LowTierGod reportedly wins restraining order against mother of his child after representing himself in court

The fighting game world's loudest mouth apparently makes a decent lawyer too.

Man seated at courtroom desk with computer monitor
(Image via LowTierGod)
TL;DR
  • LTG represented himself in a civil court hearing and was reportedly granted a restraining order against the mother of his child.
  • The case appeared to involve allegations of harassment and unwanted contact, with claims tying her to LTG's online critics.
  • The order is separate from any child support or custody case, and the full terms haven't been publicly confirmed.
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LowTierGod, the fighting game streamer better known to fans as LTG, reportedly walked into a civil court hearing without an attorney and walked out with a restraining order against the mother of his child.

The proceeding appeared to involve allegations of harassment and unwanted contact. A central part of LTG’s argument reportedly tied the mother of his child to communications with online critics and trolls who have targeted him for years.

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The judge granted the order, though the exact terms, duration, and legal category haven’t been confirmed. Civil restraining orders can cover direct contact, indirect contact through third parties, online communication, and physical proximity, but the specifics here remain unclear pending the official court record.

The hearing is separate from any child support or custody matter. The case touched on the existence of a child only as context, and the judge reportedly made pointed remarks about LTG’s own past public comments regarding his daughter. Even so, the court found enough evidence to grant the protective order.

LTG, a longtime figure in the FGC known for his Street Fighter play, viral rants, and his infamous run-in with Viscant, has spent years dealing with a dedicated network of hatewatchers who archive and clip his every move. That same crowd is part of how the court footage spread so fast, since civil court proceedings are generally public record and many courtrooms now livestream or upload hearings.

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