The internet had never seen anything like what happened next.
For hours, it felt like the entire world had turned against Dayo—articles, fake screenshots, edited images, manipulated interviews, twisted headlines. Everything was flooding every platform at once. It looked like the smear campaign was winning.
But something shifted.
Something nobody expected.
Dayo's fanbase—over 200 million strong—rose like a tidal wave.
And the wave hit back hard.
At first it started small—someone posted a fake article, and within seconds, ten replies dragged the writer. Then twenty. Then a hundred. Then thousands.
Within 30 minutes, nearly 100,000 accounts that posted defamation, hate, or "evidence" against Dayo got spammed, mass-reported, flagged, and permanently banned.
People who tried to mock him had their pages flooded.
People who commented "cheater" had their posts buried under thousands of replies.
Influencers who jumped on the trend suddenly started deleting their captions.
