LowTierGod confirms leaked Notepad showing $9,000 child support is real and claims he is being robbed

The streamer threatened immediate bans for anyone bringing up the Notepad while insisting he doesn't care about it.

(Image via LowTierGod on Twitch)
TL;DR
  • LowTierGod confirmed a leaked Notepad document showing notes about owing $9,000 in child support is authentic.
  • He described the child support obligation as being "robbed and stolen from" during the stream.
  • He threatened to immediately ban viewers who mention the Notepad despite claiming not to care about it.
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LowTierGod addressed a leaked Notepad document during a recent livestream, confirming the personal notes accidentally shown on stream were authentic.

The Notepad leak occurred when viewers spotted text on his screen that allegedly included an entry about owing approximately $9,000 in child support. Rather than dismissing it as fake or declining to comment, LTG confirmed the leak was real.

His explanation described the child support obligation as theft. He told viewers he was being “robbed and stolen from” in reference to the payments.

LTG’s response created an unusual situation where he simultaneously validated the leak while attempting to control discussion around it. During the same stream segment, he made clear the topic was off-limits in chat.

“I don’t care about that notepad either,” he reportedly said before adding that anyone bringing it up would face immediate bans. The contradiction between claiming not to care and threatening punishment for mentions wasn’t lost on viewers who clipped the moment.

Some unverified claims suggest LTG disputes the paternity of the child in question, though he hasn’t publicly pursued legal paternity testing according to available information. Courts in the United States typically allow paternity challenges through proper legal channels, though deadlines and procedures vary by jurisdiction.

What Notepad leaks are

Notepad leaks happen when streamers accidentally display a text editor window containing private notes while broadcasting. These incidents are common in streaming because many setups capture the entire desktop screen.

The leaks often occur when streamers multitask and forget what windows are open in the background. Recent Windows updates that auto-open previously used Notepad tabs have made these accidents more frequent.

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