Just when we thought Verlisify had sabotaged his channel enough to disappear from our YouTube recommendations, the perennial crybaby of the Pokémon community is back at it again—spreading yet more toxicity and forcing his hypocritical hacking callout videos into our view once more.
Driven by clear jealousy of Pokeaim’s sensational regional performance, Verlisify has shifted his fixation from 2016 world champion Wolfe Glick to a new target – Pokeaim & Imablisy. His latest attempt to harass a Pokémon player out of the community follows the same toxic pattern we’ve seen before.
His accusation centers on the use of an external tool designed to streamline the process of catching shiny Pokémon. The tool bears a striking resemblance to Instacheck, a program from the 3DS era that revealed the shiny values of Pokémon and eggs, making shiny hunting significantly faster and easier. However, the most concerning aspect of Instacheck was its ability to expose the movesets and EVs of opponents during online Wi-Fi battles, potentially undermining competitive integrity.

Verlisify was a prominent advocate for this tool, creating numerous videos and guides demonstrating its use—whether for hatching shiny Pokémon or uncovering opponents’ movesets during battle. However, he’s since chosen to private or delete all related videos from his channel. Fortunately, we’ve managed to salvage one of the earliest ones which we’ve placed at the beginning of the article. Enjoy!
Throughout his poorly structured, highly repetitive hacking callout videos, Verlis consistently labels accused players as ‘evil’—’evil’ for allegedly cheating their way to prize money and revenue. Yet, perhaps some self-reflection is in order, considering the monetized video above amassed over half a million views before being made private. Conveniently, it was taken down right around the time he began his so-called righteous crusade against all VGC players, branding them as cheaters… what a coincidence!
It’s disappointing to see the current state of Verlisify’s channel. Once a hub for insightful (albeit unconventional) Pokémon moveset guides and top-tier tutorials, it now feels decidedly… well, lifeless – reduced to drama videos and uninspired, irrelevant content. Despite his 469k subscribers, it’s rare for any of his videos to surpass the 10,000 view mark.
To anyone looking at this objectively, the reason behind Verlisify’s latest drama videos is crystal clear – views. That’s it. His highest-performing content? The same petulant, copy-paste outrage he’s been milking for over a decade. First, he went after Smogon for attention, faced backlash, played the victim, and eventually issued an apology. Turns out that apology was as hollow as his integrity – it’s since been deleted. Luckily, we obtained a copy below. Enjoy!
Next, he turned his attention to the VGC community, stirring up needless drama for easy views. More concerning, though, is his decade long fixation on relentlessly hounding Wolfe Glick (among others)… there are simpler ways to confess your feelings! Don’t worry, I did you a favour and googled some advice. Hope it helps, buddy!

A truly bewildering contradiction. Frantically engagement farming to resuscitate his dying channel by attacking the very thing he once championed: external hacking tools. Maybe one day Verlisify will finally grow up and return to making content worth watching. If not, he might want to dust off those ‘epic’ sign-spinning skills. He’s going to need them.
Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for ‘fair use’ for purposes such as criticism, commentary, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research





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