(Twitter / Chica)

Twitch has had a contentious run as of late attempting to make sure the platform is "safe" for all to use. From banning a guy for female-presenting breasts and giving short suspensions to streamers who have sex on camera to banning trans activists for discussing abuse they've received — the list goes on.

All of these controversies, apparently, pale in comparison to the "abusive" emote that Twitch recently banned from its platform for "targeted insults, bullying, threatening and inciting abuse." Here is that dangerous emote:

With its taunting, smug aura and devil-may-care attitude, some jokingly wondered how this emote wasn't banned sooner.

The jailed emote is "chicaL," a popular emote for Fortnite streamer Chica, who was understandably perplexed at the banning decision. Many shared their sentiments, joking that it was "unbelievably soft" of Twitch to ban the chicken.

However, while the ban seemed ridiculous to many, some suggested that the reasoning given by Twitch did not accurately describe its reasons for the ban.

Gameriv noted that Twitch has been banning all "L"-related emoji and emotes for a year now, as some more obviously mean-spirited L emojis could purportedly be used for obnoxious spamming in Twitch chats.

Others suggested it could be part of Twitch's widespread crackdown on letter-based emotes, as some users could employ letter emotes to spell dirty words.

(Twitter / @natarshaAU)

Twitch has not commented on the ban of chicaL, but presumably, Twitch viewers will feel much safer knowing they'll never again encounter a chicken lookin' kind of dumb with its finger and its thumb in the shape of an L on its forehead.

In the wake of the contentious decision, it seems Chica may also be considering a move to the growing streaming platform Kick, which appears to be a growing trend among many streamers who are continually getting fed up with Twitch's actions lately.

(Twitter / @ChicaLive)


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Comments 6 total

lecorbak

I can confirm that this has nothing to do with "threatening emote", twitch forbids the use of custom emotes that looks like letters.
I got one of my custom emotes not accepted for the same reason months ago.
So, nothing new.

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Rhettorical

I only heard about Kick yesterday, so if more big streamers are moving, maybe it'll survive and not go the way of literally every other Twitch competitor. The TOS is basically the same as Twitch's, but they don't enforce it. The "hot tubs and beaches" section includes "bikinis" in the title and HOOOOOO BOY. If you've ever seen a Chaturbate stream as the chick is trying to build up donos for a private nude stream, you know exactly what to expect. Checked it last night and there was a chick who was literally holding her bra on with just her hands and twerking for donos whilst wearing a thong.

But hey, at least Kick has a dedicated section for that shit.

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LastAngryWrestleman

I've seen this happen before when Microsoft tried to make their own streaming platform and paid a bunch of big Twitch streamers to come over. It didn't last.

0

Rhettorical

Yeah, that would be the main one I'm referring to. Sad thing is, it didn't have to fail. They shut it down because they don't wait until a product is hemorrhaging money, they bail out at the first sign of trouble. Case in point: Groove, Skype, Mixer, Nokia, Windows Phone. They could salvage everything and be a fierce competitor but they just don't. All their eggs are in the Windows and Minecraft baskets. Which are probably the safest baskets on Earth, but still.

0

mandrac

Just like raising a child in a completely sterile and germ free environment, raising childrens in a pure and inocent environment free of any form of violence or sexual content is going to make it reaaaal difficult for them once they discover the absolute hellscape that is adult life.

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