Sodapoppin’s latest stream took a deeply weird turn when an AI face-rating gimmick paired him head-to-head with Jeffrey Epstein.
The site in question is called Omoggle, a name that mashes up Omegle with “mogging,” slang for visually outclassing someone. Users scan their face through a webcam, an algorithm spits out an attractiveness score, and the tool stacks them against another face in a so-called looks battle.
Soda, ever the willing test subject for any odd corner of the internet, fired it up live. The site then delivered its verdict by serving up the convicted sex offender as his opponent. Epstein reportedly clocked in at a 9.6, while Sodapoppin scored a 5.1.
Omoggle sits inside a growing wave of “rate me” novelty tools that streamers have been pulling up for easy reaction content. The scoring isn’t grounded in any real science, these apps usually lean on face symmetry, landmark detection, and whatever aesthetic bias is baked into the training data.
There are also open questions about what these sites actually do with the faces they scan, since most don’t publish much about how the data is stored or used. Sodapoppin, of course, scanned his anyway.
For the uninitiated, getting “mogged” means someone is so much better-looking than you that it’s basically embarrassing to stand next to them. The fact that Omoggle decided Epstein mogs Sodapoppin with a near-perfect 9.6 is the kind of result that breaks the entire premise of the app.

