Asmongold took to his stream this week to address harassment allegations from fellow streamer Kaceytron. His response was direct: he pulled up her Twitter account and scrolled through years of posts targeting him.
The clip shows Asmongold on camera with Twitter open, auto-scrolling through what he describes as six years of tweets from Kaceytron. The feed runs for roughly thirty seconds of continuous scrolling, showing post after post mentioning or attacking him.
According to viewers and Asmongold’s commentary, many of the tweets included personal insults calling him an “incel,” attacks on his appearance and lifestyle, and references to his family. Some posts reportedly mentioned his late mother and their relationship in hostile ways.
Asmongold framed the display as proof that he’s been the target of sustained harassment from Kaceytron, not the perpetrator. He argued that she’s been fixated on him for years while rarely earning more than passing mentions from him.
Kaceytron had publicly claimed Asmongold harassed her, positioning herself as a victim of misogyny and harassment from male creators and their communities. She’s included Asmongold in a broader narrative about being targeted by influential streamers.
The timing matters because Kaceytron is currently fighting a defamation lawsuit filed by Ethan Klein of H3H3 Productions. Klein sued after Kaceytron made strong public accusations about him on social media. Reports indicate she offered to settle the case for around $17,500, though Klein apparently declined. She raised significantly more than that amount through crowdfunding for legal fees.
Her public statements about the Klein lawsuit have positioned her as being bullied by a more powerful creator with deeper pockets. She’s framed herself across multiple platforms as someone being silenced through legal intimidation.
Asmongold’s receipts complicate that narrative. The documented history suggests a pattern of her targeting other creators over extended periods, then reframing situations when facing consequences or pushback.
Kaceytron built her early career on an edgy, satirical persona that blurred the line between trolling and genuine hostility. She played up stereotypes of female streamers while simultaneously mocking them, running donation segments where viewers could insult her. Over time, many observers noted the satire became harder to distinguish from actual aggression toward other creators.
The archive never forgets
The situation shows how social media history can be pulled up instantly to counter narratives. What someone posts over years doesn’t disappear, and creators with large platforms can weaponize that archive when their reputation is at stake.
For Asmongold, showing the tweets was a reputational defense. Rather than issuing statements or pursuing legal action, he let the record speak. The visual of that endless scroll made his point more effectively than any written response could.

