In the weeks that followed, the term entered community lexicon, defined as: “An emotionally driven action that bypasses chain of command and makes everything worse.” JMAC’s Response: The Top Is a Lonely Place After the third major mistake, JMAC did something unprecedented. He convened a server-wide summit—not to exile Megan, but to publicly recalibrate their relationship. He introduced the concept of the JMAC Top , an informal but widely recognized ranking of the five most trusted individuals in his organization.
For now, the saga remains one of the most compelling cautionary tales in online roleplay—a story of loyalty, ego, and the brutal arithmetic of trust. The mistakes have been made. The top has been reordered. But in this world, as in any good drama, the final chapter is never truly written. Are you team Accountability or team Megan Defense? Do you think JMAC’s top is fair, or is it just another power play? Share your take in the comments below. megan by jmac megan mistakes jmac top
On the other side, the argues that JMAC set Megan up to fail. They claim he consistently gave her incomplete information, used her as a scapegoat for his own strategic blind spots, and then punished her for responding exactly as her character was written—impulsive, loyal, and human. In this reading, the “Megan mistakes” are actually JMAC’s mistakes in leadership. In the weeks that followed, the term entered
“The top isn’t a destination. It’s a behavior. Megan knows what she has to do. The question is whether she can stop being Megan long enough to do it.” For now, the saga remains one of the
One popular Twitter thread from user @RP_LoreMaster sums up the latter view: “JMAC wanted a wolf but kept feeding her like a pet. Then got mad when she bit the wrong person. The top isn’t about trust. It’s about control.” As of the latest arc, Megan by JMAC is no longer riding shotgun. She’s operating on the margins, running small jobs for lower-tier crews, and occasionally feeding intel to JMAC through intermediaries. Her character is in a redemption arc—slow, painful, and far from guaranteed.