2006–2017: Early years and content evolution White started making YouTube videos in 2006, when he most often uploaded videos discussing anime, as well as
anime music videos and gaming music videos, to his old channels. He created his penguinz0 YouTube channel on May 7, 2007. During this time, he streamed live on
Justin.tv from late 2009 to early 2010. In 2013, White was cited by
Tubefilter as panning YouTube's new comment system, which required a
Google+ account to leave comments on videos. In early 2015, White began speaking about various topics, including internet drama. He drew attention from media outlets for his commentary videos, which were often of discourse about online platforms and considerably critical of YouTube's policies. In December 2016, White began co-hosting
The Official Podcast with fellow
Internet personalities Jackson Clarke, Andrew Wagenheim, and Kaya Orsan. Media outlets sparsely referred to White's gameplay videos; his 2015 video on
Ark: Survival Evolved was referenced by
The Daily Star.
The Daily Dot wrote that White is known for his "sardonic commentary." In February 2016,
The Guardian included his video reaction to the
Fine Brothers' React World controversy in their coverage of the situation.
Kotaku referred to White's 2017 video demonstrating character customization in
Mass Effect: Andromeda.
2018–present: Twitch livestreaming and continued growth White has continued to make content discussing events on online platforms and their communities. In January 2018, White addressed YouTube, which removed his video discussing
Logan Paul's
suicide forest controversy. By March 2018, White's YouTube channel had two million subscribers. In May, White's video featuring a
pit of 5,400 balls, which he made for his husky Tetra, went viral; the
Press Association interviewed him about the video and media outlets reported it. In 2018, White began livestreaming on Twitch. In March 2020; due to
COVID-19 lockdown measures, he co-hosted an online
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate tournament on his Twitch channel with fellow YouTuber
Alpharad. In late 2020, White's popularity grew due to his Twitch streams about
chess and
Among Us (during its
2020 popularity spike) with popular streamers such as
Sykkuno,
Pokimane,
Nigahiga,
Valkyrae,
Trainwreckstv, and
Disguised Toast. In June, White participated in the first
PogChamps chess tournament, which
Chess.com hosted. He won "one of the more anticipated games" in the tournament, beating fellow Twitch streamer
xQc in six moves. According to
Dot Esports, the game was one of the five "biggest moments in streaming from 2020" and the clip of White's victory became one of the most-viewed in Twitch history, gaining over 1.9 million views by December 24, 2020. White won the tournament's consolation bracket. In late October, White participated in U.S. Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's
Among Us live streams. In November, White signed a contract with
BroadbandTV Corp (BBTV) to become a content partner with the company. Also in November, White spoke in a YouTube video about an increase in Twitch's
DMCA crackdowns. In December, White participated in a "
Pokémon Week" event on Twitch in which several creators hosted streams in which they opened boxes of Pokémon cards. In January 2021, White began hosting a game show titled
Hivemind with fellow streamer
Ludwig Ahgren on Twitch. On February 22, 2021, former YouTuber MaximilianMus deleted his YouTube channel after White labeled him "the worst YouTuber" in one of his videos. White was critical of Mus for maliciously raiding Twitch channels and claimed that Mus' audience had shared
child pornography via
Discord servers and his
subreddit. In May of that year, Mus restored his channel and accused White of slander. In October 2021, White participated in a
Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl charity tournament hosted by Alpharad and Coney of Panda Global. On July 31, 2024, White announced that he would be stepping away from
The Official Podcast and
The Red Thread "to scale back his time spent on the internet," amid controversy regarding Orsan and arguments with streamer
Sneako. On September 21, he was called to testify on the sixth day of the trial of
Mitchell v. Jobst, a
defamation lawsuit by
Billy Mitchell against
Karl Jobst for video essays covering allegations of Mitchell cheating his world records in
Donkey Kong (1981) and
Pac-Man (1980), of which White also voiced his belief in. White's January 2024 video on Mitchell, "He's A Cheater" — in which White started by "giving an apology" to Mitchell by
farting into his microphone before reiterating certainty that Mitchell cheated In February 2025, White released a video where he announced his apparent retirement and handed responsibility of his channel to singer
T-Pain, with whom he had previously collaborated. After T-Pain stood in for him in a single video, White clarified that his retirement was merely a comedic act. On June 10, 2025, White created an additional channel dedicated exclusively to gaming playthroughs and livestreams,
MoistCr1TiKaL Gaming, and uploaded its first video. On October 20, 2025, White released a video paying tribute to his friend and
chess teacher,
Daniel Naroditsky, who had passed away the previous day. == Other ventures ==