9 Year Old Army

2018Fandom nickname / community identitysemi-active

Also known as: Bro Army (predecessor name) · Nine Year Olds

9 Year Old Army is the 2018 reclaimed insult-turned-rallying cry for PewDiePie's fanbase, who unified under the label during the massive T-Series subscriber war.

The 9-Year-Old Army is a tongue-in-cheek label adopted by fans of YouTuber PewDiePie. Twitch streamer Alinity first used "9-year-olds" as an insult toward PewDiePie's audience during a copyright dispute in May 20183. PewDiePie's fanbase immediately reclaimed the name, and it became their rallying identity through the massive PewDiePie vs. T-Series subscriber war of late 2018.

TL;DR

The 9-Year-Old Army is a tongue-in-cheek label adopted by fans of YouTuber PewDiePie.

Overview

The 9-Year-Old Army refers to the collective fanbase of Felix "PewDiePie" Kjellberg, the Swedish YouTuber who held the title of most-subscribed individual creator for years. Before the name existed, PewDiePie's fans were known as the "Bro Army"3. The switch happened organically after a Twitch streamer tried to mock his audience's maturity level and the entire fanbase decided the insult was actually funny. The name stuck because it played into the self-deprecating, irony-soaked humor PewDiePie's community was already known for.

Members of the 9-Year-Old Army are characterized by intense loyalty and coordinated action. Urban Dictionary describes them as "a special kind of specimen who specifically devote their lives to following a certain god known as Pewdiepie"1. The label carries a dual edge: it's both a joke about being childish and an unironic declaration of fandom devotion.

In May 2018, Twitch streamer Alinity got into a public feud with PewDiePie over copyright strikes on YouTube3. During the dispute, she dismissed his fans by calling them "9-year-olds," implying they were too young and immature to have valid opinions. On May 23rd, 2018, PewDiePie uploaded a video titled "Twitch Drama #2" where he directly addressed Alinity's comments and the "9-year-olds" label3. Rather than pushing back on the insult, PewDiePie leaned into it with amusement, which signaled to his audience that they should own the name.

The community ran with it immediately. The "Bro Army" identity faded almost overnight as fans rebranded themselves the 9-Year-Old Army across YouTube comments, Reddit posts, and social media bios3.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitch (coinage), YouTube (adoption)
Key People
Alinity, PewDiePie
Date
2018
Year
2018

In May 2018, Twitch streamer Alinity got into a public feud with PewDiePie over copyright strikes on YouTube. During the dispute, she dismissed his fans by calling them "9-year-olds," implying they were too young and immature to have valid opinions. On May 23rd, 2018, PewDiePie uploaded a video titled "Twitch Drama #2" where he directly addressed Alinity's comments and the "9-year-olds" label. Rather than pushing back on the insult, PewDiePie leaned into it with amusement, which signaled to his audience that they should own the name.

The community ran with it immediately. The "Bro Army" identity faded almost overnight as fans rebranded themselves the 9-Year-Old Army across YouTube comments, Reddit posts, and social media bios.

How It Spread

On September 8th, 2018, Urban Dictionary user TankBeatsEverything submitted the first formal definition for "9 year old army," calling it a group who "specifically devote their lives to following a certain god known as Pewdiepie". The entry framed the fandom in mock-religious terms, describing membership like joining a cult where you "must spam other channels with cringey comments carrying their lord's message".

The term exploded in October 2018 when the PewDiePie vs. T-Series subscriber war heated up. On October 29th, YouTuber Grandayy uploaded a Voiceoverpete video titled "Attention All 9 Year Old Gamers," urging viewers to subscribe to PewDiePie in his battle against the Indian music label. The video pulled in over 1.1 million views and 8,000 comments within three months.

On November 1st, 2018, Quora user Louie Tangcalagan answered the question "Why does PewDiePie call his fans 9 years old?" by explaining the Alinity copyright feud that sparked the whole thing. By this point the name had spread well beyond PewDiePie's own channel. Urban Dictionary entries multiplied, with one noting that "as soon as one of the 9 year olds turn ten they go straight to Ali A," a joke about the fandom's supposed age ceiling. Another definition claimed the army had "approximately 88,393,093,230 troops," a playful exaggeration that matched the community's over-the-top energy during the subscriber war.

The 9-Year-Old Army identity was inseparable from the T-Series rivalry. Fans organized coordinated subscribe campaigns, created propaganda-style meme content, and treated the whole thing like an actual military operation, all while winking at the absurdity of it.

How to Use This Meme

The 9-Year-Old Army identity is less of a meme template and more of a community label. Common usage patterns include:

- Self-identification: Declaring yourself part of the "9-Year-Old Army" in YouTube comments, Reddit flairs, Twitter bios, or Discord usernames to signal PewDiePie fandom - Recruitment messaging: Telling others to "subscribe to PewDiePie" and join the army, especially during the T-Series subscriber war era - Ironic age jokes: Playing up the "we are all literally 9 years old" bit, sometimes adding that members who turn 10 are "kicked out" or "drafted" to other channels - Comment raids: Posting coordinated messages on other creators' videos, typically pro-PewDiePie slogans framed as orders from the army

The tone is always self-aware. Nobody actually claims to be nine. The humor comes from committing fully to the bit while everyone involved knows it's absurd.

Cultural Impact

The 9-Year-Old Army name became one of the defining elements of the PewDiePie vs. T-Series subscriber war, which was itself one of YouTube's biggest community events in 2018-2019. The name gave PewDiePie's fans a unified identity that made coordinated action feel like a game rather than harassment, though the line between fun and targeted spam was sometimes thin.

The Grandayy "Attention All 9 Year Old Gamers" video, which hit 1.1 million views, showed how the identity could be packaged into shareable content that spread the subscribe message beyond PewDiePie's existing audience. The name also fed into broader conversations about parasocial fandom on YouTube and how creator communities develop cult-like in-group language.

Fun Facts

The name was originally meant as an insult. Alinity wanted to mock PewDiePie's fans, not give them a beloved identity.

PewDiePie's fans previously called themselves the "Bro Army," a name that dates back to his earlier era on YouTube.

One Urban Dictionary entry humorously claimed the 9-Year-Old Army had "approximately 88,393,093,230 troops," a number far exceeding Earth's population.

The community developed a lore where fans who turned 10 would supposedly "go straight to Ali A," a rival YouTuber, creating a running joke about forced retirement from the army.

Frequently Asked Questions

9 Year Old Army

2018Fandom nickname / community identitysemi-active

Also known as: Bro Army (predecessor name) · Nine Year Olds

9 Year Old Army is the 2018 reclaimed insult-turned-rallying cry for PewDiePie's fanbase, who unified under the label during the massive T-Series subscriber war.

The 9-Year-Old Army is a tongue-in-cheek label adopted by fans of YouTuber PewDiePie. Twitch streamer Alinity first used "9-year-olds" as an insult toward PewDiePie's audience during a copyright dispute in May 2018. PewDiePie's fanbase immediately reclaimed the name, and it became their rallying identity through the massive PewDiePie vs. T-Series subscriber war of late 2018.

TL;DR

The 9-Year-Old Army is a tongue-in-cheek label adopted by fans of YouTuber PewDiePie.

Overview

The 9-Year-Old Army refers to the collective fanbase of Felix "PewDiePie" Kjellberg, the Swedish YouTuber who held the title of most-subscribed individual creator for years. Before the name existed, PewDiePie's fans were known as the "Bro Army". The switch happened organically after a Twitch streamer tried to mock his audience's maturity level and the entire fanbase decided the insult was actually funny. The name stuck because it played into the self-deprecating, irony-soaked humor PewDiePie's community was already known for.

Members of the 9-Year-Old Army are characterized by intense loyalty and coordinated action. Urban Dictionary describes them as "a special kind of specimen who specifically devote their lives to following a certain god known as Pewdiepie". The label carries a dual edge: it's both a joke about being childish and an unironic declaration of fandom devotion.

In May 2018, Twitch streamer Alinity got into a public feud with PewDiePie over copyright strikes on YouTube. During the dispute, she dismissed his fans by calling them "9-year-olds," implying they were too young and immature to have valid opinions. On May 23rd, 2018, PewDiePie uploaded a video titled "Twitch Drama #2" where he directly addressed Alinity's comments and the "9-year-olds" label. Rather than pushing back on the insult, PewDiePie leaned into it with amusement, which signaled to his audience that they should own the name.

The community ran with it immediately. The "Bro Army" identity faded almost overnight as fans rebranded themselves the 9-Year-Old Army across YouTube comments, Reddit posts, and social media bios.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitch (coinage), YouTube (adoption)
Key People
Alinity, PewDiePie
Date
2018
Year
2018

In May 2018, Twitch streamer Alinity got into a public feud with PewDiePie over copyright strikes on YouTube. During the dispute, she dismissed his fans by calling them "9-year-olds," implying they were too young and immature to have valid opinions. On May 23rd, 2018, PewDiePie uploaded a video titled "Twitch Drama #2" where he directly addressed Alinity's comments and the "9-year-olds" label. Rather than pushing back on the insult, PewDiePie leaned into it with amusement, which signaled to his audience that they should own the name.

The community ran with it immediately. The "Bro Army" identity faded almost overnight as fans rebranded themselves the 9-Year-Old Army across YouTube comments, Reddit posts, and social media bios.

How It Spread

On September 8th, 2018, Urban Dictionary user TankBeatsEverything submitted the first formal definition for "9 year old army," calling it a group who "specifically devote their lives to following a certain god known as Pewdiepie". The entry framed the fandom in mock-religious terms, describing membership like joining a cult where you "must spam other channels with cringey comments carrying their lord's message".

The term exploded in October 2018 when the PewDiePie vs. T-Series subscriber war heated up. On October 29th, YouTuber Grandayy uploaded a Voiceoverpete video titled "Attention All 9 Year Old Gamers," urging viewers to subscribe to PewDiePie in his battle against the Indian music label. The video pulled in over 1.1 million views and 8,000 comments within three months.

On November 1st, 2018, Quora user Louie Tangcalagan answered the question "Why does PewDiePie call his fans 9 years old?" by explaining the Alinity copyright feud that sparked the whole thing. By this point the name had spread well beyond PewDiePie's own channel. Urban Dictionary entries multiplied, with one noting that "as soon as one of the 9 year olds turn ten they go straight to Ali A," a joke about the fandom's supposed age ceiling. Another definition claimed the army had "approximately 88,393,093,230 troops," a playful exaggeration that matched the community's over-the-top energy during the subscriber war.

The 9-Year-Old Army identity was inseparable from the T-Series rivalry. Fans organized coordinated subscribe campaigns, created propaganda-style meme content, and treated the whole thing like an actual military operation, all while winking at the absurdity of it.

How to Use This Meme

The 9-Year-Old Army identity is less of a meme template and more of a community label. Common usage patterns include:

- Self-identification: Declaring yourself part of the "9-Year-Old Army" in YouTube comments, Reddit flairs, Twitter bios, or Discord usernames to signal PewDiePie fandom - Recruitment messaging: Telling others to "subscribe to PewDiePie" and join the army, especially during the T-Series subscriber war era - Ironic age jokes: Playing up the "we are all literally 9 years old" bit, sometimes adding that members who turn 10 are "kicked out" or "drafted" to other channels - Comment raids: Posting coordinated messages on other creators' videos, typically pro-PewDiePie slogans framed as orders from the army

The tone is always self-aware. Nobody actually claims to be nine. The humor comes from committing fully to the bit while everyone involved knows it's absurd.

Cultural Impact

The 9-Year-Old Army name became one of the defining elements of the PewDiePie vs. T-Series subscriber war, which was itself one of YouTube's biggest community events in 2018-2019. The name gave PewDiePie's fans a unified identity that made coordinated action feel like a game rather than harassment, though the line between fun and targeted spam was sometimes thin.

The Grandayy "Attention All 9 Year Old Gamers" video, which hit 1.1 million views, showed how the identity could be packaged into shareable content that spread the subscribe message beyond PewDiePie's existing audience. The name also fed into broader conversations about parasocial fandom on YouTube and how creator communities develop cult-like in-group language.

Fun Facts

The name was originally meant as an insult. Alinity wanted to mock PewDiePie's fans, not give them a beloved identity.

PewDiePie's fans previously called themselves the "Bro Army," a name that dates back to his earlier era on YouTube.

One Urban Dictionary entry humorously claimed the 9-Year-Old Army had "approximately 88,393,093,230 troops," a number far exceeding Earth's population.

The community developed a lore where fans who turned 10 would supposedly "go straight to Ali A," a rival YouTuber, creating a running joke about forced retirement from the army.

Frequently Asked Questions