>>16846366Rationally, it'd be a direct no. Meeting somebody from an imageboard in real life is a no-no-no-no. I haven't seen a single tale of that end without issues. The worst case was literal life ruination.
Or in general, meeting anybody who knows any of my online identities in real life. It probably won't end well. Let internet people stay internet people, I think it's best that way for anything you could think of. Maybe somebody I've known for several years I'd be inclined to do it with, but, what if they don't want anything to do with me anymore if I weird them out too much in real life? Let's not take the risk.
And this isn't even that, it's some rando who just happens to know my identity. They probably think I'm a huge insufferable faggot, already.
But, I'm a bit past rationality. This instead looks like an opportunity to me. Because I've still yet to ever have had a single real life friend, or meet literally anybody who relates to me in any way at all. I haven't even ran into somebody who simply likes playing games as much as me, for god's sake.
It's kind of because that the people here are a bit behind, like, to put it in a relative perspective it's as if I'm some goth kid from 2007 being sent into a 1990's high school. That level of disconnect, it just happens when you're an internet addict in the middle of nowhere in an already third world country.
After all that, meeting somebody in real life who knows what an imageboard is? Even if it's this surface-level shithole? I'll take the risk. Please let me know you. Thinking that I'll make a friend out of it is being optimistic, cause I don't think somebody who knows me from this place would want to have anything to do with me, but you know, at least getting to talk to somebody who I relate to, even if in the slightest bit, that'd be nice.
Anyhow. I don't think my answer would matter.
If somebody randomly comes up to me and asks if I'm me, then they already know it's me. It's already over.