Mizkif showed Discord screenshots on his stream that were presented as messages from Tuppeeyy. She says they were fabricated, and has the proof.
The screenshots allegedly showed Tuppeeyy criticizing Mizkif and making statements about her ex-boyfriend Lacari. After they circulated, Tuppeeyy says she received harassment from viewers who believed the messages were real.
Tuppeeyy responded by going live and pulling up her Discord server records. She showed welcome messages, join history, and audit logs to argue that the account name appearing in the screenshots had never been in her server. Her point was simple: if that user never joined, those messages couldn’t have been posted there.
The clip shows her walking through Discord’s backend tools, which track member activity and server actions. She emphasized that these logs cannot be edited, positioning them as definitive proof against the screenshots.
Discord screenshots have become a common source of misinformation in streamer drama. They’re easy to fake using image editing software, browser developer tools, or by staging conversations with fake accounts. The platform doesn’t make verification straightforward for viewers watching on stream.
What Discord audit logs actually track is limited. They record administrative actions like bans, role changes, and channel modifications. They don’t necessarily capture every message or deletion, especially if users delete their own messages rather than moderators removing them. Join history can be persuasive but depends on server settings and whether that tracking was enabled at the time.
The most reliable way to verify Discord messages is through user IDs and message IDs, which are unique and visible with developer mode enabled. Tuppeeyy suggested this approach during her stream, saying anyone claiming she wrote those messages should provide the IDs to prove it.
Some viewers pointed out that Mizkif may have received multiple screenshots, with debate ongoing about whether all were fake or just some. The situation points to an ongoing problem: streamers broadcasting unverified screenshots to thousands of viewers without checking authenticity first.

