r/Ryzemains is a place where League of Legends meets true depravity
An Apex Legends streamer on Twitch has been accused of domestic abuse after multiple clips of his behaviour were shared on Reddit’s LiveStreamFail subreddit.
“In 2021, we can pretty much discard the pretense that discussions on video-game-themed subreddits represent pure player opinion."
Apex Legends Director of Communications Ryan K Rigley went to chat with Reddit, and it's fair to say it could have gone better...
Shortly after the most recent Legends of Runeterra expansion, Guardians of the Ancient, went live on May 5, players began experimenting with the new content. Champions such as Zilean, Taliyah, and Malphite struggled to find their footing in the meta while others, such as Irelia, found a home alongside Nasus on top of the tier list.
It's a tradition like no other: Millions of players around the world log onto Hearthstone to experience brand new content that has been hyped and leaked over the course of a few weeks (or months) only to have the game crash, or lag, or inaccessible. On Tuesday afternoon, the ritual continued.
Well, that was fast. Before the upcoming Hearthstone expansion, Forged in the Barrens, goes live next week, players already uncovered the mini-expansion set to release halfway through its' lifecycle.
A little more than two weeks after the most recent Legends of Runeterra expansion, Empires of the Ascended, went live, players began flocking to the game's official subReddit to express their displeasure with a card that predates it.
Following the recent controversy surrounding GameStop, stock trading app Robinhood, and Wall Street, Democratic Representative of New York's 14th District Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — known to the public more commonly as AOC — hosted a stream on her Twitch channel to discuss the situation.
When Madness at the Darkmoon Faire launched on Tuesday, things were a little different. While many were talking about cool cards and decks they were experimenting with, more were focused on an announcement Blizzard had made earlier in the day.
Jeremy “DisguisedToast” Wang understands Hearthstone’s official subReddit (/r/Hearthstone) almost better than anyone else on it. He got his start curating content on the page before anyone knew who he was and years before anyone would ever see his face. Once that began gaining traction, he took his talents to Youtube where he has over one million subscribers across his two channels then began streaming on Twitch where his success has continued. Last Wednesday, Toast was streaming when it was brought to his attention that there was a thread about him on the subReddit that he should check out. Toast, who has seen hundreds of threads about him over the years, sat perplexed when he saw that shortly after the post had gone live it already had over 4,000 upvotes. Less than a week later, that number currently stands at nearly 13,000, one of the most popular in the past year.But the thread wasn’t showcasing a play he had made or a funny response from Blizzard on his content, like usual. It was in reference to recent videos he had made with clickbait thumbnails. While lighthearted in nature, hundreds of comments began pouring in calling Toast’s integrity into question and pointing out his clickbaiting ways.
Clutch Gaming came back to their original roster in Week 7, but they weren't able to turn around their tough situation. Although they got went 1-1 for the week, they're still tied at 8th or last place