The defeat screen appeared. Justice stared at it for ten full seconds. His webcam showed a vein pulsing in his forehead. Here is the exact transcript of the 18-second clip that has since garnered 1.4 million views across platforms.
Then, the "coin flip" happened.
By [Staff Writer]
(End of article.)
According to the VOD (which has since been clipped over 2,000 times), his top laner—a Riven player—decided to split push bot lane while the enemy team was doing Elder Dragon. Justice spam-pinged "Assist Me." The Rivan ignored him. Justice engaged 4v5. He got a triple kill, but died in the process. The enemy team, with their remaining two members, marched down mid lane and ended the game while Rivan was auto-attacking a tier-2 tower. lordjusticelol out
One such moment that has been trending across Twitch clips, YouTube shorts, and Reddit boards like r/LivestreamFail involves the phrase
The audio of the headset hitting the desk and the specific cadence of "LordJusticeLOL out " (instead of just "I'm out") turned it into an instant audio meme. The phrase "lordjusticelol out" went viral for three specific reasons: 1. The Alliteration and Rhythm Saying your own screen name in the third person before announcing your exit is inherently funny. It sounds like a wrestler calling their own finish. "Stone Cold Steve Austin out." "Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson out." LordJusticeLOL accidentally created a linguistic meme template. Now, streamers in his community will say "YourNameHere out" before they fail a skill check in Dead by Daylight . 2. The "Calculated Rage" Most rage quits involve screaming, crying, or throwing peripherals. LordJusticeLOL's was cold. He didn't scream. He was clinical. He explained his thesis ("I've lost my sanity pixels") and executed the shut down. It felt like a CEO resigning mid-board meeting, not a gamer losing LP. That contrast made it gold. 3. The Relatability Every League of Legends player has had the "Rivan top lane" experience. Every streamer has felt the 11-hour wall. The lordjusticelol out clip isn't just a meltdown; it's a documentary of the endurance athlete's breaking point. The Aftermath: Did He Actually Quit? For the first 24 hours after the clip exploded, the internet was unsure. LordJusticeLOL went completely dark. His Discord went into lockdown. His Twitter (X) account, which usually posts clip highlights every 2 hours, was silent. The defeat screen appeared
(Silence. Heavy breathing into the mic. He clicks the "Play Again" button, then immediately cancels it.) LordJusticeLOL: "No. No no no no." Chat: Spams "copium" and "RIP bozo" LordJusticeLOL: "You know what? I've been doing this for eleven hours. Eleven. Hours. I am not doing the 4v5 dance anymore." (He pushes his keyboard forward roughly six inches. It clatters against a monitor stand.) LordJusticeLOL: "I am done. I am so done. I have lost all of my remaining sanity pixels." (He rips his Sennheiser headset off his head—carefully, because those are expensive, but forcefully enough to make a loud CRACK of plastic.) LordJusticeLOL: "If Rivan wants to play PvE, I'm playing IRL. LordJusticeLOL out. " (He reaches forward, hits the "End Stream" hotkey on his Stream Deck, and the screen cuts to black. The last frame shows him throwing his hands up in the air like a referee signaling a touchdown.)