Which brings up a couple of questions.
I'm not sure how somebody can inadvertently get into a private chatroom. It was stated that private rooms required an invite. Which in another Blizzard game, World of Warcraft, can be as easy as right clicking on a character name, dropping down a menu, and clicking invite to party.
Or typing /invite Bagster.
Or it could be more complicated than that.
In WoW, a list of particpants is generated so you can see who is in the party or group.
I'm not saying this is how Star Wars does it.
Just find it curious that somebody could get into a private group that requires an invite and the spies didn't notice some civilian listening in on them.
And the dude says he has more like that? Like as if he inadvertently busted in more than once?
What is the likelihood of that?
Maybe, just maybe, this is how the Q team give plausible deniability for leaks? Blame some gamer rube having an accident?
Either way, Q posted it for a reason at this time. And the derps know he posted it at the same time things are coming to a crescendo and Trump is talking about Treason and whatnot.
TBD
And the dude says he has more like that? Like as if he inadvertently busted in more than once?
What is the likelihood of that?
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As we all know, there are multiple Q posts with the phrase “How many coincidences before mathematically impossible?”
So, was/is Q the proverbial fly on the wall?
I’m not sure how somebody can inadvertently get into a private chatroom
Trying to catch up so this may have already been addressed.
When youre inviting people to a chat, its entirely possible that their username is similar to other usernames of people not in the group. I see that type of thing happen all the time with email, when you end up adding the wrong person because the name is close.