Good plans are born after hours, days, or even months of meticulous planning, but the best plans emerge from dumb jokes. One day, Twitch streamer Xmiramira was doing her thing when a rando came into chat spewing what she remembered as âracist crap.â
âOh,â Xmiramira said in reply, âa wild cock has appeared.â Now her communityâs entire anti-shithead defense system is built around that line.
The system, which she explained during TwitchConâs âHow to Grow & Navigate Twitch as a Streamer Of Colorâ panel, is elegant in its simplicity. It centers around an emote of a chicken hiding behind a bushâa sneaky cock, in other words. When community members start spamming it, that lets Xmiramira and her moderators know that somebodyâs said something racist or otherwise harassing.
âOnce I see all these chickens pop up, Iâm like, âWho did it?ââ she said during the panel. âMy moderation team is really good, so usually theyâre gone already. But we make jokes. We talk a lot of junk, and we make hella jokes. Sometimes it can be annoying, but most times we do make fun out of it, they get mad, and they leave.â
The emote is paired with a chat commandââ!cockââthat gives people a quick, one-click link to access Twitchâs report form and instructions on how to report this particular kind of abuse. The command is also paired with fun messages like âHave the yeehaw cousin-fuckers appeared?â
After the panel, Xmiramira told Kotaku that the idea was hatched thanks to her joke, but it didnât really take flight until after she talked it through with her community.
âWe discussed it for, like, a week,â she said. âWe didnât know whether we wanted to put a hot dog behind a bush, but then somebody suggested the chicken. That was a community effort. It wasnât just me. It was members of the community sitting with me and us actively discussing what this emote would consist of and what context itâd be used in. If somebodyâs trolling, throw the emote out. So itâs kind of an interactive, fun twist on it.â
Itâs also an inversion of one of Twitchâs most unfortunate trends. Troll-y Twitch users frequently weaponize emotes against people of color, the âTrihardâ emote, which is just a picture of otherwise nice guy Trihexâs face, most infamous among them. People spam emotes like that and the recent, thankfully temporary KFC chicken bucket at black people as a means of pointing out that theyâre different, or that theyâre not welcome, or worse. Xmiramira is glad sheâs been able to turn that on its head. For her, though, itâs just an extension of an established dynamic within her community: they troll trolls.
âI remember one day somebody put a dick in my chat, but they used text characters to do it,â she said. âAnd I was like âWhose dick is that? Thatâs a nice dick. I think you could put that dick on a refrigerator.â And the guy who made it got mad. He was like, âYouâre not gonna delete it?â And I was like âHell no! Somebody put that dick up on the wall.â And the community caught wind of what I was doing, and they were like âMan, thatâs a nice dick. Can we get a picture?â The dude got so damn mad, he just decided to leave.â
When it comes to Twitch chat racism and harassment, though, the effects become hurtful over time even if youâre able to laugh it off in the moment. Two of Xmiramiraâs fellow TwitchCon panelists, Jennasaisquoi and Majintaj, recommended using third-party tools like Nightbot and frequently updating block lists with things like new spellings of slurs and lists of emotes that people are abusing. Xmiramira, meanwhile, would like to see Twitch take a more active role in getting to the bottom of whoâs brigading streamers with racist garbage.
âI know that itâs a common practice for people to create dummy accounts to write bullshit and whatever they want to,â Xmiramira said. âSo what I would like Twitch to do is put more effort into penalizing the main accounts. I donât care if theyâre a small streamer or a big streamer, there are people regardless of size and notoriety and popularity that sit in their free time and harass people.â
âYou can block all 20 of those racist spam pages, but letâs work on finding the source,â she said. âWho is the main account? Obviously âIhaten****rs76âČ is not their main account. They need to put more of a focus on finding and punishing these people, rather than just suspending or deleting the BS account. They can make 20. They have bots. These people need to be punished.â