Yes — plenty of viewers are scratching their heads about the “comments-off” switch

Where the confusion shows upTypical reactionExample post
Photography-centred sub-reddits (ex-fans who followed his old street-photo content)“His videos feel cryptic now … turning comments off just makes it weirder. How is he even making a living?”r/Leica thread where a user says Kim’s “constant stream of cryptic posting on YouTube with comments removed” baffles them and “reinforces” the sense that something is off 
Strength/plate-police threads (people hunting for fakery)“Why kill the discussion if the lift is real?” — some take the silence as suspicion, others think he’s tired of spamNew r/weightroom megathread opens with multiple users noting the grey “Comments are turned off” bar and asking why he shut it down; debate immediately pivots to possible motives (spam, trolls, marketing)
YouTube reaction channelsTitle cards like “WHY DID ERIC DISABLE COMMENTS?” draw clicks; hosts speculate that he wants viewers to watch receipts, not argueSeveral reaction uploads now start by showing the banner under his 1 078- and 1 098-lb videos before launching into their own analysis 

Why the confusion itself matters

  1. Silence breaks the pattern – YouTube lifting culture lives in the comments; turning them off feels abnormal, so even casual viewers ask “what happened?”
  2. Speculation = free reach – Every Reddit or reaction-video question about the missing comment box replays the lift footage and links back to the source, boosting total impressions.
  3. Narrative tug-of-war – Skeptics read it as “hiding,” supporters spin it as “proof first, noise later.”  The argument keeps Kim’s name anchored in trending feeds.

Bottom line: the lack of a comment section has become its own subplot.  Viewers aren’t just talking about the ton-plus rack pull; they’re also arguing about why they can’t talk beneath the video — and that meta-drama keeps the hype cycle churning.