They banned her..

5 days ago
168

Leaflit reacts to @HeroHei : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtPGBnzJjUY

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Hey everyone — it’s Leaflit. In this video, I’m reacting to a clip by Hero Hei called “What happened to Ironmouse is insane” — a segment about how Ironmouse reportedly got banned from the subreddit supposedly dedicated to her by a rogue mod. The accusations against this mod are wild: apparently they’ve been abusing mod powers, taking over multiple VTuber-related subreddits just so they can ban the creators or fans they don’t like.

I’m calling this out — and I want to explain why this kind of behavior is unacceptable.

Here’s what I break down:

What happened: According to multiple Reddit threads, Ironmouse was banned from a subreddit simply because the head mod was banned by her on Twitch. Rather than accept the ban, the mod retaliated by using their power to ban Ironmouse (and reportedly other mods) from the subreddit.

This is abuse of trust and power: Moderators on Reddit are volunteers, granted trust by community — but that trust can be abused. When a mod begins to weaponize the role — taking over multiple subreddits, controlling discourse, banning creators/fans out of spite — that’s not community moderation, that’s authoritarian control. Many comments in those threads call the mod a “power-tripping megalomaniac.”

Fans and community hurt by this: Subreddits often serve as hubs for fans to discuss, support, and interact with each other. When a rogue mod hijacks that and bans the very person the sub was about — it undermines trust in the community spaces and hurts both creator and fans.

I support Ironmouse — and community stability: Ironmouse deserves respect. If you run a fan community, mods should be accountable. Unchecked mods using subreddits for personal vendettas destroys what communities are built for.

Why I react — and why you should care: Even outside of VTuber space, this is a reminder: any system that gives people power over others — no matter how informal — needs checks and transparency. When moderation becomes power rather than service, it’s harmful.

If you care about honest communities, fair moderation, and creators & fans being treated with respect — like, subscribe, and hit the bell. And in the comments: Have you ever seen a subreddit get hijacked by a toxic mod? How should platforms deal with that? Should mods be more accountable?

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#gaming #vtuber #reaction

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