Warzone Streamer Jordan Sisco Accused of Striking Pregnant Wife on Stream
A 29-second clip from Jordan Sisco's live broadcast captured audio of two strikes and his wife saying "ow" after a March 24 confrontation that spread across the COD community within hours.

A 29-second clip pulled from Jordan Sisco's live broadcast captured two sharp thuds and his wife saying "Chill. You need to have no drinks in here. Ow, ow!" after an off-camera confrontation on March 24, 2026, and it spread across Reddit and X fast enough that viewers had already saved it before Sisco could take the VOD down.
The sequence began when the 21-year-old Warzone creator, who streams across Twitch, YouTube, and TikTok with roughly 58,000 Twitch followers and an average of 166 viewers per stream, spilled an energy drink on his gaming PC. Before his wife entered the room, he could be seen punching a wall and yelling "You just got me banned." When she came in to help, viewers watching live saw two rapid arm movements off camera, each followed by an audible strike. His wife is reportedly pregnant.
The footage reached prominent creators within hours. Jake Lucky, a well-known gaming commentator, posted the clip directly to his audience the same evening. MoistCr1TiKaL, one of the most-watched voices in streaming, called the behavior disgusting in a YouTube video. The community's priority shifted quickly from career consequences to immediate safety: calls went out urging law enforcement to verify the welfare of Sisco's wife and unborn child.
When Sisco returned to stream hours later, his explanation shifted more than once. He said he was having a panic attack over the spilled energy drink. He said he pushed his wife because her fingers were trapped under a PC he was moving. He brought her on camera; she told viewers he had never hit her. But viewers pausing the footage identified what appeared to be bruising near her eye consistent with a black eye. Sisco's final public account settled into: "I wasn't hitting her bro. I pushed her. That's the only thing that I did."
His Twitch account remained active at the time of reporting, a week after the incident. That gap between what the clip appeared to show and the platform's response is the accountability problem the COD community keeps running into. Twitch and TikTok both carry policies against content involving domestic violence, but those policies hinge on review timelines that rarely match the speed at which communities document and redistribute clips. By the time a VOD gets flagged and actioned, it has already circulated in versions no takedown can reach.
Anyone who believes a domestic violence situation is ongoing can contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or by texting "START" to 88788, available 24 hours a day. Violent content on Twitch can be reported through the platform's Safety Center; TikTok offers an in-video reporting function under "Violence and dangerous acts." If a situation involves immediate physical danger, contact local law enforcement directly.
The investigation, as it stands, is happening primarily in public: in clipped video, on social media, and in community forums demanding responses from platforms and authorities that have not yet publicly answered.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

