Demonic Pornstar System - Chapter 656: Two Distinct Fanbases

Chapter 656: Two Distinct Fanbases
Kaiden’s group walked away from the western zone without looking back.
Luna looked back.
“Unbelievable,” she spat, loud enough for the stream to catch. “The absolute audacity of that spray-tanned, brand-name-stealing, girlfriend-renting piece of-”
“Bestie…” Nyx grinned. She did not try hard to stop her friend from cussing more.
“-overcompensating, camera-humping, knockoff Ashborn trash who has the NERVE to walk up to us and suggest we-”
“Chaos Gremlin…”
“SWAP?!” Luna stomped hard.
The chat was already there.
— MoonlitHeart: Luna is speaking for all of us right now!!
— CalypsoMommy: Go, Luna! You’re speaking gospel right now
— 44xStorm: “girlfriend-renting” 💀💀💀
— SinnerDevotee: luna is so angry she forgot she was on stream
— LunaRage: Nah she just dont care
— BastetThrone: let her cook. LET HER COOK
Then the main moderators arrived.
Kaiden’s stream had three of them, handpicked employees of Valhalla’s Sinners who managed the chat during live broadcasts. They were as much a part of the stream’s identity as the combat itself, known by name and feared by trolls.
— [MOD] PrincelessPrincess: The incels in ash’s chat gave me secondhand embarrassment. What a sad life they must lead.
— [MOD] Kaiden’s Wife: These men have never been loved, and it shows. maidenless losers…
— [MOD] Lady Leia: They are the same dudes who dm girls “hey” alongside an unwanted dick pic at 3 am and then call them stuck-up bitches when they don’t respond
— 44xStorm: the three valkyries of moderation have descended! are you banning the incels?
— [MOD] Kaiden’s Wife: Those who were cursing have already been banned. The rest who are just speaking aggressively are being watched. if Kaiden or the girls say the word, it’s done.
— 44xStorm: 🫡🫡🫡
Aria, meanwhile, had quietly taken Kaiden’s hand.
He glanced down at her fingers laced through his, then at her face. The Moon Valkyrie was smiling. Soft. Warm. The kind of smile she reserved for moments that mattered.
“I’m proud of you, Kai,” she said. Just loud enough for him to hear.
Kaiden raised an eyebrow. “For?”
“For not attacking him.”
A beat.
“The thought crossed my mind.”
“I know.” She squeezed his hand. “That’s why I’m proud.”
Kaiden let the moment sit for exactly two seconds.
“Alright.” His voice shifted. The warmth dropped. The casual authority returned. “Luna, stop dissing him alongside the chat. Nyx, stop feeding her material. We’re here to grind. These interactions can wait when we leave the active combat zone.”
Luna’s mouth snapped shut mid-word.
Nyx’s giggling stopped.
Behind him, Bastet and Calypso exchanged a glance. Bastet’s lips curved into a thin, satisfied smile. Calypso’s grin was wider, toothier.
Both girls found his current behavior deeply attractive.
Neither said a word.
They didn’t need to. Their man had handled it, and now he was moving forward, and they were following, and that was how it should be.
…
The incident went viral within a minute.
Clips spread across every major platform with the speed and violence of a wildfire, spawning reaction videos, analysis threads, and at least three separate tier lists ranking “coldest moments in streamed combat history.”
But beyond the spectacle and the memes, the encounter had revealed something the industry analysts and platform strategists had been circling for some time without quite naming.
Kaiden Grey and Ash had split the market in two.
Two men, through wildly different philosophies, carved out audiences that were almost perfectly opposed.
Kaiden’s viewers were largely female.
This had been true since the beginning, but the exclusivity of his adult content had accelerated the divide.
By restricting intimate videos to female-only access on the Awakened Media Platform, Kaiden had done more than protect his girls’ privacy.
He had created a culture.
His fangirls didn’t just watch. They invested. They argued about which girl was best for him. They analyzed his body language during combat for signs of who he was thinking about. They wrote essays about the time Luna overstepped with Nyx and Kaiden put her in her place, and they debated whether that moment proved he loved Luna most (because he held her to a higher standard) or Nyx most (because he protected her without hesitation) or Aria most (because when he turned away from Luna, his eyes found Aria first and the tension in his shoulders softened).
They noticed everything.
Every reaction Kaiden had to his girls was content. Every argument, every reconciliation, every teasing exchange, every moment where Calypso’s bravado crumbled into neediness, or Bastet’s regal composure cracked under Kaiden’s firm hands.
The girls were varied, distinct, each bringing out a different facet of Kaiden’s personality, and the female audience ate it alive because it was the ultimate relationship content wrapped in the shell of an action stream.
The adult videos weren’t just sex. They were continuations of those dynamics.
The way Kaiden handled Aria was different from how he handled Luna, which was different from Calypso, which was different from Nyx and Bastet. Each video felt like a Chapter in an ongoing story, and the fangirls consumed them with the same fervor they’d bring to a serialized romance, except the characters were real and the stakes were life and death and the man at the center of it could freeze the ground by being mildly irritated.
Ash’s audience was the mirror image.
His viewers were overwhelmingly male, and the reason was simple: Kaiden had locked them out.
Millions of men wanted to watch Valhalla’s Sinners’ adult content and couldn’t. The female-only restriction was, to them, an insult.
A statement that they weren’t welcome. And Ash had positioned himself as the answer to that insult. Where Kaiden was selective, Ash was available. Where Kaiden restricted, Ash distributed. Every platform. Every format. Every piece of content available to everyone, all the time.
His male viewers liked what they saw. Ash was an S-tier combatant, tall, built, and dominant. He commanded his women with authority, and they obeyed. Brittany, Stacy, and Trisha were gorgeous and compliant, performing desire on demand, their bodies and their obedience presented as trophies for a man who had earned them through power and success.
It was a fantasy that appealed to men who wanted to see themselves reflected in an awakened who had it all: strength, women, wealth, looks, and total control.
The content was polished, frequent, and explicit. No paywalls. No restrictions. No pretense of exclusivity. Ashbound gave the audience what it wanted without asking them to earn access or prove they deserved it.
It worked. The numbers were real.
But so was the emptiness underneath.
Because Ash’s girls didn’t argue with him. They didn’t tease him, challenge him, or surprise him. Brittany didn’t crack jokes mid-combat. Stacy didn’t rage at video games. Trisha didn’t blush when Ash held her hand, because Ash didn’t hold their hands unless a camera was running.
There were no moments of vulnerability. No scenes where the mask slipped, and genuine feelings surfaced between them. No horn-cracking incidents followed by trembling puppy eyes and a kiss that made ten million women collectively lose their minds.
Ashbound’s content was a product. Valhalla’s Sinners was a story.
And stories won.
Every time.
The data confirmed it. Kaiden’s retention rates were nearly triple Ashbound’s. His fangirls watched entire streams. Ash’s viewers clicked on the explicit clips and left. Kaiden’s audience grew through loyalty. Ash’s audience grew through volume. One was a foundation. The other was a treadmill.
But still. Ashbound kept the fight by making large investments – Kaiden’s marketing budget was still sitting at 0$ – and using connections.
Now, it seemed, they found their most lucrative opportunity for growth yet: directly compete with the Sinners.
Of course, the split between the genders of the two fanbases was not absolute. Kaiden had a lot of loyal male viewers who followed him for the combat, the humor, the strategy.
Men who respected what he’d built and didn’t care about the adult content restrictions.
And Ash had female fans, remnants of the audience he’d cultivated as the Ashen Knight before the pivot to explicit content. Women who had admired the S-tier warrior and his clean, efficient fighting style.
Many of those women were not happy with the direction their idol had taken.
But the core divide was real, and today’s encounter had made it undeniable. The two fanbases weren’t just different audiences. They were opposing philosophies, and the basin incident had given them a flag to rally around.
The fangirls had their frost-eyed king who would rather die than share his women.
The male viewers had their S-tier playboy, who thought everything and everyone had a price.
Neither side was backing down.
And this location, this event, was the perfect place to settle some differences.
Best evidenced by what came next.


