It gained 6.5 million views in nine months. On June 24th, he posted his version of "Rush E," and it was widely thought of as the superior performance. Upon being challenged by other commenters, particularly a user named "Just A Guy Who Likes Hentai" to perform the piece better, Fanchen obliged. In the comments of the video, YouTube commenter Fanchen said the performance was mediocre. The account was later deleted, but the video was reuploaded to his new account, Litening, on July 28th, 2021 (shown below, left). In June 2021, YouTuber ProLitening posted a video of himself attempting to play "Rush E" via an arrangement that was possible for one person. On March 17th, 2021, YouTuber ItzAleck47 posted a similar video, gaining over 1.6 million views in one year (shown below, right). On June 18th, 2018, YouTuber Elioth posted a video of him pretending to play the piece and growing increasingly frantic as it became more impossible, gaining over 59 million views in roughly four years (shown below, left). "Rush E" was a quick hit with musicians on YouTube in 2018. ![]() ![]() In the comments, users asked for a "Russian version" of the piece, as the channel had created "Russian" versions of meme posts before, such as "Rush B." On June 1st, they delivered, transposing "Rush B" into the key of E minor to make "Rush E." The video gained over 29 million views in nearly four years (shown below, right). The video was a joke, as it consisted of only hitting the E note on a keyboard (shown below, left). On May 29th, 2018, YouTuber Sheet Music Boss uploaded a video in which they demonstrated "how to play" the Lord Marquaad E meme.
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