2022 Twitchcon Foam Pit

2022Event / viral video / exploitabledead

Also known as: TwitchCon Foam Pit · TwitchCon San Diego Foam Pit

2022 Twitchcon Foam Pit is a viral video from TwitchCon San Diego where streamer Adriana Chechik broke her back jumping into a dangerously shallow foam pit, sparking outrage and Dashcon comparisons.

The 2022 TwitchCon Foam Pit refers to a dangerously shallow foam pit at TwitchCon San Diego 2022 that injured multiple attendees, most notably streamer Adriana Chechik, who broke her back in two places after jumping in. The incident, caught on video and viewed millions of times, sparked widespread outrage toward Twitch, Lenovo, and Intel, and generated a wave of memes comparing the setup to the infamous Dashcon ball pit.

TL;DR

The 2022 TwitchCon Foam Pit refers to a dangerously shallow foam pit at TwitchCon San Diego 2022 that injured multiple attendees, most notably streamer Adriana Chechik, who broke her back in two places after jumping in.

Overview

At TwitchCon San Diego 2022, Lenovo Legion and Intel set up an interactive "Face Off" exhibit where attendees stood on raised platforms and tried to knock each other off with foam noodles, Gladiators-style8. The losers (and winners celebrating) would fall into what was supposed to be a foam pit below. The problem: the pit was barely a foot deep, with a thin layer of foam cubes sitting on top of bare concrete1. The platforms stood about two feet high1. Multiple people were seriously injured, and the whole thing was livestreamed, producing viral footage that turned into memes mocking the event's safety failures.

TwitchCon 2022 ran from October 7-9 at the San Diego Convention Center7. On October 8, Adriana Chechik, a streamer and adult performer with over 800,000 Twitch followers, competed in the Lenovo Legion Face Off challenge8. After winning her round, she jumped off the platform in celebration, did a split in the air, and landed hard on her backside3. The foam cubes did almost nothing to cushion the fall. In the video, Chechik rolls over in pain and says "I can't get up," while an announcer can be heard saying "No, no, she's fine"4.

She was not fine. Chechik tweeted on October 9 that she had broken her back in two places and was heading into surgery to have a metal support rod inserted1. That surgery lasted five and a half hours and revealed the damage was worse than expected: bones were "completely crushed," there was nerve damage to her bladder, and more fusions were needed than anticipated2.

On October 9, Twitter user @ClippyChimp posted the video of Chechik's injury, and @JakeSucky amplified it5. The clip racked up over 8.4 million views, 7,400 retweets, and 122,300 likes within a single day5.

Origin & Background

Platform
TwitchCon San Diego (source event), Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
@ClippyChimp, @JakeSucky
Date
2022
Year
2022

TwitchCon 2022 ran from October 7-9 at the San Diego Convention Center. On October 8, Adriana Chechik, a streamer and adult performer with over 800,000 Twitch followers, competed in the Lenovo Legion Face Off challenge. After winning her round, she jumped off the platform in celebration, did a split in the air, and landed hard on her backside. The foam cubes did almost nothing to cushion the fall. In the video, Chechik rolls over in pain and says "I can't get up," while an announcer can be heard saying "No, no, she's fine".

She was not fine. Chechik tweeted on October 9 that she had broken her back in two places and was heading into surgery to have a metal support rod inserted. That surgery lasted five and a half hours and revealed the damage was worse than expected: bones were "completely crushed," there was nerve damage to her bladder, and more fusions were needed than anticipated.

On October 9, Twitter user @ClippyChimp posted the video of Chechik's injury, and @JakeSucky amplified it. The clip racked up over 8.4 million views, 7,400 retweets, and 122,300 likes within a single day.

How It Spread

The story blew up across social media within hours. On October 9, @Sw33tsTTV revealed that her friend LochVaness had dislocated her knee in the same pit. LochVaness later explained to NBC News that when she jumped off the platform after winning, "my foot hit the bottom and my ankle rolled and then my kneecap was on the side". Medical staff had to set her kneecap back in place on-site. She posted a photo of herself in a wheelchair, and other attendees came forward with their own injury reports, including back pain and ankle problems.

Washington Post reporter Nathan Grayson visited the pit in person and noted the foam "barely reached his knees" and the blocks were "not exactly soft". ASTM voluntary safety standards for foam pits at trampoline parks call for pits to be at least five feet deep. This one was about a foot.

The pit stayed open on Sunday morning despite the injuries. Staffers were still inviting people to participate (after signing waivers), though most attendees just took photos and refused. It finally closed at noon on Sunday. By then, #boycotttwitch was trending on Twitter.

Memes spread fast on Twitter and Reddit. On October 9, @Liv_Agar posted a joke connecting the incident to Twitch's streamer revenue policies, pulling 2,000 retweets and 64,400 likes. @SavinTheBees followed with an image caption meme that hit 5,000 retweets and 68,300 likes. Many posts drew comparisons to the Dashcon ball pit, another legendary convention failure. The incident also fed into broader criticism of TwitchCon 2022, which attendees slammed for overcrowding, poor accessibility, misgendering streamers in official materials, and inadequate security.

How to Use This Meme

The TwitchCon foam pit generated memes in several formats:

1

Comparison jokes referencing the shallow, dangerous pit alongside other infamous convention disasters, most commonly the Dashcon ball pit

2

Image captions placing the foam pit in absurd contexts (e.g., previewing "next year's foam pit" with an image of a concrete slab)

3

Corporate accountability jokes connecting Twitch's treatment of the injured to its broader reputation for mistreating streamers (revenue splits, bans, etc.)

4

Reaction format using the video still of Chechik's landing as a "that's gonna hurt" reaction

Cultural Impact

The foam pit incident drew coverage from NBC News, Vice, Gizmodo, Kotaku, and dozens of other outlets. It became the defining story of TwitchCon 2022, overshadowing every planned event, panel, and performance at the convention.

The incident raised real questions about liability at influencer and gaming conventions, where attendees are often encouraged to participate in physical activities. Legal analysis from multiple firms pointed to potential negligence claims against the organizers. The waiver debate played out publicly, with attorneys arguing that a signed waiver cannot protect against foreseeable hazards created by the organizer's own negligence.

TwitchCon's reputation took a significant hit. The decision to move the 2023 event to Las Vegas and emphasize safety protocols was widely interpreted as a direct response to the San Diego disaster. Chechik's experience, from the injury through the corporate silence to the revelation about her pregnancy, became a high-profile example of how platforms and sponsors handle (or fail to handle) harm to creators at their own events.

Full History

The corporate response to the foam pit disaster was a case study in deflection. When journalists asked Twitch for comment, the company directed them to Lenovo's PR team. Lenovo issued a brief statement acknowledging "incidents of TwitchCon visitors who sustained injuries in the gladiator game soft foam pit at the Lenovo booth" and said the area had been closed while they worked with event organizers to investigate. Intel told Gizmodo it had "no comment" and pointed reporters back to Lenovo. The San Diego Convention Center did not respond to press inquiries at all.

What drew the sharpest criticism was the silence directed at the injured. On October 12, after her surgery, Chechik tweeted: "I find it odd that no one from any of the convention center the booth or twitch has even had well wishes or said anything. I get not talking about it publicly incident wise but saying no nice words to me so far is kinda fucked up". LochVaness confirmed she had also heard "absolutely nothing" from Twitch or Lenovo. Twitch spent the days following TwitchCon posting upbeat highlight reels from the event on its social channels, making zero public acknowledgment that anyone had been hurt.

The waiver issue became a major point of debate. All participants had been required to sign liability waivers before competing. Some argued this shielded the organizers from legal consequences, but legal experts pushed back. Lawyers who spoke to Gizmodo said there could be a potential negligence case against Twitch, Lenovo, and any other party involved in setting up the pit, regardless of the waiver. Personal injury attorneys noted that waivers often do not hold up in negligence claims, particularly when the hazard (concrete under a thin layer of foam) was not reasonably foreseeable to participants.

Three spine surgeons consulted by Gizmodo analyzed the available footage and public statements. Dr. Oren Gottfried of Duke University School of Medicine assessed that Chechik likely suffered a burst fracture, a severe injury where the front and back halves of the vertebral body break apart under axial compression. "Think about the injury resulting in compressing the spine together like an accordion, but the bones are firm and stiff, and they break apart from the contact of hitting each other," Gottfried explained. He noted the lengthy surgery suggested spinal instability requiring stabilization with screws and rods, and predicted she would need a restrictive brace for three months with intense pain lasting at least six weeks.

Over the weekend of October 29, roughly three weeks after the incident, Chechik returned to streaming and showed viewers the surgical scars on her back. She could stand and walk, which was encouraging. But she also shared devastating news: she had been unknowingly pregnant at the time of the fall, and the surgeries forced her to terminate the pregnancy. This revelation added another layer to the public anger toward the event organizers.

TwitchCon 2022 broke with years of tradition by not announcing the location of the next event during the closing ceremony. When TwitchCon returned in 2023, it moved to Las Vegas for the first time ever, with over 30,000 attendees and "enhanced safety measures" prominently featured in the marketing.

Fun Facts

Washington Post reporter Nathan Grayson measured the foam pit at barely past his knees. ASTM standards for trampoline park foam pits require a minimum depth of five feet.

Chechik shouted out an off-duty EMT in the audience who recognized the severity of her injury and convinced booth workers to keep her still until help arrived.

The Lenovo Legion promotional tweet for the Face Off challenge, which invited followers to "tag one creator you think you could beat," was still live on social media as the injury reports went viral.

Chechik actually won her battle before jumping off the platform in celebration, meaning the pit was dangerous regardless of whether participants fell or jumped voluntarily.

A separate streamer named Zummers also broke her ankle at the same TwitchCon, though her injury was from jumping over a chair and unrelated to the foam pit.

Derivatives & Variations

Dashcon comparisons

Memes directly overlaying the TwitchCon foam pit with images of Dashcon's infamous ball pit, framing them as twin failures of convention planning[5]

Revenue split jokes

Twitter users connected the foam pit negligence to Twitch's then-controversial 50/50 revenue split with streamers, suggesting the company cut costs on safety the same way it cut creator pay[5]

"Next year's foam pit" edits

Users posted images of concrete slabs, empty pools, and other obviously dangerous surfaces as mock previews of future TwitchCon attractions[10]

Corporate silence memes

Jokes about Twitch's social media team posting highlight reels while ignoring the injuries, often using the "This is fine" dog format[2]

Frequently Asked Questions

2022 Twitchcon Foam Pit

2022Event / viral video / exploitabledead

Also known as: TwitchCon Foam Pit · TwitchCon San Diego Foam Pit

2022 Twitchcon Foam Pit is a viral video from TwitchCon San Diego where streamer Adriana Chechik broke her back jumping into a dangerously shallow foam pit, sparking outrage and Dashcon comparisons.

The 2022 TwitchCon Foam Pit refers to a dangerously shallow foam pit at TwitchCon San Diego 2022 that injured multiple attendees, most notably streamer Adriana Chechik, who broke her back in two places after jumping in. The incident, caught on video and viewed millions of times, sparked widespread outrage toward Twitch, Lenovo, and Intel, and generated a wave of memes comparing the setup to the infamous Dashcon ball pit.

TL;DR

The 2022 TwitchCon Foam Pit refers to a dangerously shallow foam pit at TwitchCon San Diego 2022 that injured multiple attendees, most notably streamer Adriana Chechik, who broke her back in two places after jumping in.

Overview

At TwitchCon San Diego 2022, Lenovo Legion and Intel set up an interactive "Face Off" exhibit where attendees stood on raised platforms and tried to knock each other off with foam noodles, Gladiators-style. The losers (and winners celebrating) would fall into what was supposed to be a foam pit below. The problem: the pit was barely a foot deep, with a thin layer of foam cubes sitting on top of bare concrete. The platforms stood about two feet high. Multiple people were seriously injured, and the whole thing was livestreamed, producing viral footage that turned into memes mocking the event's safety failures.

TwitchCon 2022 ran from October 7-9 at the San Diego Convention Center. On October 8, Adriana Chechik, a streamer and adult performer with over 800,000 Twitch followers, competed in the Lenovo Legion Face Off challenge. After winning her round, she jumped off the platform in celebration, did a split in the air, and landed hard on her backside. The foam cubes did almost nothing to cushion the fall. In the video, Chechik rolls over in pain and says "I can't get up," while an announcer can be heard saying "No, no, she's fine".

She was not fine. Chechik tweeted on October 9 that she had broken her back in two places and was heading into surgery to have a metal support rod inserted. That surgery lasted five and a half hours and revealed the damage was worse than expected: bones were "completely crushed," there was nerve damage to her bladder, and more fusions were needed than anticipated.

On October 9, Twitter user @ClippyChimp posted the video of Chechik's injury, and @JakeSucky amplified it. The clip racked up over 8.4 million views, 7,400 retweets, and 122,300 likes within a single day.

Origin & Background

Platform
TwitchCon San Diego (source event), Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
@ClippyChimp, @JakeSucky
Date
2022
Year
2022

TwitchCon 2022 ran from October 7-9 at the San Diego Convention Center. On October 8, Adriana Chechik, a streamer and adult performer with over 800,000 Twitch followers, competed in the Lenovo Legion Face Off challenge. After winning her round, she jumped off the platform in celebration, did a split in the air, and landed hard on her backside. The foam cubes did almost nothing to cushion the fall. In the video, Chechik rolls over in pain and says "I can't get up," while an announcer can be heard saying "No, no, she's fine".

She was not fine. Chechik tweeted on October 9 that she had broken her back in two places and was heading into surgery to have a metal support rod inserted. That surgery lasted five and a half hours and revealed the damage was worse than expected: bones were "completely crushed," there was nerve damage to her bladder, and more fusions were needed than anticipated.

On October 9, Twitter user @ClippyChimp posted the video of Chechik's injury, and @JakeSucky amplified it. The clip racked up over 8.4 million views, 7,400 retweets, and 122,300 likes within a single day.

How It Spread

The story blew up across social media within hours. On October 9, @Sw33tsTTV revealed that her friend LochVaness had dislocated her knee in the same pit. LochVaness later explained to NBC News that when she jumped off the platform after winning, "my foot hit the bottom and my ankle rolled and then my kneecap was on the side". Medical staff had to set her kneecap back in place on-site. She posted a photo of herself in a wheelchair, and other attendees came forward with their own injury reports, including back pain and ankle problems.

Washington Post reporter Nathan Grayson visited the pit in person and noted the foam "barely reached his knees" and the blocks were "not exactly soft". ASTM voluntary safety standards for foam pits at trampoline parks call for pits to be at least five feet deep. This one was about a foot.

The pit stayed open on Sunday morning despite the injuries. Staffers were still inviting people to participate (after signing waivers), though most attendees just took photos and refused. It finally closed at noon on Sunday. By then, #boycotttwitch was trending on Twitter.

Memes spread fast on Twitter and Reddit. On October 9, @Liv_Agar posted a joke connecting the incident to Twitch's streamer revenue policies, pulling 2,000 retweets and 64,400 likes. @SavinTheBees followed with an image caption meme that hit 5,000 retweets and 68,300 likes. Many posts drew comparisons to the Dashcon ball pit, another legendary convention failure. The incident also fed into broader criticism of TwitchCon 2022, which attendees slammed for overcrowding, poor accessibility, misgendering streamers in official materials, and inadequate security.

How to Use This Meme

The TwitchCon foam pit generated memes in several formats:

1

Comparison jokes referencing the shallow, dangerous pit alongside other infamous convention disasters, most commonly the Dashcon ball pit

2

Image captions placing the foam pit in absurd contexts (e.g., previewing "next year's foam pit" with an image of a concrete slab)

3

Corporate accountability jokes connecting Twitch's treatment of the injured to its broader reputation for mistreating streamers (revenue splits, bans, etc.)

4

Reaction format using the video still of Chechik's landing as a "that's gonna hurt" reaction

Cultural Impact

The foam pit incident drew coverage from NBC News, Vice, Gizmodo, Kotaku, and dozens of other outlets. It became the defining story of TwitchCon 2022, overshadowing every planned event, panel, and performance at the convention.

The incident raised real questions about liability at influencer and gaming conventions, where attendees are often encouraged to participate in physical activities. Legal analysis from multiple firms pointed to potential negligence claims against the organizers. The waiver debate played out publicly, with attorneys arguing that a signed waiver cannot protect against foreseeable hazards created by the organizer's own negligence.

TwitchCon's reputation took a significant hit. The decision to move the 2023 event to Las Vegas and emphasize safety protocols was widely interpreted as a direct response to the San Diego disaster. Chechik's experience, from the injury through the corporate silence to the revelation about her pregnancy, became a high-profile example of how platforms and sponsors handle (or fail to handle) harm to creators at their own events.

Full History

The corporate response to the foam pit disaster was a case study in deflection. When journalists asked Twitch for comment, the company directed them to Lenovo's PR team. Lenovo issued a brief statement acknowledging "incidents of TwitchCon visitors who sustained injuries in the gladiator game soft foam pit at the Lenovo booth" and said the area had been closed while they worked with event organizers to investigate. Intel told Gizmodo it had "no comment" and pointed reporters back to Lenovo. The San Diego Convention Center did not respond to press inquiries at all.

What drew the sharpest criticism was the silence directed at the injured. On October 12, after her surgery, Chechik tweeted: "I find it odd that no one from any of the convention center the booth or twitch has even had well wishes or said anything. I get not talking about it publicly incident wise but saying no nice words to me so far is kinda fucked up". LochVaness confirmed she had also heard "absolutely nothing" from Twitch or Lenovo. Twitch spent the days following TwitchCon posting upbeat highlight reels from the event on its social channels, making zero public acknowledgment that anyone had been hurt.

The waiver issue became a major point of debate. All participants had been required to sign liability waivers before competing. Some argued this shielded the organizers from legal consequences, but legal experts pushed back. Lawyers who spoke to Gizmodo said there could be a potential negligence case against Twitch, Lenovo, and any other party involved in setting up the pit, regardless of the waiver. Personal injury attorneys noted that waivers often do not hold up in negligence claims, particularly when the hazard (concrete under a thin layer of foam) was not reasonably foreseeable to participants.

Three spine surgeons consulted by Gizmodo analyzed the available footage and public statements. Dr. Oren Gottfried of Duke University School of Medicine assessed that Chechik likely suffered a burst fracture, a severe injury where the front and back halves of the vertebral body break apart under axial compression. "Think about the injury resulting in compressing the spine together like an accordion, but the bones are firm and stiff, and they break apart from the contact of hitting each other," Gottfried explained. He noted the lengthy surgery suggested spinal instability requiring stabilization with screws and rods, and predicted she would need a restrictive brace for three months with intense pain lasting at least six weeks.

Over the weekend of October 29, roughly three weeks after the incident, Chechik returned to streaming and showed viewers the surgical scars on her back. She could stand and walk, which was encouraging. But she also shared devastating news: she had been unknowingly pregnant at the time of the fall, and the surgeries forced her to terminate the pregnancy. This revelation added another layer to the public anger toward the event organizers.

TwitchCon 2022 broke with years of tradition by not announcing the location of the next event during the closing ceremony. When TwitchCon returned in 2023, it moved to Las Vegas for the first time ever, with over 30,000 attendees and "enhanced safety measures" prominently featured in the marketing.

Fun Facts

Washington Post reporter Nathan Grayson measured the foam pit at barely past his knees. ASTM standards for trampoline park foam pits require a minimum depth of five feet.

Chechik shouted out an off-duty EMT in the audience who recognized the severity of her injury and convinced booth workers to keep her still until help arrived.

The Lenovo Legion promotional tweet for the Face Off challenge, which invited followers to "tag one creator you think you could beat," was still live on social media as the injury reports went viral.

Chechik actually won her battle before jumping off the platform in celebration, meaning the pit was dangerous regardless of whether participants fell or jumped voluntarily.

A separate streamer named Zummers also broke her ankle at the same TwitchCon, though her injury was from jumping over a chair and unrelated to the foam pit.

Derivatives & Variations

Dashcon comparisons

Memes directly overlaying the TwitchCon foam pit with images of Dashcon's infamous ball pit, framing them as twin failures of convention planning[5]

Revenue split jokes

Twitter users connected the foam pit negligence to Twitch's then-controversial 50/50 revenue split with streamers, suggesting the company cut costs on safety the same way it cut creator pay[5]

"Next year's foam pit" edits

Users posted images of concrete slabs, empty pools, and other obviously dangerous surfaces as mock previews of future TwitchCon attractions[10]

Corporate silence memes

Jokes about Twitch's social media team posting highlight reels while ignoring the injuries, often using the "This is fine" dog format[2]

Frequently Asked Questions