
A trending post on Korean forum Pann is stirring up controversy around Ojo Gang’s performance in the latest World Street Woman Fighter mission, with fans questioning whether the team’s high engagement numbers reflect genuine stage quality, or the star power of Kyoka.
Titled “Ojo Gang Should Be Thanking Kyoka, If You Only Look at the Results,” the post criticizes the crew’s Mega Crew Mission for being visually disjointed and thematically inconsistent. The original poster (OP) wrote, “It suddenly felt like a TWICE music video, then abruptly switched to a rap segment—other than that, it was mostly Ibuki dancing up front, and the storyline felt disjointed.”


Despite these critiques, Ojo Gang placed second in both video views and likes, leading the OP to argue that Kyoka’s individual popularity is overshadowing objective performance quality.
The post went on to rank the performances from a non-fan perspective:
- BUMSUP
- AG SQUAD
- MOTIV = RH TOKYO
- Ojo Gang
While MOTIV was praised for its creativity and detailed execution, the OP noted it lacked the large-scale “wow” factor typically expected from a Mega Crew Mission, calling it a missed opportunity. The post quickly drew heated responses across fan communities, reigniting debates over the role of fan voting and social media metrics in shaping competition results on dance survival shows.

Comments on Pann:
- BUMSUP should’ve been eliminated during the K-pop mission based on actual performance, but they rode the wave of popularity ㅠㅠ
- Same with BEBE in Season 1 — their Mega Crew stage was a complete mess with that sudden collab with male dancers, but they made it through thanks to fans.
- Honestly, OSAKA is riding purely on fan power… Without Kyoka, they would’ve placed dead last. It was really disappointing.
- If you take away fan bias, Lia Kim was right — it was basically a TWICE music video, lol. Kyoka’s the one who took even the smallest “decent” moments and turned them into viral highlights.

As World Street Woman Fighter pushes into its final stages, questions surrounding performance substance versus star influence are becoming increasingly central to the conversation, and this latest viral debate may just be the beginning.