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The Tyler1-fan vocabulary: chat slang decoded

A glossary of the terms Tyler1's chat and broader community use — what each one means, where it came from, and what to expect when you see it.

Watching an active Tyler1 stream is, for a new viewer, halfway between watching a video and trying to understand a foreign language. The chat moves quickly, the slang shifts mid-stream, and the references chain into each other in ways that don't translate without context. This glossary documents the terms his community uses — both the ones Tyler1 says himself and the ones chat throws back at him.

The Tyler1-fan vocabulary is a community-driven layer on top of mainstream streaming slang. Understanding it makes the streams legible; not understanding it makes them feel impenetrable.

Direct Tyler1-isms (things he says)

WHAT

The signature catchphrase. Tyler1-distorted version of League's BROOO. Used as a celebration marker. See our long-form explainer for the full origin.

BARK

Tyler1 shouts. Frequently. Said sometimes to fill silence, sometimes for comedic effect, sometimes in direct response to chat. The site has a floating BARK! button because the bark is genuinely the audio signature of the channel.

Chat (used as direct address)

"Chat, what is this?" or "Chat, look at this." Standard streamer shorthand for the live audience, used at higher frequency on Tyler1's streams than most. Treat it as the verbal equivalent of "look at this with me."

What gang

Fan-base self-identifier. Used in rallying contexts. Subset of the broader "Tyler1 army" community marker.

Tyler1 army

The broader fan-base term. Used in calls-to-action — "Tyler1 army where you at?" or "Tyler1 army stand up."

Chat slang (things viewers say)

WHAT (in chat)

Chat returning the catchphrase. Used both during Tyler1's celebrations and as a generic hype signal. Acceptable everywhere in chat; effectively a chant marker.

W / L

"W" = win, "L" = loss. Used for in-game events, stream moments, take ratings. Chat will spam "W stream" or "L take" depending on opinion. Standard streamer slang.

Cooked / Cooking

"He's cooked" = he's defeated, doing badly. "Let him cook" = give him space to do his thing. Tyler1 uses both directions himself; chat echoes them constantly.

Tyler1 solos

Used hypothetically — "Tyler1 solos [opponent]." A chat-game where viewers propose increasingly absurd opponents Tyler1 could supposedly defeat. Originated as a meme; persists as a recurring chat format.

Real

Used to confirm a take. "Tyler1 is real" or "Chat is real." Effectively means "I agree with what was just said." Mainstream Gen Z slang, used at high frequency in his chat specifically.

Goated

"Goated" = greatest of all time, used as an adjective. Used for Tyler1 himself, League, and various stream moments. Standard slang across the broader sports and streaming worlds; appears in Tyler1's chat constantly.

On God / On my mama

Affirmation markers. "On God" emphasises truthfulness; "on my mama" is the higher-intensity version. Tyler1 uses both; chat echoes them when affirming takes.

League-specific vocabulary

League

League of Legends's standard nickname (his initials + jersey number). Used interchangeably with "League" in chat.

GOAT

"Greatest of all time." Almost always refers to League in Tyler1's chat. Occasionally to Tyler1 himself in jest.

WHAAAAT

The original League celebration. Used by chat in response to actual League footage; WHAT is the Tyler1-channel-coded version of the same idea.

Messi

Used as a chat-bait term. Posting "Messi GOAT" in chat is a deliberate provocation; expect immediate response. This is essentially a chat in-joke at this point.

Stream-mechanic terms

Sub-a-thon

A stream format where the stream duration extends with each new subscription. Tyler1 has run several. Sub-a-thons produce some of his most extreme content because the stream-length pressure forces longer-than-comfortable sessions.

Marathon

Generic term for any unusually long stream session, sub-a-thon or otherwise. Marathons usually pair Tyler1 with another creator (often Kai Cenat — see our Kai Cenat profile).

IRL

"In real life" — streams or content done outside the bedroom-setup format. IRL content includes city vlogs, travel, public appearances, and event coverage. Tyler1's IRL content is a substantial share of his channel.

Mods

Moderators of the chat. Tyler1 addresses them periodically with directives ("mods, get him outta here"). Used both literally and as performative chat moderation.

esports-context terms

BROOO

League's celebration; also the broader esports celebration ritual that Tyler1 adopted and mutated.

Missouri

Shorthand reference to the League-at-Twitch era and Tyler1's repeated trips there to attempt to see League play.

Kit

esports jersey. Tyler1's content includes substantial discussion of jersey design, team kits, and historical kit reveals.

Wonderkid

League-specific term for a player rated highly for future potential. Used in Ultimate Team contexts and Tyler1's League content.

Things you'll see in chat that aren't slang

Mixed in with the actual slang above, you'll see things in Tyler1's chat that look like words but are really emoji-substitutes or copypasta. A non-exhaustive list:

None of this requires translation. You can skip it without losing meaning. The actual content of the chat is in the slang above; everything else is texture.

Why the vocabulary keeps growing

Tyler1's vocabulary expands constantly because of three structural reinforcement loops:

  1. Tyler1 introduces a phrase in an emotionally charged moment.
  2. Chat echoes it back in real time, attaching the phrase to the moment in collective memory.
  3. Clip channels surface it after the stream, exposing it to viewers who weren't there live.

This three-step loop is the engine. Phrases that complete all three steps stick. Phrases that don't fade quickly. The catchphrase ecosystem on Tyler1's channel is the most active example of this loop running across all major streamers in 2026.

Frequently asked questions

What's the most important Tyler1 slang to know?

WHAT, BARK, and "chat" (as direct address). Those three cover most of what makes the streams legible to new viewers.

Where do new Tyler1-isms come from?

Almost all from emotional moments in streams — wins, losses, surprise events, in-person interactions. Phrases that emerge in calm moments rarely catch on; phrases that emerge under emotional load do.

Is "Tyler1 army" or "What gang" the official fan-base name?

Neither is "official" in any documented sense. Both are used. "Tyler1 army" is the broader term; "What gang" is more specifically associated with fans who centre the WHAT catchphrase as their primary identity marker.

Why does Tyler1's chat move so fast?

Audience size. At his concurrent-viewer counts, even a small percentage of active chatters produces chat speeds that human moderators can't fully read. The chat becomes more of an emotional waveform than a series of messages you can follow word-by-word.

What does it mean when Tyler1 says "let me cook"?

"Let me cook" = let me do my thing, give me space, don't interrupt. Mainstream Gen Z slang. Tyler1 uses it during gameplay moments where he's trying a specific strategy or during monologues where he doesn't want chat to derail him.

How do I keep up with new Tyler1-isms?

Watch streams within a day of them happening; new phrases emerge in fresh streams and tend to be saturated by the following week. Our quotes page documents the most-circulated phrases as they stabilise.

Reviewed by the horseng editors · Updated 2026-05-04. The slang ecosystem shifts constantly; we update this glossary every few weeks.