There was plenty of criticism surrounding Friday’s much-hyped Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul boxing event streaming on Netflix, but it had nothing to do with the boxers in the ring.

Issues with video streaming quality, pixelation, stuttering and even outright crashes lit up social media well before the main event at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, as undercard fighters slugged it out.

 
 

Tracking website downdetector.com showed a surge of reports of problems with Netflix’s website beginning just before 8 p.m. local time. They climbed to more than 88,700 reports around 9:30 p.m.

The fight between boxing legend Tyson and YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul began shortly after 11 p.m. local time.

Users on X shared gifs of highly pixelated videos, or images of wires and comments suggesting that the streaming company’s IT department must be in for a rough night.

Some even dusted off the old “connecting” screen from the internet’s America Online days to make a joke about the problems.

The hashtags #NetflixFight, #buffering and #netflixcrash trended on the social media platform.

 

Netflix had no immediate comment, a spokesperson said in response to an emailed inquiry.

There were still reports of problems as the marquee event between Tyson and Paul was underway, according to downdetector.com, but nowhere near the spike of reports earlier in the evening.

Tyson, now 58, is the former heavyweight champion and one of boxing’s biggest names. Paul, 27, gained fame as a social media star before he began training and boxing.

The event was supposed to take place on July 20 but was postponed until Friday after Tyson suffered an ulcer flare-up in May that limited his training for a time.