Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Kwebbelkop’s shift to AI displays his detachment from reality

|
|

YouTuber Kwebbelkop has destroyed his reputation due to his reliance on artificial intelligence (AI), and it’s a sad sight to see. 

Jordi Maxim van den Bussche, known online as Kwebbelkop, has amassed a staggering 15-million subscribers on his YouTube channel. He rose to fame over the last decade, gaining much of his popularity from the group he formed with his friends Jelly and Slogo, known as Robust. 

The trio would play video games and compete in challenges together, and their friendship became integral to their joint online growth. Their videos were evidently made for children and had a significant impact on the viewers who grew up watching them. 

In 2020, Kwebbelkop exited the group, citing mental health issues as the reason for his departure. While this move would be a blow to many fans of the trio, many seemed to understand the rationale behind Jordi’s decision. After all, mental health is incredibly important, and it was clear that Jordi was simply doing what’s best for him. 

Things looked to be improving for Jordi, but no one could predict the downfall that his channel soon experienced. 

In the years after departing the group, Kwebbelkop would primarily create surface-level gaming and reaction content. His new videos presented nothing of substance or value and, based on the plethora of commenters asking for Jordi to return to Robust, it’s safe to assume that many of his remaining views came from people hoping to see what had happened to their once-beloved creator. 

Jordi’s viewership dropped to abysmal levels, with his videos usually attaining a fraction of his former views. Over the last year, his view count dropped even lower, with many of his videos struggling to reach even 100,000 views. This is an especially odd sight when juxtaposed with his subscriber count, which remains sky-high thanks to his days of notoriety. 

It was clear that something needed to change, so Jordi altered his approach – and somehow, he made things far, far worse. 

On Aug. 1st, Kwebbelkop released his first video starring “Kwebbelkop AI,” a fully AI-generated version of Jordi. The video shows a cartoon-style version of Jordi “playing” a Minecraft challenge. The animation’s physical likeness and speech are generated by code analysing Jordi’s past behaviour, meaning that the real Jordi is nowhere to be found in the video. 

Needless to say, the video is completely soulless. Without any element of human touch, there is no reason for any of Jordi’s fans to watch it. They’d just be watching a simulation of what a computer thinks Jordi is like, not the creator himself. 

This approach to content creation – if you can even call it that – shows everything wrong with AI in the current technological landscape. Jordi’s strategy is lifeless, lazy and misinformed about why people watch content creators in the first place. It’s mind-boggling that Jordi expected anyone to enjoy this. For someone that was once a YouTube powerhouse, this move illustrates how out-of-touch he is with any audience on the platform. 

Naturally, fans and critics alike were outraged by Jordi’s strategy. As he continued uploading new videos starring his simulated doppelganger, angry comments about the nature of Jordi’s so-called “content” began to flood in.  

Jordi has taken to X, formerly Twitter, to defend his use of AI, calling it a “tool for creators” that will “enhance storytelling.” He expressed excitement over the influx of views on his AI videos, when in reality, these views are primarily coming from people wanting to see the absurdity of an “AI creator” for themselves. 

Once Jordi got the message that viewers were not happy with his content shift, his response was to introduce a new, more realistic iteration of Kwebbelkop AI. This new version is a scarily accurate depiction of Jordi that is difficult to tell apart from his real self. While he can never actually replace himself with AI, he’s doing a convincing job of making it seem that way. 

Jordi has started posting about his “AI girlfriend,” a troubling sign of a man who’s replacing more and more aspects of his life with AI. It’s a sad tale, but one that can hopefully prevent others from following in his footsteps. 

Kwebbelkop’s behaviour displays his utter disconnect with the world around him as he slowly moves into a comfortably simulated existence. His misunderstanding of content creation shows the beginning of his detachment from humanity, and this is something he’s unintentionally made quite clear through his own words. 

“I think the issue is that a lot of creators and brands have pushed the narrative that creators are all about having a connection with them [and their] personalities,” Jordi posted. “It’s not that deep. It’s just about having a good time when watching a video; [it] could be for any reason.” 

While his program is certainly technologically impressive, it’s downright terrifying for the future of content creation given the fear that he and his AI counterpart are essentially non-differentiable. What this holds for the future of content creation remains to be seen, but it can only be hoped that Jordi’s ideas do not pass on to other creators. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Carney’s Canada: the middle power once again 

It's fair to say that Mark Carney was elected to do big things. This preliminary trade deal with China is exactly what Canada needs: it puts us back into our rightful — and more importantly, traditional — place as a middle power.  

New Year’s resolutions are stupid 

New Year’s resolutions are a whole load of kablooey and we all know it.  

TikTok life advice fuels anxiety more than easing it 

Have you ever been doom scrolling during a bout of anxiety and come across videos urging you to make a massive change in your life, claiming to be your “sign” that your job is holding your back, your friends are actually unhealthy, and your partner might be cheating on you? These are the moments when “self-help” creators don’t seem to help at all. 

It is hypocritical to call the left “brainwashed” from a right-wing echo chamber 

Though online right-wing spaces are plagued with memes depicting the left as a movement filled with “brainwashed” members who only care about identity politics, the right relies on echo chambers and identity markers more than they’d like to admit — or perhaps more than they even realize.

Brock’s winter maintenance is disappointing 

When the snow falls in mounds and you have an early class, you shouldn’t have to arrive an hour before it starts to account for your car getting stuck in the parking lot, making the trek through unploughed pathways and slipping on slush while you walk across campus.

Embarrassment signifies growth in a perfectionist world  

Embarrassment is usually described as an unpleasant feeling, but in today’s age of performance and perfection, the feeling of embarrassment should be something to take pride in as a signifier of personal growth.  

Why does winter make me mourn what could have been?  

As it gets cold, the late October breeze metamorphosing into a biting chill characteristic of early November, I can’t help but lose myself to the melancholy that comes with reminiscing. Then, as the snow falls and the world turns white, I inevitably get lost in what could have been. 

I am forever running just to stand still 

I’m taking a second-year class this semester and I think it might be killing me.