She showed up. He said yes. Neither of them has stopped since.
She was watching his streams before she ever said a word in chat. Then one stream she just asked — "hey, any room for me to play REPO?" — and fit in with a group of established friends within minutes.
She did not ease him in. She never does. She threw him in — Outlast Trials, Dead By Daylight (scary f*cking games), Resident Evil (the whole franchise, including Outbreak which required a mystery website, a Japanese ROM, and controller rage), Deadly Premonition, Silent Hill, Fatal Frame. He thought he knew what gaming was. Then he heard her laugh. The energy was infectious, her taste devastating, and he was starved for exactly this — he just didn't know it until she showed up.
Without her, none of what came after exists. Not the courage to commit to something long and ambitious. None of it.
The one who says yes. To REPO at short notice with strangers who became friends. To survival horror games he'd never have tried alone. To a psychological horror game she described only as "a nudge." He commits fully to everything she points him toward — and finds something he didn't know he was missing every single time. She did that.
Her laugh arrives before the joke lands and somehow makes it funnier. She shows up in chat, names the game, and waits patiently while he figures out what she already knows — that he's going to love it. Avid lurker, moderator, creative catalyst. She watched every stream of a broken open-world detective game from 2010 because she knew he'd love it. She was right. She's usually right.
"She doesn't lead. She knows. Those are different things."