The streamer Erobb221 has set up an almost impossible task on Twitch: he wanted to solve a 1,000-part puzzle live on Twitch. Especially nasty: the puzzle was completely black, there was no visual clues how the parts match. After 12 days of live on the air, the project is over, but not because the puzzle fits together, but because Twitch banned the streamer.
What kind of action was that? The streamer Erobb221 had announced that it would put together a puzzle with 1,000 parts in the stream. All parts of the puzzle were black.
As Sports Illustrated reports, he had only put together 3 parts after the first 2 hours.
After 288 hours live on Twitch, Erobb was at the end with his strength. It means: after almost 2 weeks he was “extremely tired, hungry and frustrated” – then the redeeming spell came from Twitch.
Erobb is the brother and permanent rival from Tyler1:
Erobb has to wipe the puzzle from the table because it is caught cheating
How did the puzzle go? Not good at all. Erobb laboriously assembled the edge and then stated that he would need about 1 hour per part and still had 860 parts in front of him.
When he had already progressed a good deal, about Nach 33 hours in the stream, expose spectators that he had cheated, and Erobb decided to wipe the puzzle off the table and restart. He was pretty at the end.
The chat had recognized that the streamer had apparently numbered puzzle parts to solve the puzzle more easily. An attentive viewer had caught him and repeatedly posted it into the chat (via Reddit).
Puzzle streamer is banned due to copyright violation
Why was Erobb banned? It is assumed that X has received a “DMCA strike” because he watched a episode “South Park” live in the stream.
That is the assumption: An experienced streamer, like Erobb, knows that something is a clear violation of the copyright lines and has a spell.
Therefore, many now assume that he could have provoked the spell of Twitch to get out of his own challenge with the puzzle.
Many suspect that he was deliberately banished to escape the puzzle hell
Even his own brother and permanent rival Tyler1 seems to assume that. When he is asked about the spell, he asks: “Erobb? Why was he banned? […] Well, hopefully it’s permanent! Did he look at South Park in the stream? Did he deliberately be banished so that he didn’t have to finish the puzzle? “
In any case, it does not seem to make it so easy to let it get away in the comments: the run is clearly incomplete and must be repeated-and from the start, it says from sadistic Reddit users.
Did anyone watch? It is like many such events: In the first few hours the event ran excellently and Erobb had 111,000 spectators on average, but then the numbers dropped rapidly. He was constantly on the air and switched between the puzzle and sleeping, but after the initial hype only had “relatively normal number of spectators” of around 3,000. We recently looked at some streamers where the ruble rolls: we calculated what 8 German -language streamers earn on Twitch per hour