If I Send You This

2020Video remix / montage parodysemi-active

Also known as: Do You Really Need Anyone Else? · Come Break Me Down Montage

If I Send You This is a 2020 video meme merging Twitch streamer InvaderVie's 2019 emotional speech with a 2015 Call of Duty montage, created by Biomez and spawning remakes that swap different rants while keeping the iconic footage.

"Do You Really Need Anyone Else?" (commonly shared as "If I Send You This") is a video meme that pairs Twitch streamer InvaderVie's passionate 2019 speech about loving her community with a 2015 Call of Duty montage set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars. The combined edit blew up in mid-2020 after Biomez, the montage's creator, merged the two clips. It spawned dozens of remakes swapping in different emotional rants while keeping the iconic montage drop as the punchline.

TL;DR

"Do You Really Need Anyone Else?" (commonly shared as "If I Send You This") is a video meme that pairs Twitch streamer InvaderVie's passionate 2019 speech about loving her community with a 2015 Call of Duty montage set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars.

Overview

The meme follows a two-part structure. The first half features an emotional, sincere speech or rant, building up feelings of earnestness and vulnerability. Then, without warning, it hard-cuts to a high-energy Call of Duty montage with "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars blasting over quickscope trickshots. The tonal whiplash between heartfelt vulnerability and peak mid-2010s gaming montage energy is the entire joke.

The original version uses InvaderVie's February 2019 Twitch speech where she talks directly to her viewers about why she loves streaming and doesn't need validation from haters1. Biomez's montage, originally uploaded in 2015, features players Danji and Piku hitting Call of Duty trickshots. When stitched together, the edit creates a specific emotional arc: genuine passion, followed by the unspoken punchline that this passion leads straight into maximum gaming hype.

Around February 24, 2019, Twitch streamer InvaderVie went on an impassioned rant during a livestream about her fans, her haters, and why she loves the platform1. That same day, YouTuber Twitch Place included the clip in a compilation video that picked up over 16,700 views in three years. The next day, YouTuber theOnionestMonk posted an isolated version of the speech along with a full transcript, pulling in over 259,000 views1.

The other half of the meme predates InvaderVie's speech by nearly four years. On May 23, 2015, YouTuber Biomez (then going by Native) uploaded a Call of Duty montage called "Danji NE & Piku NE Dual Episode 1!" featuring trickshot clips set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars1. That video hit over 63,000 views before being removed sometime before May 2022. A full reupload by YouTube user Katie4's Dumping Grounds appeared on May 24, 2022.

The two clips existed independently for over a year before Biomez himself combined them. On April 27, 2020, he posted an edit on X (then Twitter) that appended the Call of Duty montage to the end of InvaderVie's speech1. That original post was later deleted, but it lit the fuse.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitch (original speech), X/Twitter (combined edit, viral spread)
Key People
InvaderVie, Biomez
Date
2020 (combined meme), 2019 (speech), 2015 (montage)
Year
2020

Around February 24, 2019, Twitch streamer InvaderVie went on an impassioned rant during a livestream about her fans, her haters, and why she loves the platform. That same day, YouTuber Twitch Place included the clip in a compilation video that picked up over 16,700 views in three years. The next day, YouTuber theOnionestMonk posted an isolated version of the speech along with a full transcript, pulling in over 259,000 views.

The other half of the meme predates InvaderVie's speech by nearly four years. On May 23, 2015, YouTuber Biomez (then going by Native) uploaded a Call of Duty montage called "Danji NE & Piku NE Dual Episode 1!" featuring trickshot clips set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars. That video hit over 63,000 views before being removed sometime before May 2022. A full reupload by YouTube user Katie4's Dumping Grounds appeared on May 24, 2022.

The two clips existed independently for over a year before Biomez himself combined them. On April 27, 2020, he posted an edit on X (then Twitter) that appended the Call of Duty montage to the end of InvaderVie's speech. That original post was later deleted, but it lit the fuse.

How It Spread

The format caught fire within weeks of Biomez's original edit. On June 12, 2020, X user @falco reposted the combined video and called it "top 5 internet clips," pulling over 3,800 reposts and 152,000 likes within four years. The next day, YouTube user shrimp dynamics reuploaded the clip, where it drew 1.8 million views.

Content creators jumped on the format fast. On June 14, 2020, Grandayy released a version swapping in TwoMad clips for the speech portion, earning over 455,000 views. Four days later, @kertia_ on Twitter posted a Tekken-themed take. By July 18, 2020, the full transcript of InvaderVie's speech had landed on r/copypasta.

The meme kept resurfacing in new forms over the following years. On February 7, 2021, Reddit user dontworryboutmeg posted an xQc version to r/xqcow that hit 6,700 upvotes. YouTuber harve created an Osu!-themed edit in May 2021, pulling 428,000 views in ten months. An Overwatch fan animation by YouTube user Joubinour appeared on September 7, 2023, drawing 62,000 views in nine months.

By 2024, the montage had split off as a standalone reaction format, used separately from InvaderVie's speech to counter doomposting on social media. On June 11, 2024, X user @7Negative_Creep deployed the montage in a post that hit 5,500 reposts and 41,000 likes in a single day.

How to Use This Meme

The standard format pairs an emotional or sincere speech with the Biomez Call of Duty montage as a hard cut. People typically:

1

Start with a clip of someone speaking earnestly about something they care about (gaming, streaming, a fandom, a relationship)

2

Let the emotional buildup play for 15-30 seconds

3

Hard-cut to the Call of Duty montage right as "The Kill (Bury Me)" hits its chorus

Fun Facts

Biomez's original Call of Duty montage was uploaded in 2015, nearly four years before InvaderVie's speech even existed. The two pieces of content lived separate lives until Biomez merged them in 2020.

Biomez was both the original montage creator and the person who invented the combined meme format, making him responsible for both halves of the joke.

The original combined edit on X was deleted at some point, meaning most people only know the meme through reposts and remakes by other users.

The 30 Seconds to Mars song "The Kill (Bury Me)" was released in 2006, making the meme's soundtrack older than most of the platforms it spread on.

@falco's description of the combined clip as "top 5 internet clips" became part of the meme's lore and is often quoted when the video gets reshared.

Derivatives & Variations

TwoMad version

Grandayy created an early viral variant using clips of streamer TwoMad in place of InvaderVie's speech[1].

xQc version

A Reddit edit using xQc clips became one of the top posts on r/xqcow in early 2021[1].

Game-specific edits

Players from various communities built versions using Tekken gameplay, Osu! footage, and Overwatch fan animation[1].

Doompost reaction format

By 2024, the montage portion had split off as a standalone reply to negative or doomer posts on X[1].

Copypasta

InvaderVie's full speech transcript circulated as a text meme after being posted to r/copypasta in July 2020[1].

Frequently Asked Questions

If I Send You This

2020Video remix / montage parodysemi-active

Also known as: Do You Really Need Anyone Else? · Come Break Me Down Montage

If I Send You This is a 2020 video meme merging Twitch streamer InvaderVie's 2019 emotional speech with a 2015 Call of Duty montage, created by Biomez and spawning remakes that swap different rants while keeping the iconic footage.

"Do You Really Need Anyone Else?" (commonly shared as "If I Send You This") is a video meme that pairs Twitch streamer InvaderVie's passionate 2019 speech about loving her community with a 2015 Call of Duty montage set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars. The combined edit blew up in mid-2020 after Biomez, the montage's creator, merged the two clips. It spawned dozens of remakes swapping in different emotional rants while keeping the iconic montage drop as the punchline.

TL;DR

"Do You Really Need Anyone Else?" (commonly shared as "If I Send You This") is a video meme that pairs Twitch streamer InvaderVie's passionate 2019 speech about loving her community with a 2015 Call of Duty montage set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars.

Overview

The meme follows a two-part structure. The first half features an emotional, sincere speech or rant, building up feelings of earnestness and vulnerability. Then, without warning, it hard-cuts to a high-energy Call of Duty montage with "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars blasting over quickscope trickshots. The tonal whiplash between heartfelt vulnerability and peak mid-2010s gaming montage energy is the entire joke.

The original version uses InvaderVie's February 2019 Twitch speech where she talks directly to her viewers about why she loves streaming and doesn't need validation from haters. Biomez's montage, originally uploaded in 2015, features players Danji and Piku hitting Call of Duty trickshots. When stitched together, the edit creates a specific emotional arc: genuine passion, followed by the unspoken punchline that this passion leads straight into maximum gaming hype.

Around February 24, 2019, Twitch streamer InvaderVie went on an impassioned rant during a livestream about her fans, her haters, and why she loves the platform. That same day, YouTuber Twitch Place included the clip in a compilation video that picked up over 16,700 views in three years. The next day, YouTuber theOnionestMonk posted an isolated version of the speech along with a full transcript, pulling in over 259,000 views.

The other half of the meme predates InvaderVie's speech by nearly four years. On May 23, 2015, YouTuber Biomez (then going by Native) uploaded a Call of Duty montage called "Danji NE & Piku NE Dual Episode 1!" featuring trickshot clips set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars. That video hit over 63,000 views before being removed sometime before May 2022. A full reupload by YouTube user Katie4's Dumping Grounds appeared on May 24, 2022.

The two clips existed independently for over a year before Biomez himself combined them. On April 27, 2020, he posted an edit on X (then Twitter) that appended the Call of Duty montage to the end of InvaderVie's speech. That original post was later deleted, but it lit the fuse.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitch (original speech), X/Twitter (combined edit, viral spread)
Key People
InvaderVie, Biomez
Date
2020 (combined meme), 2019 (speech), 2015 (montage)
Year
2020

Around February 24, 2019, Twitch streamer InvaderVie went on an impassioned rant during a livestream about her fans, her haters, and why she loves the platform. That same day, YouTuber Twitch Place included the clip in a compilation video that picked up over 16,700 views in three years. The next day, YouTuber theOnionestMonk posted an isolated version of the speech along with a full transcript, pulling in over 259,000 views.

The other half of the meme predates InvaderVie's speech by nearly four years. On May 23, 2015, YouTuber Biomez (then going by Native) uploaded a Call of Duty montage called "Danji NE & Piku NE Dual Episode 1!" featuring trickshot clips set to "The Kill (Bury Me)" by 30 Seconds to Mars. That video hit over 63,000 views before being removed sometime before May 2022. A full reupload by YouTube user Katie4's Dumping Grounds appeared on May 24, 2022.

The two clips existed independently for over a year before Biomez himself combined them. On April 27, 2020, he posted an edit on X (then Twitter) that appended the Call of Duty montage to the end of InvaderVie's speech. That original post was later deleted, but it lit the fuse.

How It Spread

The format caught fire within weeks of Biomez's original edit. On June 12, 2020, X user @falco reposted the combined video and called it "top 5 internet clips," pulling over 3,800 reposts and 152,000 likes within four years. The next day, YouTube user shrimp dynamics reuploaded the clip, where it drew 1.8 million views.

Content creators jumped on the format fast. On June 14, 2020, Grandayy released a version swapping in TwoMad clips for the speech portion, earning over 455,000 views. Four days later, @kertia_ on Twitter posted a Tekken-themed take. By July 18, 2020, the full transcript of InvaderVie's speech had landed on r/copypasta.

The meme kept resurfacing in new forms over the following years. On February 7, 2021, Reddit user dontworryboutmeg posted an xQc version to r/xqcow that hit 6,700 upvotes. YouTuber harve created an Osu!-themed edit in May 2021, pulling 428,000 views in ten months. An Overwatch fan animation by YouTube user Joubinour appeared on September 7, 2023, drawing 62,000 views in nine months.

By 2024, the montage had split off as a standalone reaction format, used separately from InvaderVie's speech to counter doomposting on social media. On June 11, 2024, X user @7Negative_Creep deployed the montage in a post that hit 5,500 reposts and 41,000 likes in a single day.

How to Use This Meme

The standard format pairs an emotional or sincere speech with the Biomez Call of Duty montage as a hard cut. People typically:

1

Start with a clip of someone speaking earnestly about something they care about (gaming, streaming, a fandom, a relationship)

2

Let the emotional buildup play for 15-30 seconds

3

Hard-cut to the Call of Duty montage right as "The Kill (Bury Me)" hits its chorus

Fun Facts

Biomez's original Call of Duty montage was uploaded in 2015, nearly four years before InvaderVie's speech even existed. The two pieces of content lived separate lives until Biomez merged them in 2020.

Biomez was both the original montage creator and the person who invented the combined meme format, making him responsible for both halves of the joke.

The original combined edit on X was deleted at some point, meaning most people only know the meme through reposts and remakes by other users.

The 30 Seconds to Mars song "The Kill (Bury Me)" was released in 2006, making the meme's soundtrack older than most of the platforms it spread on.

@falco's description of the combined clip as "top 5 internet clips" became part of the meme's lore and is often quoted when the video gets reshared.

Derivatives & Variations

TwoMad version

Grandayy created an early viral variant using clips of streamer TwoMad in place of InvaderVie's speech[1].

xQc version

A Reddit edit using xQc clips became one of the top posts on r/xqcow in early 2021[1].

Game-specific edits

Players from various communities built versions using Tekken gameplay, Osu! footage, and Overwatch fan animation[1].

Doompost reaction format

By 2024, the montage portion had split off as a standalone reply to negative or doomer posts on X[1].

Copypasta

InvaderVie's full speech transcript circulated as a text meme after being posted to r/copypasta in July 2020[1].

Frequently Asked Questions