The Jackrabbit Era (2021–2022): Part 3
Like many internet stories, the details have become scattered as accounts were deleted and posts disappeared.
This post isn’t meant as harassment or a callout. It’s simply a look back at a moment in SCP fandom history that sparked conversations about influence, parasocial dynamics, and community accountability.
Read Part 1 Here
Read Part 2 Here
The Ban Announcement
In June 2022, the SCP Wiki’s Anti-Harassment Team issued a moderation notice stating that Agent Jackrabbit had been permanently banned from participating on the site.
According to moderators, the decision followed an extended investigation into reports about interpersonal conduct within collaborative spaces. The moderation notice referenced patterns of behavior including manipulation, harassment, intimidation, and harmful conduct within collaborative projects.
Because the SCP Wiki relies heavily on cooperation between authors, and a month before was the ban announcement of a high ranking SCP author, moderators explained that maintaining a safe and functional collaborative environment was essential. As a result, the decision was made to remove her access to the wiki entirely. Like many moderation investigations on the SCP site, the full details of the report were not publicly released.
To much of the general audience, the ban appeared to come out of nowhere. This was largely because the majority of the conflicts that led to the investigation happened in private creator spaces rather than in public fandom areas. Most fans knew Agent Jackrabbit primarily through her TikTok cosplay content, collaborations with other creators, appearances on streams and podcasts, and her promotion of projects like SCP Sideshow. Those public interactions often presented a positive and enthusiastic image.
The disputes that eventually reached moderators were mostly occurring behind the scenes between collaborators. Because of this, the ban felt abrupt to many fans who had not been aware of the internal conflicts.
Once the ban became public, reactions within the SCP community were mixed. Some fans were shocked and confused, especially those who had only experienced Jackrabbit through her public content. Others, particularly creators who had been involved in collaborative projects, began sharing their experiences and explaining the events that had led to the moderation decision.
These statements helped fill in some of the timeline that most fans had never seen. However, as with many fandom controversies, different people interpreted the situation differently depending on their experiences.
Not long after the ban announcement, the online presence associated with Agent Jackrabbit began disappearing. Accounts connected to the persona became inactive or were deleted across several platforms, echoing the same disappearance pattern Koujackie had performed years earlier. Her exit resembled a calculated retreat rather than a breakdown, an attempt to disappear before accountability caught up.
Also to note, a GoFundMe campaign that she was hosting for a fellow SCP artist was confirmed to be completely paid out after the announcement, claims of theft were quickly squashed. However, art and gifts sent to Jackrabbit were destroyed, confirmed by one artist who had been informed of the destruction.
Later, she issued brief statements accusing the SCP community of being toxic and unsupportive, which contrasted sharply with her initial enthusiasm. But those who knew her, or recognized the infamous belly-dance cosplayer from years before, saw the pattern clearly.
Collaborative projects she had been promoting, including SCP Sideshow, also faded from public discussion. For many fans, this marked the end of a creator who had seemed highly active in the community only months earlier.
Because so much of the content was removed, newer fans encountering references to the situation often struggle to find a clear explanation of what happened.
Over time, the SCP fandom largely moved on from the situation. New creators and projects emerged, and the community continued growing across platforms like YouTube, Reddit, and TikTok. Because much of the original documentation now exists mainly through archived posts and screenshots, the story has gradually shifted from an active controversy into a piece of recent SCP fandom history.
Every so often, someone new to the fandom encounters old screenshots or archived posts and asks the same question:
“Wait… what happened to Agent Jackrabbit?”
For those who were around during that time, the answer is complicated.
But in simple terms, the situation became an example of how quickly internet influence can grow and how difficult it can be for online communities to navigate conflicts when personal relationships, creative collaboration, and fandom culture all overlap.
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