xQc got an unexpected lesson in note-taking during a recent stream. While browsing around, xQc pulled up Destiny’s publicly available Obsidian vault and was clearly not ready for what popped up on screen.
Instead of a simple document, viewers got a sprawling web of connected nodes. Obsidian’s graph view turns linked notes into a visual map, and Destiny’s archive lit up like a city at night. Clusters, subtopics, and cross-references branched out in every direction.
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xQc’s takeaway was blunt. He said Destiny is well-read and has actually done the homework on the topics he argues about. Coming from one of the biggest streamers on the internet, that’s a notable stamp.
The notes weren’t leaked or pulled from anything private. Destiny publishes his Obsidian vault openly, and anyone can dig through it. The archive reportedly includes heavy sections on Israel-Palestine, January 6, and the post-2020 Trump election push, plus broader media and political research.
For anyone unfamiliar, Obsidian is a markdown-based note app popular with researchers, writers, and productivity nerds. Each note can link to others, and the graph view maps those links into a network. The denser the linking, the more intimidating it looks at a glance. Some viewers watching xQc’s stream genuinely thought they were staring at a video game skill tree before realizing it was a political research archive.
The moment landed during a wider segment involving Trainwreckstv and a conversation about debate tactics and streamer credibility. Train argued that online debates often collapse into rhetorical games. xQc pulling up the vault mid-discussion flipped the angle to preparation, showing just how much groundwork sits behind Destiny’s side of these talks.

