
Tensions inside the streaming world are getting harder to ignore, and this time it is not just about allegations. Disguised Toast has stepped into the conversation surrounding Sykkuno, but instead of repeating what others are saying, he turned the spotlight on something else entirely. He questioned the behavior of people who once stood close to Sykkuno, raising doubts about how genuine those friendships really were.
The discussion has moved fast. Creators are reacting, fans are choosing sides, and opinions are spreading across platforms within minutes. In the middle of it all, Toast’s comments feel less like a reaction and more like a reality check. He is not dismissing what happened, but he is clearly uncomfortable with how quickly some people have shifted their stance in public.
Disguised Toast calls out “fake” friendships as debate intensifies
Toast spoke openly, and his frustration came through without any filter: "i get what sykkuno did was fked up and why people are dogging on him but watching his "friends" of years that acted close to him, used him for their own gain when he was popular- run to throw him under the bus for a few quick likes is why people say streamers are fake as fk."
It is a sharp take, but it hits on something many viewers quietly think about. In a space where collaborations bring views and growth, it is often hard to tell where real friendship ends and mutual benefit begins. Toast’s point suggests that when things go wrong, those lines disappear even faster.
At the same time, xQc added his own perspective during a livestream. He pushed back against how strongly some labels are being used, especially by people who know Sykkuno personally: "Why are the people that are close to him having takes that greenlights dogst lables that damage him severely?"
"And I'm the outsider, and I have to be some voice of reason, saying, 'Guys, I don't think he's a predator. What the fk is that? That's fking awful!' Like, it's just kind of lame. Like, stand on business, yo! Like, yeah, he did something bad, I get it, but it doesn't mean that, like, everything else is [unintelligible], fk it, like, come on, bro! I don't think that's fair at all. And if someone did that to me, I mean, I would cut them off. Sorry. Like, I'd cut them off."
Right now, Sykkuno has not responded publicly. Until he does, the conversation will likely keep growing. But beyond the headlines, this situation is starting to reveal something deeper. Online friendships can look strong on screen, yet when pressure hits, they can fall apart just as quickly.