Xxn00bslayerxx Song Videos Youtube Videos ● | OFFICIAL |
Leo, known online as , wasn't a gamer anymore. Not really. Three years ago, he’d ruled the leaderboards in Tactical Siege Ops , his sniper tag infamous. But now, at 22, his wrists ached, and his kill-death ratio had flatlined.
It began as a joke. He’d taken a clip of himself rage-quitting a match—screaming "N00bs! All of you!"—and auto-tuned it into a 15-second loop. He uploaded it to YouTube as
Within a month, had seven song videos on YouTube. They weren't masterpieces. They were raw, weird, and brutally honest. One track, "LFG (Looking for Ghosts)," was a quiet acoustic piece about the friends who logged off one day and never came back.
The comments exploded. “This slaps unironically.” “Why am I crying over a n00b slayer ballad?” “Bro turned his gamer rage into a genre.” xxn00bslayerxx song videos youtube videos
The YouTube video ended with a single line of text: “xxN00bSlayerxx signed off. Thanks for the matches.”
That video hit 2 million views.
So he did something unexpected: he started making . Leo, known online as , wasn't a gamer anymore
To his shock, it got 47 views. Then 400. Then 12,000.
Here’s a short story based on the phrase Title: The Ballad of xxN00bSlayerxx
He never uploaded again. But every few months, someone rediscovers his strange little —part meme, part eulogy—and leaves a comment: But now, at 22, his wrists ached, and
A small label reached out. Leo declined. Instead, he made one more song: No gaming clips this time. Just him, sitting on his childhood bedroom floor, guitar in hand, singing:
His second video was more deliberate. He wrote actual lyrics about spawn camping and teabagging, set to a cheap synth beat. He called it For the YouTube video , he used clips of his old montages—grenade tricks, wallbangs, 360 no-scopes—but slowed them down, dreamy and VHS-grainy. It felt like nostalgia for something that had just happened.
“He wasn’t a n00b slayer. He was a poet.”