Okay, we got to talk about the pirate software situation. Basically, people are now accusing him of fraud. YouTuber and lawyer Legal Mindset has responded going over the potential legal implications. His moderator, Kronos, has also responded. Pirate Software himself has actually responded on stream and in several tweets as well, and it's not looking very good. Subscribe for the absolute best daily entertainment. Let's up those numbers. Now, quick context. Pirate Software is a streamer with a massive ego that has been in drama for over a month now. This is for various different things, but one of the main dramas was him spreading misinformation about the Stop Killing Games movement, which was basically a movement trying to get signatures to help put game preservation laws in place. Now, he responded several times, made a complete fool of himself because his ego is massive, and he can't seem to ever admit fault. There's also a bunch of side stuff going on. He had some wow drama where he got his party killed. People have been questioning his reputation as a so-called intelligent person. And in general, he just seems very fake. From his credentials to his gaming skill to basically everything about him. Shout out to fellow YouTuber Quinio who has covered this extensively. And no, this is not my alt, guys. But anyways, today I wanted to talk about the potential fraud he might have committed on Twitch. So basically, some DMs got leaked between him and his moderator Kronos, and it appears they might have been setting up donations to themselves to artificially inflate the hype train on Twitch. And then Pirate might have been paying back these donations to him behind the scenes. So, if you don't know what a hype train is, it's basically whenever you have a surge in subscriptions or bits on Twitch, you get this ongoing hype train and you can unlock emotes and [ __ ] like that. And of course, when people see there's a lot of hype behind it, and there's all this momentum behind these donations, it inspires other viewers to donate as well. And Pirate in the past also had one of the biggest hype trains ever. But because of this potential fraud, it sets up a host of legal problems. And in general, the drama has gotten so bad that Pirates's been losing tons and tons of followers and subs as well. But let's just start with the incriminating leaked DMs here. Pirate accidentally flashed this on stream. So, this is a conversation between Kronos, his moderator, and Pirate himself. Kronos says, "I Pirate Software says, uh, let me know if you do. Bits is going to be the best way to do it due to the return if you need to save it." Bits rather than tier 3es. Tier 3es might be better. Don't know. Bits is 82% return when you buy them in bulk. Have you bought any yet? I've done 100 tier ones on my personal and ready to do 40 tier 3es on an alt, so this alt will come up very soon. Can do bits instead or both. Kronos says, "Did 50k bits at 20 seconds left." Okay, what is the alt account? Serendipitous Bean. Okay, so this name will be very important. Apparently, this is this is Kronos' alt and he tries to pretend this is one of his like IRL friends or something. All part of the massive scheme they got going on. Where's the beef? Didn't mention this to the mods either. Now, the challenge is to clear the queue. Now, I think what they mean by clear the queue is clear the list of donations. Go go go through them one by one. Basically, the donations that don't get cleared get donated to charity or something. Anyway, so basically, Pirate, the absolute genius here, had his mod donate in bits and then had him create an alt account to pretend to be an IRL friend of his mod and then donate when it was actually just a mod himself. So, we got this absolute two stooges scheming here, trying to artificially inflate their hype train. Now, I don't know why you do this as a already popular streamer. It seems pretty pathetic if you ask me. I feel like the amount of ego you actually need to donate to yourself is crazy. But anyways, let's check out the stream that actually got him caught. Shout out to Quincio for these clips. But I want to give credit to the individual who had this archived VOD, and that is Scorpion from MK on Kiwi Farm. I wished I could place my head between them and go full burr mode and make what? So, this is him pulling it up on stream here, and I'll just go ahead and let the rest of it play as you guys will see that this is indeed pirate software. You can see his messages between Kronos, the ones that we were just showing you. And then you're going to watch him go ahead and delete the text to speech that he just heard. What? What is this? Where is it? I'm going to find this. I need to find your message. God damn it. Click. Click. You garbage machine. What? Who are you? Why are you like this? Number 420. deleted. Jesus Christ. Oh, that is uh not good. That is definitely a legit clip right there. So, he basically flashed his DMs on stream real quick. You know, classic uh streamer mistake right there. Click the wrong tab, open the wrong uh OBS scene. Plenty of streamers have made this uh mistake in the past, but uh I feel like it would be better off if he accidentally flashed some like prawn instead or even like I don't know good boy mommy girlfriend ASMR videos would be better than this. At least that way you're just a bit of a weirdo instead of uh somebody who actually potentially might have committed fraud. So obviously they ended up you know deleting the VODs, wiping out any instance of this clip on the internet essentially. But fortunately, we had random people who archived it and that's why we actually have this clip. So anyways, now let's get to Legal Mindset's analysis of the situation because apparently he can be liable in a variety of ways. Now, it appears his DM, the DM with his moderator, it appears his DM was purchasing bits to extend Pirates Hype Train by and in and of itself, and we're going to see that with the terms of service, etc. That probably wouldn't be a problem if the if the moderator was doing that on their moderator account, right? and the moderator was just as a moderator going and donating those bits. However, uh it was beyond just the moderator doing it. The moderator was donating them not with their main account but with an alt account which the mod made pirate aware of and which presented itself not as the mod but as a friend of the mod as a separate person who was not the mod which is not true. We're going to see that right today. But in that screenshot, we have some pretty damning proof uh that he was talking with the moderator in order to uh engage in this behavior. Says, "Let me know if you do bits is going to be the best way to do it due to the return if you need to save it." So, what he's talking about is what is the most efficient way for you to buy these bits and then extend the hype train? And the return would imply that he's going to get money back, that he's going to get reimbursed. So that implies that as this moderator is donating, Pirate Software is going to pay him back for what he gets. So it's going to be returned to him, right? So obviously that is blatantly not allowed. Secretly paying back the donations in order to artificially inflate the numbers is absolutely crazy. Now don't worry, this isn't somehow uh automatically generating money here. This isn't like an infinite money glitch here. Uh they still make a net loss because obviously when you donate, Twitch takes a cut, right? But they are scheming here to minimize the losses here and maximize, you know, the hype train here. And if you look at the whole picture, it definitely leads to profits for them because when people see this massive hype train, they are more incentivized to donate and that completely negates the so-called loss they're taking from uh the Twitch donations. And it's not even that much. It's about like 80% plus. So they only end up losing a very small percentage. By the way, I don't know what the hell Dan Clancy is doing. Wake up, buddy. It's time to stop gooning for once in your goddamn life and enforce the toos. This is a blatant violation. So after this, he talks about Kronos's alt, the serendipitous bean. IRL friend of Kronos. So Kronos is the main moderator and excited that they are free from corporate. Love your stream and what you do for the people here. There aren't many cooler, supportive streamers left once they get big like this. stay cool, bud, and tell Kronos that Ben sends the regards. So, this person is clearly painting themselves as not Kronos, not the moderator, but a separate IRL friend of this moderator, which is extremely deceptive if you ask me. Serendipitous Bean with 50,000 bits said IRL friend of Kronos and excited that they are now free from corporate. I know. Love your stream and what you do for people here. There aren't many cool or supportive streamers left once they get big like this. Stay cool, bud, and tell Kronos that Ben sends their regards. I'm sorry you had to know Kronos in real life. 500 bits said, "When is your pregnant man going to be real?" Dude, this guy can't be real. This guy actually can't be real. Here you are like a cringe lord pretending like that is an actual different person and not the guy you instructed to do this [ __ ] The level of secondhand embarrassment I have. Holy [ __ ] And this is supposed to be your extremely confident uh, you know, always right streamer here who apparently just is a god at everything, right? He can figure out puzzles and games immediately. He's a god at coding. He worked at Blizzard. He's just the king of everything, it seems. Meanwhile, here's what he's doing behind the scenes. Like actually donating to himself, bro. Also, I just love that in the donation he is glazing himself. You can't make this [ __ ] up. And I'm I'm going to say it's himself because cuz I highly doubt the moderator made it up himself. Unless he's just like an Omega S. I don't know what exactly is their relationship here. You know, this is a great idea. I got to start doing this. You know, none of the comments ever on my channel ever is actually real people, guys. It's actually me on my 7 billion alternate accounts. Anyways, now we get to the juicy legal repercussions on three levels from Twitch DOS to federal and state law. So, the first one is Twitch terms of service. Then we have federal law violations and state law violations. So let's look at the Twitch terms of service. So obviously you're supposed to use bits in a certain way. You're supposed to behave like a normal contributor and not do certain impermissible things. And a big thing here, and this is one that I think he has to really watch out for, is selling, offering to sell, trading, bartering, or transferring bits to other users in exchange for real or virtual currencies. So if this mod is using these bits and transferring them to pirate software and pirate software is converting that to cash and paying them back, that would appear to violate the toos. Okay, so basically the the rule there is that you can't exchange bits for real money. And you might be asking why. Well, the obvious reason is that it prevents money laundering or fraud of any type. The second reason is that they want to maintain control over the whole currency ecosystem, right? Obviously, Twitch wants to remain as the sole entity that monetizes the bit purchases. And and the third reason is probably tax reasons. Uh Twitch has to track the income of all the streamers, right? So, they got to make it easy to track. And if you allow this sort of um off-platform trades, it's going to be absolute nightmares, which is why they prohibit it, right? So this next part he talks about the relationship between a mod and a streamer and how that is related to the legal repercussions. Beyond that um you cannot use the bits to engage in any fraudulent criminal or otherwise unauthorized activity soliciting or receiving bits for any fraudulent or any other criminal activity. uh that could be a problem because of the nature of what they did because they engaged in a kind of fraud there where you were having a sock puppet account, a a fake account, an alt account, right? That is donating these bits, pretending to be a friend instead of a mod. Now, understand that a mod can very well be perceived as an agent or an employee of the streamer. So, if a mod goes out and does something on the streamer's behalf, they are an agent. And the streamer is what's called the principal. That's principal agent theory. And a principal can be liable for the actions of their agent. If you tell somebody to go out and do something and certainly if you're compensating them or reimbursing them for that, they are your agent. So it's as if the streamer was doing this. So it's as if pirate software was engaging in this. And in this case, it's doubly damning because he shows he knows this. He was told this and he didn't say don't do that. He didn't say, "Well, that might be against toos." He says, "Well, that's kind of shady." No, he's like, "Okay, great." He's like, "Okay, fine." In fact, he's strategizing on the best way to do this, right? So, we can obviously understand this. If you hire a hitman to go and, you know, kill somebody even though you didn't actually commit the murder, you can be held legally liable because uh that's like the agent principal thing. So, if Pirate was actually instructing him to do these fake donations, he's actually going to be equally liable. And we kind of already know that he was aware and he was sort of coordinating this whole thing because of those leaked Discord messages in which he was uh basically just leaked his whole plan. Man, you should really have that [ __ ] on like a separate PC or something like that. Uh I think that's what all streamers need to do. You know, have like two PCs, have your extra extra extra monitor. Now, another interesting thing about Pirate is that he actually hires his moderators. Here we have a tweet. Thank you to everyone in the community for the immense amount of support over the last 6 months. As a result, tomorrow we're finally able to hire on a number of the moderators and other staff full-time. So, that would be even worse if Pirate Software is actually paying this guy. That would make the principal agent relationship very solid there. By the way, imagine your full-time job is actually moderating for a Twitch streamer. Holy [ __ ] Like, I've I've covered some pathetic things, but holy [ __ ] I mean, how is that even a full-time job? Like, what do you do all day? Press time out like every 5 seconds? Holy [ __ ] man. And I'll even excuse doing it for I don't know, somebody is doing something big, something massive, something really impressive, but for this egotistical piece of [ __ ] you need to go do something better with your life, man. For for real. But I really wonder like what is he paying you in? Like, is this worth a full-time salary? Like, he's got to be paying you in like Runescape Gold or some [ __ ] cuz uh I don't know how that's sustainable at all. like how many moderators does he have? Is he paying every single one of them? And what do what are their tasks? What do they even do? Do they help him commit fraud? Now, this next part, legal mindset, talks about federal law. And this is pretty easy to understand. Basically, if I think, you know, my donation is going to be the one, the special donation that breaks the hype train record. You know, I'm going to be more inclined to donate, right? Uh I'm going to be more in incentivized to do it if I see so many other people donating. Everybody's in on this new hype thing, which is donating to this absolute loser here, helping him brake this record or whatever. But you're basically building this whole thing up on a false premise. It's potential violations of federal law. Uh there are three separate elements. So you need a representation, omission, or practice that is likely to mislead a customer. So the practice would be, hey, donating bits from the sock puppet account. The consumer's interpretation is reasonable under the circumstances. So the consumer is thinking this is a private party. This is somebody else. This is not the mod. This is not pirate software. They're thinking, "Oh, look, this person is extending the hype train." And so because of that, because of that misleading representation that materially led others to donate more to keep it going, it's a very well-known thing in scams and cons. This is something that confidence men do. They get fake buyers to go out there and jin up interest so that people will buy stuff even though it's overpriced. That is a very common fraudulent practice. So by not disclosing the fact that essentially your agent, your employee is going out here and doing that, that is misleading a reasonable viewer, a reasonable consumer. That's a possible interpretation of that. Oh yeah. I mean that is absolutely misleading. It's kind of like those um street videos in Paris. If you've ever seen one of those, there's basically a bunch of like scammers there, right? And essentially what they'll do is they hire a bunch of people to pretend to win the game, right? And these are, you know, they're employees or people they're paying for a quick buck or whatever. And these people will all win one after another after another. And you watching from the sidelines is like, "Holy [ __ ] this person's making all this money here. I got to try as well." And it's essentially a classic scam strategy where uh you think the odds of winning are much higher and you end up trying to play this game and you just, you know, end up getting scammed there. And it's obviously looking very bad for pirate and it always seems to be like the people with the biggest egos, right? The people who want to appear the most successful, look the best, the most popular. Uh and it always leads you down this bad path because you feel the need to prove yourself to everybody time and time again. And sometimes your own merits are not enough. So you got to invent [ __ ] You got to invent these creative ways of artificially inflating your success. Right? Then after this legal mindset talks about the state law in California, particularly about false advertising and the unfair competition law. So consumer legal remedies act. California has that. And I mentioned California by the way because that's where Twitch is. So, it would be very reasonable if a California donor, if a California whale brought a claim against a California corporation in a California court against, you know, Twitch and against uh, you know, Mr. uh, Mr. Pirate Software. But beyond that, there's California Business Code 17500, which leads to false or misleading statements or false or misleading advertisement. And this could be perceived as, hey, falsely advertising that you're number one on the hype train, that you're this hype train leader, that you're this person that needs to be donated to keep this thing going to breach all these levels when really most of those levels or maybe a lot of those levels, some of those levels were just artificially inflated by either Pirate Software's mod or the sock puppet accounts. I mean, who knows? We don't really have a full track on that uh yet. And beyond that, there's the unfair competition law. And this one I think is pretty juicy because this one would even allow other creators the potential to say, "Hey, this is unfair competition. You're allowing these people to inflate their numbers and get this hype train going on. Get featured on the front page, get highlighted, get hyped up, you know, by all of the platform and by the, you know, CEO himself, all this sort of good stuff. And that is unfair competition. That's giving them an unfair edge because they're doing things that are violating the toos freely. And hey, if you don't enforce this Twitch, if you don't do anything Twitch, this is a problem. Did somebody say CEO? Hello everybody. It's me, Dan Clansancy. My bad. Couldn't hear you. Over my extreme gooning sash with my king Hamas [ __ ] and my queen extra, of course, who I recently made CEO. I don't care about terrorist glazers. What makes you think I care about false advertising or unfair competition? You know, screw all that. I'm thinking of changing the Twitch currency from bits to only fans coupons. Now, that's a banger idea right there. Let me know what you think, fellas. Clancy out. Dan, stop taking over my videos, man. Holy. But yeah, basically Twitch is opening itself to several lawsuits at this point from several different reasons, from several different dramas, and all of it boils down to the same thing that they refuse to enforce their toos properly. They just can't be asked to do it. So, this next part, he talks about a few other issues. Advertisers might feel like they were defrauded. They might feel angry because they're saying, "Hey, we're running ads and they're supposed to be on the top channels." But if he's falsely inflating his numbers and he's being falsely promoted, well, maybe we're not really getting the value we thought we were getting. We thought we were getting a value of someone who was number one in the hype trains, who was leading in this pack of hype trains, and we're not getting that value. And even if they don't have a claim, they might express their anger. They might pull out. they might refuse to advertise. Okay, so about the advertiser thing, I'm pretty sure it would be way worse if he had um sponsors in particular, right? That would be some straight legal liability there. Uh I'm not sure about the midroll ads, right? Because I think there will be some level of liability there because pretty sure Twitch has some level of filtration system, right? Basically, they only play the ads on specific streams. I don't think it's entirely random. So, like uh certain streams with a specific view count or a specific genre will get a specific type of ad. Um, and that's the way it works on YouTube as well, even though it seems like you might be getting the most unrelated ads ever. That is the case a lot of the times, but it is more or less still tailored to the audience itself. Now, on more general types of content, it's hard to tell like uh like they might find it confusing what to advertise on a commentary video. Do you put finance stuff? Do you put cooking stuff? What the hell do you put there, right? But in general, unlike a finance channel, you'll be less likely to see like cooking ads or something like that. I think that's how it works. Okay? I'm not I don't work at YouTube, right? I don't work at Twitch, so I wouldn't know. So, basically, the point is if an advertiser ever felt like, okay, I'm paying this amount to be on this person's stream, but their numbers aren't even accurate. You know, I wanted this hype train or whatever. But, uh, you know, it's a very specific scenario. So, uh, it's likely we're going to look at the other option here. Beyond that, this could open the flawed fraud gates. If Twitch does not crack down on this, does not issue some punishment, some correction, well, others might say, "Well, I can do that, too." And then everybody is going and committing this deception, which would just open up Twitch as a really really poor perceived platform where everyone is essentially essentially artificially boosting their own numbers, which once again goes towards Twitch's impotent image. Twitch is something that I've Twitch is a platform that I've talked about a lot because they failed to enforce their own rules evenly, fairly, and justly. And if you have terms of service and you never enforce them, well, that's not a good look for your platform as a whole. Amazing. So, basically, the downfall of Twitch continues. All right. And I don't really know what incentive they have here to protect pirate software in particular. Now, Hamas [ __ ] I definitely understand. They're politically brained and, you know, several other instances, you know, anti-Semitic, etc., etc. But, uh, in this pirate software case, don't really get it here. Um, maybe they're not aware yet. They should be at this point. But, we'll have to see if they ever take action because, yeah, I guess they got to prove it beyond a reasonable doubt here before actually banning them. But, I'm just saying, you know, not a good look to have a potential fraud case being enabled here, obviously. Anyways, moving on to this next part. It's basically Pirate Software's reaction to the Hype Train record being broken by a VTuber. And he basically says, "Hey guys, don't accuse them of cheating. That would be horrible." Vetle is a name of a VTuber who ended up beating that record and getting to a1 level hype train. And this is what Pirate Software had to say when they found out their record was broken. So Veto broke the hype train record. Um Veto's Veto's record is at level 111. And that's wild. I I think I think that's freaking incredible to be honest with you. with help from Valerant. I mean, yeah. So, during that hype train, they got an extra 19,000 subs from Valerant, which is wild. Like, absolutely wild. So, I think they ended up with with something like 80,000 subs. Our hype train was 54,000 subs, but you guys had given 8 million bits, and that was kind of the difference between the two. No, there's no cheating. No, no, don't don't try to diminish what they did at all. I think Veto is an amazing content creator. I think Neurosome is cool as [ __ ] Ah, yes. Don't diminish their achievement, guys. That would be horrible. They weren't cheating, but I was. You absolute pathetic [ __ ] loser. The gall. The absolute audacity this guy has. Basically, I'll tell you what he's trying to do here. He's trying to get any future at this point, the cheating allegations were not made, right? Obviously, he's trying to get any future cheating allegations thrown off his back as well, right? Because by defending someone who probably didn't actually cheat and didn't do this scummy [ __ ] he sort of creates this protection barrier for himself, right? And it kind of reminds me of those uh roided out dudes, right, on social media who goes who looks at like a natty physique and they're like uh yeah, don't don't diminish this guy's work, right? Uh they they worked really hard for this. Meanwhile, they themselves are like roided out to the roeded out to hell. They're actually juicing. So they want that level of protection themselves by protecting somebody else. I would assume that cheating in terms of building up a hype train would maybe be to artificially inflate it yourself by chance. Uh coordinating with a mod of yours, maybe your head mod to keep a hype train alive. I would say that myself. Could be wrong. Interested to hear what you guys think. No, no, you're definitely right. That is 100% cheating if that is actually what happened there. And I've yet to see uh compelling evidence otherwise. you are absolutely inflating your numbers there, getting an achievement you didn't deserve and, you know, gaming the whole system there while pretending you did it organically, which would definitely fall under cheating. But anyways, let's move on to his mod's response. This is that Kronos person he was talking to. They've actually responded on Twitter in the most disingenuous way. I don't believe a word they're saying. I've spoken about this before, but I guess the truth isn't as compelling. Kronos vi on Discord. VOD was removed to prevent a 2025 repeat of people watching the 2024 video and messaging donators, myself included. Said this before, in January during the WoW drama, people contacted me and others about donating during the hype train record in 2024. This year, I did less from my main and did some on an alt. Now, I'll be honest, I'm a bit confused about this message, but he said that he did do 100 tier ones on his personal. Now, if you have an issue with people harassing you and you end up using an alt, I would figure that you would probably send most of the donations through that alt account, but sending a 100 separate tier one subs or maybe they were grouped in fives, 25, maybe did it all at once, that's still putting your name out there. That's still going to get people to message you. So, I mean, having the VOD deleted afterwards is going to solve all of it regardless. So, you shouldn't have to worry about if you donated it using your personal account. The VODs have been wiped. Yeah, I'll tell you why it doesn't add up. They are just straight up bullshitting. I'm I'm calling it right now. He is in cahoots with pirate software obviously. Okay. You can't trust a thing this guy says. He was pretty much enabling the fraud, you know, taking part in it as well. You know, being part of this whole scheme, going along with with it. So, obviously, he's going to try to protect his own image here. You know, this is like a bank robber going, you know, I only took down the security cameras while I was robbing the bank because uh well, you know, I had a bad hair day that day. I just didn't want the poor security guards to look at my bad hair. So therefore, I had to take it down, right? Don't nothing nothing to see here, right? I just deleted the VOD because of Definitely not because I'm doing some like extremely shady [ __ ] Then this next part, he talks about the mats behind the whole thing and like how they're trying to efficiently, you know, pull off this whole uh ordeal, right? When your viewers perform and confirm an action that requires bits within the extension on your channel page, you'll earn 80% of one US cent per bit used. And the remaining 20% is shared with the extension developer. So here's that 80%. But let's do a little bit of that math. So taking a look here, I just took a screenshot. I went into a Twitch stream, went to the bits, and you can actually get a 12% discount at 25,000 bits. So that puts you at a $38 price tag. Now, to make this a bit easier to understand, uh, one of my buddies here actually created this here, so special thanks to them. But we're showing that 82%. So bid is 82% when you buy them in bulk. What he means is if you spend $38 to buy 25,000 bits, donate them, the streamer gets $250. And then of course Twitch takes its fee, that 20% being $58, which means that $250 is the money going out like to the streamer and $38 is the money that you put into the system to give that $ 250 to the streamer. That's how you end up getting a return on your money of 81.1.6. But they're also trying to save as much overhead as possible and get it back to Kronos without bleeding as much money. Right? So they literally created this efficient operation here to make sure they lose the least amount of money humanly possible while still artificially boosting the numbers. I mean, it's very hard to argue what they're doing here uh isn't, you know, shady here. I don't know if they're going to have some sort of defense for this. So far, all the responses I've seen is horrible. and we'll take a look at Pirates response as well. But holy [ __ ] this is uh completely shameless. Anyways, let's move on to pirates response to the whole situation. Like that's been a public thing forever. I think I even talked about it on there. That's against though. No, it is not against to. It is absolutely not against to have somebody use their own money to buy subs and bits for the channel if they want to. That in no way was triggered by me, nor was he compensated for that or reimbursed for it. That is not against toos. So, it's a [ __ ] joke at this point. Just because you heard it on YouTube doesn't mean it is. In fact, I guarantee that you could go to thousands and thousands of communities across this entire platform and find lots of different moderators supporting the stream. Do you know why? Because moderators are generally the first fans of the stream. That is how that works in every community on this platform. And people somehow don't understand that because you're blinded by your dislike of me. And I understand that you're upset at me, but you have to stop making [ __ ] up to be mad about. It's stupid at this point. Okay. So, you're saying that your moderator was acting out of their own valition. They just happened to really fall in love with you, right? Uh you're like a beautiful egirl that they're donating all of their money to conveniently. My question is, what about the leaked DMs though? You were quite clearly coordinating with this person, right? And why did he feel the need to have to pretend to have an IRL friend who was donating, but it was actually his own alternate account? So, why did he have to even do that whole thing if this wasn't part of the scheme you were doing? I just want to see an explanation for that. If you can justify that, I I mean, so far it's just not adding up at all. And um with the evidence so far, I'm more inclined to believe that this was definitely some level of shady [ __ ] going on. Obviously, I'm not the court. I don't I don't I'm not going to make a final judgment on this. I'll let you guys decide. Okay? What what do you think from seeing all these clips here? Now, a definitive way to prove this would be actually the bank statements or the, you know, behindthe-scenes transactions showing that, hey, I didn't actually pay him back for any of this or any any of that. Um, I'm not buying that [ __ ] though. Uh, also, he's not going to leak all of his transactions or something like that. So, I don't know. I feel like uh nothing is really adding up here. and just pirate software's history in general. It's just not being a very honest person, is it? Okay, so somebody posted this tweet on Twitter just calling out Pirate Software. And he responded saying, "Nope, Kronos used his own money to do this and asked if it was okay to do so. He wasn't paid for this or told to do it either. He's a grownass man and can spend his money in whatever way he chooses. You can hate me all you like, but going after my staff is [ __ ] tier behavior. I do not hate a single person, but I don't spend time discussing what I'm going to do with my money with my boss." Exactly. That makes no sense. Especially not something that directly influences others by potentially spending money that benefits my boss. Oh my god. Thor is now brigading this post. Posting as a 190k plus member Discord server, sending them after a person. The mob is attempting to go after Kronos now. Oh my god, this guy's insufferable. So, somebody asked, "Did the 82% apply to your perspective instead of Cronis' in this conversation? Confused by the wording if not," he responds, "This is something I talk about with the community all the time. If you purchase 25,000 bits, around 82% of your purchase ends up making you a streamer and as such pushes the hype train more. It's not secret info. It's basic math. He wanted to push the train. So, I let him know as I always let everyone know the best way to do so. At the end of the day, it's his money. Nobody was told to do anything and he has his own man and he can do what he wants. Why did you have him use an alt to do it? Please tell me. He responded. Okay, no response. And then lie with his donation message on the alt account. You say this [ __ ] with arrogance while defending a message where you say, "Tear things might be better." Simple math, guys. Simple math. Kronos messaged me over Discord. It provided more context, but I also asked if he was paid back for the donations. He said he was not reimbursed for these. Yeah, lots of guilty people don't admit to their deeds. Sounds believable, but why would a mod spend hundreds and hundreds of dollars to collude with a streamer out of the goodness of his heart? Either a big fat liar or being cucked so hard parasoially. Current is a paid employee of Jason's. He likes to brag about how his mods are paid with benefits. So, as a company, they're actually rigging it. Yeah, that definitely makes it look extra shady. Pretty hilarious watching his entire existence crumble because his ego is too big to cope with being a roach. But your honor, did you know that he works for Blizzard? Anyways, click this video or you turn into a L cow like Pirate Software here. Okay, thanks for watching.