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This was possibly the most successful Twitch raid that there has been. Although there may have been funnier ones – though this was hilarious – it was undoubtedly the best and most impressive.
It was the 16th of February and /b/ had been raiding Twitch all day, it just never got boring. Hours of time was spent by myself and others, taking amusement from the annoyance of the streamers. On every raid we would futilely attempt to try and convince them that System32 – the folder in your computer necessary for your computer to actually turn on – was a virus and they needed to delete it immediately. However, when /b/ reached Ironminer98, it was clear he wasn't the brightest and he fully believed us when we said we couldn't hear him – which was an obvious lie. /b/tards then proceeded to tell him the problem was system32 and he needed to delete it.
At this point, it was clear that Ironminer98 would do anything to get this dreaded system32 virus off his PC. Then came along two men, who found Ironminer98's Skype and pretended to be two Twitch employees. He listened to everything they said – and never doubted them once – even when they made him put a Middle-Eastern song on YouTube as it would "Help quicken the process". He listened to everything they told him to. So then, after they downloaded him more RAM and made him give his Stream Key out to the 50 people watching, they were finally ready to delete System32.
He couldn't follow instructions correctly, so one of the "tech support" told him to download Team viewer, software that would allow the Twitch Employees to actually take control of his computer. He obeyed without hesitation. When they were in control of his computer, they didn't know how to delete System32 either however, so they simply hurr-durred his computer. This was to the anger of the people watching, saying that they had wasted the biggest opportunity to finally get someone to delete system32.
Although it was disappointing that they didn't delete system32, it was very impressive they managed to convince a kid to give them full control over his computer, his stream key, and to delete vital files without even the slightest bit of verification that they were who they said they were. Personally, I class Ironminer98 as a win.



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Ironminer98

Ironminer98

Updated Feb 17, 2015 at 06:46AM EST by Z..

Added Feb 17, 2015 at 06:29AM EST by idontknowwhattoput.

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This entry has been rejected due to incompleteness or lack of notability.

To dispute this DEADPOOL flagging, please provide suggestions for how this entry can be improved, or request editorship to help maintain this entry.

This was possibly the most successful Twitch raid that there has been. Although there may have been funnier ones – though this was hilarious – it was undoubtedly the best and most impressive.
It was the 16th of February and /b/ had been raiding Twitch all day, it just never got boring. Hours of time was spent by myself and others, taking amusement from the annoyance of the streamers. On every raid we would futilely attempt to try and convince them that System32 – the folder in your computer necessary for your computer to actually turn on – was a virus and they needed to delete it immediately. However, when /b/ reached Ironminer98, it was clear he wasn't the brightest and he fully believed us when we said we couldn't hear him – which was an obvious lie. /b/tards then proceeded to tell him the problem was system32 and he needed to delete it.
At this point, it was clear that Ironminer98 would do anything to get this dreaded system32 virus off his PC. Then came along two men, who found Ironminer98's Skype and pretended to be two Twitch employees. He listened to everything they said – and never doubted them once – even when they made him put a Middle-Eastern song on YouTube as it would "Help quicken the process". He listened to everything they told him to. So then, after they downloaded him more RAM and made him give his Stream Key out to the 50 people watching, they were finally ready to delete System32.
He couldn't follow instructions correctly, so one of the "tech support" told him to download Team viewer, software that would allow the Twitch Employees to actually take control of his computer. He obeyed without hesitation. When they were in control of his computer, they didn't know how to delete System32 either however, so they simply hurr-durred his computer. This was to the anger of the people watching, saying that they had wasted the biggest opportunity to finally get someone to delete system32.
Although it was disappointing that they didn't delete system32, it was very impressive they managed to convince a kid to give them full control over his computer, his stream key, and to delete vital files without even the slightest bit of verification that they were who they said they were. Personally, I class Ironminer98 as a win.

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