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The Times of India
The Times of India
World
Barsha Dutta

“I’m a really ugly guy”: Asmongold sparks debate after claiming women only talked to him because of clout

Fame changes conversations long before it changes people. During a recent Twitch broadcast, Asmongold peeled back a layer of that reality with the kind of blunt honesty his audience expects. While discussing online trends around self-improvement and appearance, the longtime streamer reflected on how differently he was treated before millions of viewers knew his name.

The moment struck a nerve because it was not framed as bitterness or self-pity. Instead, it sounded like a matter-of-fact look at how attention works in the digital age. For someone who has never built his brand around polish or perfection, the contrast felt sharp and revealing.

Asmongold says women ignored him until fame made him “worth talking to”

Asmongold was reacting to the idea of “looksmaxxing,” a trend that pushes people to optimize their appearance at all costs. He dismissed the concept outright, saying physical tweaks would never shift how he is perceived. In his words, “I’m a really ugly guy."

He added, "The way that I look on my camera right now is the best that I can make myself look. If you look at any video of me, any photo of me, you’re going to have thousands of comments with thousands of likes saying that I look like a ghoul, I look awful, everything else. It’s just that RNG.”

He then turned the focus to his younger years, explaining that attention from women was almost nonexistent before streaming success entered the picture. That dynamic changed only after his channel exploded. “Anytime that a girl would interact with me, it’s like, ‘ok, now this has happened because you’re a popular streamer and people know you.’ I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad thing always.”

The admission fits into a larger pattern of how Asmongold presents himself online. He openly documents his messy living space, poor diet, and resistance to lifestyle upgrades that other creators embrace. Critics often mock those choices, yet his transparency keeps viewers engaged.

What stood out most was not the self-criticism, but the clarity. Asmongold was not asking for sympathy. He was pointing out how visibility reshapes social value, sometimes overnight. In a space obsessed with image, his comments landed because they felt unfiltered, uncomfortable, and very real.

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