LOL. Check out these Mr. Pool twitter accounts sometime. Straight up LARPing.
Grok:
The Mr. Pool accounts (and their many variants) on X are enigmatic, cryptic poster accounts deeply embedded in fringe online communities, particularly those overlapping QAnon-style narratives, NESARA/GESARAconspiracy theories, Quantum Financial System (QFS) lore, XRP/Ripple and XLM/Stellar cryptocurrency hype, "global currency reset" (GCR) predictions, med beds, suppressed technology, elite arrests, and "the great awakening"-type messaging.The original / most prominent "Mr. Pool" style accounts (like
@looP_rM_3117211
,
@pooL_rM311_7221
,
@MrPool_QQ
, and similar loop-themed handles) typically share:
- Extremely vague, riddle-like image posts (often memes, symbolic pictures, numbers, clocks, military-themed graphics, or distorted text)
- Phrases like "Follow the loop", "Brace", date/time stamps, countdown-style alerts, or "End Game"
- Content implying insider military/intelligence knowledge about imminent world-changing events (mass arrests, financial resets, quantum tech rollouts, etc.)
- Heavy focus on hope/awakening for followers while warning of traps, emergencies, or "sheeple" manipulation
These posts are intentionally obscure—designed so believers can "decode" them to fit whatever current event or wishful thinking they have (e.g., "this proves Tier 4B is activating next week"). Many in the crypto/QFS space treat them as prophetic or decoding signals for massive wealth transfers via ISO 20022 assets like XRP.Mr. Pool 2.0 (and similar "2.0" variants) usually refers to imitator / copycat accounts that sprang up later. These tend to:
- Use almost identical naming/style (e.g., adding "2.0", underscores, or Q prefixes)
- Post very similar cryptic content, but often more overtly tied to current political/MAGA talking points, direct Trump references, or aggressive "exposure" claims
- Get called out more frequently in replies as frauds, trolls, clones, or scammers by people following the older/original-looking accounts
Community opinions split sharply:
- Supporters view the main Mr. Pool(s) as legitimate (if mysterious) drop-style channels with real insider info.
- Critics (including some longtime observers in those same circles) dismiss virtually all of them as hoaxers, attention farmers, psyops, or grifters who recycle the same vague predictions that never materialize, while preying on hopium-seeking audiences.
In short: They're the cryptic-meme equivalent of a never-ending "any day now" QFS/NESARA/XRP moonshot newsletter—fascinating to some, exhausting or obviously fake to others. The entire phenomenon thrives on ambiguity, endless pattern-seeking, and the refusal to ever give a clear, testable prediction.