The "allegations" you are referring to stem from a specific, user-made project titled the "Science7301 diss track", which was created and shared directly on Scratch by DirtIsTheBestBlock99. [1] Rather than a real-world legal issue or platform-wide scandal, this situation is an isolated, community-driven piece of user drama. On Scratch, creators within the same circle—especially those participating in competitive community spaces like object shows or roleplay studios—frequently release joke or call-out "diss tracks" targeting each other in good fun or over minor, localized disagreements. [1, 2] The Context of the Track The Project: The track is shared directly on the DirtIsTheBestBlock99 Creator Profile as an interactive audio or animated project. The Target: It specifically targets science7301, who is another active creator in the same shared community networks, such as the OBJECTS Related Stuff Studio. Other Tracks: This isn't an isolated event; DirtIsTheBestBlock99 has made similar projects targeting other platform peers, including an "EpicMaxi diss track". [1, 2]
Why This Story Was Created The "Diss Track" Lore: After DirtIsTheBestBlock99 released the EpicMaxi diss track, community members expanded the story inside studio comments by joking that the track was so harsh the character was "arrested" or defeated. Roleplay & Storytelling: Within Scratch groups like the Union of Crazy Friends, users write fictional text-adventures or create short animations where member avatars face over-the-top consequences, including being banned, jailed, or exiled from a fictional studio base. No Real-World Basis: No real-world legal action or actual law enforcement involvement exists behind this claim. It is entirely limited to user-generated scripts and comment board banter.