. If you've played any survival games like DayZ or anything that involves other players, yeah you've probably been through this. It's not pleasant, it's not a good time, but that's just the nature of these games. That's what you're signing up for. He told her his friend needed help, he trapped her in a room, and then killed her.
She wasn't the first player he did this to, and she wasn't going to be the last. I even think many of you watching would have raged at this, right? It's stupid, but you would have moved on afterwards. After raging a little bit, you would have just queued up the next game and started over. But of course, that's not what the streamer here, PeachXO, would do. She'd actually decide to take this out of the game
by leaving an inappropriate comment on the steam profile of one of those two players. Free content. Suck a fat one.
Next, after leaving a comment on the Steam profile of one of the two players, she decides to report Nessie in-game. And out of all the different things she could have picked, for some reason she decides to go with scamming. Like, he scammed her. I don't even know what scamming would entail in a game like this.
Liar
People like that make me hate the fucking game.
An hour after she had reported him in-game, Nessie would understand that he had just killed a streamer. And look, he has common sense, he understood that killing someone like this wasn't the most fun way to play this game. So he made it a point to go to her chat and say, hey, gg from before. This would be her reaction, and this would be their brief discussion.
Hello gg from before, hi nessie were you the person like in um we're looking for processes no no you're one start with the stock friend ah so you're the asshole from before right now did you like the comment i left on the profile so you're the asshole i'm gonna be quiet now are we just we're we're going with dad So far, he's been nothing but nice, right?
She's trying to understand, like, hey, why am I an asshole? I'm just saying GG, right? It is what it is. That's just the game. So then she makes it a point to focus on his Twitch profile, seeing when he last streamed, and for some reason commenting on his partner verified badge.
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Get started freeWhen was the last time you even streamed bro?
Let's have a look.
Let's have a look.
It's just a game chill. Oh I'm chill. I'm allowed to call you an arsehole because what you did was arsehole behavior. I don't give a f*** that you've got a partner badge.
Bro, no one said anything about a partner badge. No one even like... It's automatically equipped if you're partnered on Twitch. I know this myself since I have that badge too. But for some reason, she's very triggered by it.
...over 30 days. You play some interesting games. Trying to log in with uni. I wonder if you're like being a shitlord over there too. I wonder if like, you know, people are safe being around you.
So she asked why the guy hasn't streamed in a while, right? Even though he has no obligation to answer that, he'd say, I'm trying to lock in for uni. And the first thing she says afterwards, right? She could have just ended it here and been like, you know what, dude, I don't agree with how you play the game, but whatever.
It is what it is. See you later. No, she makes a comment about how, I hope people are safe around you. I hope you're not harassing
or even being weird around people in your uni. on? I don't know. Your vibes give off, um, good luck with that. Yeah, good luck. Goodbye. Goodbye. I don't care if you have a partner badge. I don't care if you have a partner badge. I, just, with his friend, his so-called stuck friend, you solo queued with your friend into a game and lured me in to kill me and like put a, like, barricade up. That is the like, BTS going to uni. I'm a lawyer. Oh, wait.
No, my family members actually a lawyer, not me. Sorry.
All right.
So he gets accused of being a weirdo around people IRL in college. And then she remembers that he has a partner badge, which figured her so much that she banned him from her chat.
I mean, the messages were nothing but nice. She could have just ended it right here and then, by just being friendly, bantering a little bit, I mean they're Australian dude, banter is in their blood, and just ending it there. So seeing how unreasonable she was becoming, Nessie's friend, the guy who was pretending that he was downed, would come into the chat to also say something. He'd say, I just got lured into a room by a guy that wanted me to help him free his friend.
He trapped me and killed me. I just got this game two hours ago. Is it always like this? As you can imagine, he also got instantly banned as well.
I want you to tell your little boyfriend, tell your little boyfriend, thank you for
the engagement.
They appreciate it.
You can also send all the screenshots from chat as like evidence. The reason why this is significant is because one of her mods would decide to say alright I'm gonna go report this kid for harassment lmao. And mind you when the mod says this kid he's referring to Nessie right they don't care about his friend they care about Nessie because he's the one with the partner badge. Even though everything he's said has been nothing but courteous. She's saying, oh let's get all the screenshots and report him.
Report him for what? He just came in the chat and said GG, like what? But here's the thing, regardless of how weird their entire interaction has been so far, things could have genuinely ended right then and there. For 99.99% of people on the internet, they would have never known this even happened. Unfortunately, though, seeing how dead the Australian servers truly are,
two days after this incident, they would end up getting into the same game again. This is when things would truly escalate to ridiculous levels. So what happened here is that Nessie would come across Peach, right? And they would work together for a few minutes. What's interesting though is that Peach doesn't recognize him at all, right?
She doesn't recognize anything about him. She thinks he's a random player that she encountered for the first time. Nessie, on the other hand, seeing that he's an absolute troll when he plays games like this, was playing to kill her dies, he'd realize something. I think I ran into you the other! Yeah I thought I recognised your voice.
Yeah you're the one that was trying to flex his partner badge on Twitch!
It auto-equips! It auto-equips!
I don't care you can turn it off bro, it literally is an option when you're on Twitch. But also, you've been reported for harassment on multiple levels by multiple people and towards CSDs too. People know exactly who you are and what piece of shit you are for harassment for what you did. It's all recorded. It's all done.
I don't care who the fuck you think you are, but you're done.
Wait, what did I do?
He knows exactly what he did.
So here she ended up surrendering, right? So instead of continuing the conversation, she just killed her character. But what's really interesting to note here is that before killing her for a second time, she had already implored her community to report him not just on Ark Raiders, but they stalked his Twitch, saw what his primary game was, and reported him in Sea of Thieves as well for harassment. I mean, look, I think we're all not crazy. We saw what happened the first time, right? None of this was directed towards her, he was doing this to other players as well, she
just so happened to come across him the first time and he was nothing but courteous in her chat as well. What's really funny here is that there's also a comeback to the whole partner badge discourse, right? Oh you came into my chat to flex it, like what? It auto equips! So by now this went from somewhat of a misunderstanding to, oh no, I'm trying to just destroy your career. I'm trying to get your main account banned.
Me and my community, not just from Arc Raiders, but from Sea of Thieves to your main game that you make content on. Shit was getting real.
This fucking cunt. This little piece of shit. Stream sniped, like, not stream sniped sorry. Q sniped with his friend so they could go into a lobby and play together in solos and pulled me into a room
acting like this. He's found this person like glitched in the game, blocked me in there and killed me and then tried to come into the stream about an hour later
acting all tough and mighty. And I called him an asshole and he was trying to flex that he's a twitch partner.
Tough and mighty. The guy came in and said, Hey, good game. And again, with the flexing of the partner badge, dude, I feel like this is our main issue right here. Who gives a shit about a partner badge? And I'm like, you know what?
You're actually not. about a partner badge.
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Get started freeAgain boyfriends, he only had one boyfriend, and it was his friend. And yeah sure you can argue what he said was sarcastic and kind of annoying, but I mean, dude, she left a Steam comment on his profile telling him to suck a fat one. I'm pretty sure the Steam comment that she left was actually on his friend's profile, and then she reported Nessie in-game.
So his friend was absolutely warranted in posting a sarcastic message like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you were here for this, Counted? Um... Like, it was all, like, it's all been screenshot recorded and reported to the proper channels. I was like, I'm not having it. Yeah. Not on my watch. Like, we're not, I'm not an idiot. I know exactly what you're doing, my guy.
Absolute cock**k stain. Sorry, that's offensive to c**ks. Sorry, he's the smeg that lives in c**ks.
Um...
So there you have it, another confirmation from her that she and other members of her community had mass reported him. And of course, she would spend many minutes after the incident calling him names, insulting him, etc.
But of course, that's not where things ended. Two hours after this incident, Nessie would be in another Arc Raider streamer's chat, as he always was. What he didn't know though, was that this streamer had recently played with Peach. They had collabed. Peach also happened to be in that streamer's chat, and when she saw Nessie, she would at
him and say, also be careful of Nessie. He's harassed me before our games and then again tonight in game. This would of course make the chat turn against him. How dare you harass her like this? Was someone saying, fuck you fat dog Nessie, ban that guy, you're a dog, cut. That's very Australian, got him.
I have to censor so much in this video, but that was Nessie's new reality, all because he was unlucky enough to run into her while he was playing the game like he always did. So look, so far, the only thing Nessie had done was kill her twice in a video game. Both of these instances were not targeted in any way. He just ran into her randomly. That's just the reality of how small the servers in Australia are.
It is what it is. What he's gotten for this so far, though, has been a Steam profile comment that's inappropriate. A streamer in her community mass reporting him in both Arc Raiders and his main game Sea of Thieves and Peach going around the Arc Raider streamer community and telling them to avoid Nessie because he is a harasser, making him out to be some sort of creep. Now, again, things to an extent could have still ended there.
OK, they could have somehow moved on, forgot about it. Whatever we reported him. Maybe it didn't work. She can just continue living her life. But that's not what happened. You might have actually noticed this by the balloons that are behind Peach, but she had actually turned 31 around the time this happened.
This made her friend that works at Embark Studios, the creators of our graders, to come into her chat and say, happy birthday. This person, of course, wouldn't just be anyone, it would be the community lead at Embark Studios, so someone who has a hand in anything involving the community. And here's how Peach would use this to her advantage to escalate this to ridiculous levels. Watch.
How are you? I'm gonna be, I'm gonna try my very best not to ask you an Embark question. I'm gonna do my research and I'll find an email address. I have been so excited. I would say just bang into the expedition. I'm being harassed by someone who plays this game is a streamer and yeah, it's a whole thing. And I was gonna ask if there's an email address to...
25%?
Oh my god. If there's an email on the website to contact about it, because I've got evidence and stuff. Okay. So this is how she framed it to the community lead at Embark.
I'm being harassed repeatedly by one player who's making my life hell. Is there anything I can do in terms of like sending it to an official email? What's up? To which the community lead would say, yes, send me a DM on Twitch. She had direct access to the community lead. And seeing that the community lead unfortunately probably doesn't watch my channel, she didn't learn the very important lesson that is, there are two sides to every
story. Conducting a ban based on one person's perspective is a recipe for disaster, but that's exactly what ended up happening. Nessie, who had been playing this game almost every day creating content for it, would be temporarily suspended for 30 days immediately afterwards for behavior that violates Embark's code of conduct. Because of this, he would end up creating a video that's unlisted called Message to Embark and sent it in his appeal.
He would point out how most if not all of the VODs that involved him and Peach had been deleted from Peach's channel. He would then proceed to go through everything we went through, in fact all the clips I showed you were from his video, showing everything, their first interaction, their chat messages, the second interaction, how she tried to destroy his reputation in other streamers chat, etc. By the end of it, he had compiled everything into a board on Microsoft Paint. On one side was him, and the worst thing you could think of where he was harassing her was just sending his friend to type his message saying, I just got lured into a room by a
guy that wanted me to help free his friend, he trapped me and killed me. On Peach's side though, we can see the Steam comment, we can see verbal abuse, we can see mass reports slash witch hunt, we can see chat rallied against me with many mean messages, so aka ruining his reputation and other streamers chat. So obviously it didn't make sense to ban him without banning her too. If he was going to be made into a villain, then she deserves to get some flack as well. He sent everything in the support ticket, but he didn't get a reply for five days.
"Your service and product truly is the best and best value I have found after hours of searching."
β Adrian, Johannesburg, South Africa
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Get started freeSo instead he got desperate and reached out to the community lead directly through Twitch DMs. This is where he would say, Hey Austin, I'm really sorry for reaching out this way. I believe you might recognize my name from an email you received from PeachXO. When reviewing her VODs for reasons that could have led to my ARC ban, I saw you in chat and assumed that the direct correspondence between you and Peach could have been what led to my ban.
I feel horrible throwing accusations around, but there is no doubt in my mind that whatever email you received contained either outright lies or gross exaggerations. I have sent everything in my support ticket, but have received no reply in 5 whole days, and it feels very unfair to be waiting when in the instance of my interactions with Peach, it was myself who was actually harassed. He would then send the YouTube video I just showed you, and then say, this link contains a full timeline of all our interactions and shows how I was treated. This is when the community lead would reply with, Hi there, I see this is an uncomfortable situation. I'd be happy to undo the ban, but I would need your assurance
that any future interactions with Peach would cease. I'm happy to have the same conversation with her. Nessie would reply with, Yes, please. All I want is this to go away. Please understand, however, that Oceania is small,
and I have no idea if if I see her in game and somehow know it's her, I'll leave the game, or run away. Whatever you want. So look, it's important to acknowledge that the community lead was in an uncomfortable situation here, right? Having to deal with the ban of someone that her friend was claiming was harassing her.
At the same time though, as a community lead and bothered talking to him, which eventually led to him getting unbanned early. However, saying things like, I want your assurance that any future interactions with Peach would cease is definitely interesting. The guy had killed her twice. That's it. There was no proof he was targeting her, there was no proof he wanted to kill her, in particular he was just playing the game and ran across her. That is it. But still, he was willing to be cooperative if he knew that it was her. By this point, Nessie was unbanned. Great. But the threat of PeachXO and her community
was still there. They were still tarnishing his reputation and they were still trying to mass report him from games that he played. I mean, it had worked. She had banned him for 30 days. If she found out he got unbanned, God knows what she would have done. So he decided to take the explanation video he had made to the Ark Raiders team and publish it on his YouTube channel, titling it, Streamer Mass Reports Me After Being Trolled In Ark Raiders. It would be uploaded on March 6th, 2026 and it would get over 10,000 views.
This was him pretty much defending himself and trying to repair whatever reputation he still had left in the Ark Raiders community after the damage that PeachXO had done. In theory, it's a pretty good idea. The problem though, was that he was dealing with PeachXO, and she was about to escalate this to unforgivable levels. Because shortly after the video would be uploaded, it would get copyright claimed. Nessie would receive an email saying, we received a copyright removal request for your video.
Based on applicable copyright law, we've removed your video from YouTube content used. This is from a stream VOD from Peaches channel content found in entire video removal request issued by Peach XO contact info is the same email you find on Peach XO social media. This was her look a copyright removal is a very big deal. Okay? It gives you a copyright strike. You get a few of those, your channel gets deleted. It's not like something you just do because you feel like doing.
This is like you genuinely messing with the law. Now the good news is that you can counterclaim. And unless the other person actually hired a lawyer, they can't, you know, counter again, they have to actually take you to court. The problem though is by the time you counter, many people who actually do copyright strikes have already won. They don't actually care about the video being taken down. They care about getting your personal information
because that's the only way you can counterclaim. And it's been a problem on YouTube for years. This has been a tactic employed against content creators by malicious actors who seek to harm them by getting their personal info. And unfortunately, that's what Nessie had to do to counterclaim this video. He had to put in his full legal name, his street address, his phone, his city,
his email, his postcode, and his country. Peach only had to supply her email address. He had to give everything. And yeah, you guessed it, the person who copyright claims a video, when they receive the counterclaim,
they can see all of this. Nessie would tweet about this and say, how cool that the person who got their chat to mass report me everywhere for killing them in Arc Raiders now has access to all this information. But now you think, come on, dude, listen, okay, yeah, she's been very unreasonable, she's been very weird throughout the whole thing,
she's not actually gonna do anything with this, right? Like, come on, you'd really have to be crazy, right? Well, it turns out that Peach truly is that crazy. Because shortly after Nessie's appeal to the copyright strike, Peach would tweet this out on her account, saying, Filing a police report on the partnered Twitch streamer who keeps harassing and stream sniping me and causing people to send death threats to me.
I yelled at him in a game. He stream sniped me and I told him via proximity chat that I've reported him and people who witnessed his shitty behavior in game have reported him too. They told me. He thinks I mass reported him, thanks for thinking I'm big enough to mass report them. He made a hate video about me so naturally I reported it to the e-safety commissioner and he still won't stop so now I'm reporting it to the police. I also copyright strike the video to YouTube as a nightmare to talk to about harassment, bullying, death threats. She would then end this by saying, how I love being a woman on the internet. Yeah so look, just in case you've watched this video so far and you don't have any common
sense, don't worry, I got you. All of this, from start to finish, did not happen because Peach was a woman. Peach could have been an alien from Mars, she could have been like one of those fictional aliens from Star Wars, whatever you want dude, she could have not even been from Earth. This is about her behavior, and the fact that she's making it about her gender is an injustice to anyone who's actually had to get harassed and stalked and all these things on the internet. These are real cases that deserve attention, and this case right here doesn't deserve to take any attention away from people actually struggling and suffering. I can't believe she said this with a straight face. At the same time though when it came to Nessie,
he was back to square one. The video of his that he made to defend himself was taken down, and now he had to live with the idea, going to bed every day thinking, are the police gonna knock at my door? Things were getting very serious very quickly. He understood that he couldn't do this by himself anymore, he needed help. So he reached out to a friend of his that also happens to be a Sea of Thieves content creator and asked him to help. And so he did. He went by the name The B. And on his channel, they would both upload a video titled, Streamer
wants my friend arrested for killing her in a video game. And within just two weeks, it would amass over half a million views. It would go over a lot of clips that were already featured in Nessie's video, and near the end of the video they would update everyone and telling them that yes, Peach claimed to have reported him to the police, because she docks his information through a YouTube copyright strike. How disgusting can you get as a person? At this point it was over. Nessie's video didn't really get that much attention, but this one, this one did. The Ark Raiders community was well aware of what Peach had done now, and it had even reached
people who don't even play the game. Because you were that bothered that the person who killed you had a partner badge? Come on, man. So as you might imagine, after the Beast video came out, and everyone was well aware of her actions, she would proceed to private her twitter account. No apology, no accountability, just running away and pretending like nothing happened. She of course has not streamed since then either. This all could have
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Get started freebeen avoided multiple times throughout this entire timeline. She could have stopped at any given moment and moved on, but no, we had to report him to the police. When it came to Nessie though, he had finally gotten his video back up on March 26th, 2026. So almost 20 days after uploading it. The memes that have come out from this have also been pretty funny, of course. But in the end, I think what really blows my mind here is that this was all done by a streamer with 2000 followers, right?
Someone who doesn't really have that much of a mass influence on people. One has to ask themselves, what would Peach have done in the situation if she had 10 or a hundred times the followers and the viewership? themselves, what would Peach have done in this situation if she had 10 or 100 times the followers and the viewership? Honestly, it's scary to even ask this question, but we've seen it multiple times, especially on my channel.
Some people let the influence get to their heads, their egos become inflated beyond belief, and they end up hurting people in the process. Guys don't play extraction shooters if you don't expect to get killed by another player. And if you do, please don't dox them and involve the police. Thank you so much for watching until the end. I really appreciate it.
And if you want to see exclusive content, including awesome high-quality drawings, as well as two exclusive yapping videos per month, then make sure to check out my stacked page in the description and the pinned comment. pinned comment. It's like Patreon, but in my opinion, better. I'll see you in the next video whenever that is, and I love you so much. Platonically.
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