- Joined
- Aug 1, 2022
The problem here is that accounts on this wiki site are directly connected to destiny.gg accounts, and the only people who get edit privileges are those with paid DGG subscriptions. I don't think a bunch of DGG paypigs will have much to contribute, unless you think they're restraining themselves on a site controlled by Destiny and have dirt on him they know they can't get away with adding to that wiki. Far more likely they're just Destiny sycophants who'd look for every opportunity to suck him off.He also has a wiki hosted on his own site that covers a lot of stuff, and even mentions him wanting to kill the DDoS kid, despite him trying to hide this incident from Joe Biden or whatever:
https://wiki.destiny.gg/view/List_of_Destiny_Arcs#Jun_29,_2011_%E2%88%99_Destiny_calling_DDoS_kid_-_Starcraft_2![]()
Essentially, far more autistic people are tracking him that don't even post in this thread. I wish they would sign up and contribute here, but here we are.
Also am I supposed to be impressed with this level of cataloging? Highlights of his most prolific videos and a few curated playlists? I've seen deeper analysis on random individual Chris Chan drawings.
I'll show you autism that you won't find on this wiki:
Back in 2018 Destiny was complaining about how he felt he had to censor himself on Twitch too much, and while doing so he claimed he would sometimes tell his son Nathan (6 years old at the time) to kill himself:
A few years later we'd see Nathan telling someone else to kill themselves, which would suggest Destiny was telling the truth and that Nathan picked up the mannerism from him.
For what it's worth I can believe that Destiny saying that to his kid was intended like a flippant retort, sort of like saying "fuck off" to your friend. However I'd like to say it seems very unwise to tell a young child to kill themselves (or telling them to fuck off, for that matter) even if it's not intended to be taken seriously. What we see here is probably the best case scenario where Nathan copies Destiny's behavior but doesn't quite know when it's 'appropriate' to say it. A far worse case scenario would be if he took his dad's words more seriously and developed self-esteem issues because his dad is saying things to him that he also says to people he hates.