Kirsty Victoria Collins
DETAILS
Who — Kirsty Victoria
Social — Sarcastic_kitkat_
In Summary — Kirsty is a chronic liar and online fantasist who build entire fake worlds to gain attention - from invented illnesses to “dead babies” to stolen scan photos, imaginary partners and reborn doll storylines. Her life is a cycle of tragedies, chaotic online behaviour, and public embarrassments.
TikTok Handle
A Masterclass in Lies, Dead Baby Storylines & Discount Catfishing
Introduction / Overview
Welcome to the chronicle of Kirsty — a woman who treats reality like a scratch card: cheap, chaotic, and mostly blank.
This breaks down the lies, the characters, the “dead babies,” the fake family trees, and the web of accounts she uses to stalk, manipulate, and control Nathan.
Buckle up. It only gets darker from here. As you will see, Kirsty is a compulsive liar and master manipulator
Kirsty’s Background
Kirsty Victoria’s background is a mixture of half-truths, contradictions, and fabricated identities that make it difficult to separate fact from fiction. What can be traced, however, is a long pattern of online deception stretching back nearly a decade. Her digital footprint shows that she has been creating fake accounts since at least 2015, with each identity designed to serve a role in whatever storyline she was building at the time—friends, partners, siblings, cousins, even entire fake families. Many of these personas interacted with each other publicly, creating the illusion of a social circle that never actually existed.
Her offline life is equally chaotic. She has a complicated family structure, with her sister Hannah also involved in several questionable behaviours, including an arrest for assaulting police and NHS workers. The household dynamic appears unstable, with blurred boundaries and inappropriate social media activity—such as her mother’s partner leaving sexual comments on Kirsty’s explicit content.
Her relationships, both real and fabricated, often centre around Nathan, who became a key target in her long-term catfishing schemes. Kirsty engineered dozens of accounts to influence him emotionally, pretending to be love interests, family members, or friends urging him to stay with her. Nathan, believing the accounts were real people, became deeply entangled in her invented world.
Kirsty’s background is also marked by instability in employment, short-lived business ventures, and a reliance on dramatic storylines involving pregnancies, medical emergencies, and bereavements—none of which align with verifiable reality. She has impersonated parents, faked children, staged online tragedies, and used stolen images from Pinterest, Flickr, and Instagram to support her narratives.
At its core, Kirsty’s background isn’t defined by where she’s from or what she’s lived through, but by the elaborate fictional universe she’s constructed around herself—one she continues to expand, rewrite, and weaponise whenever needed.
The Lies We’ve Already Uncovered
Kirsty’s Back Catalogue of Fiction includes:
• “Grape size baby loss” (19 times)
• Cancer
• Autism
• PCOS
• Taking testosterone
• Unknown baby dads
• Theft, rings, stolen goods
• Spicy page in her child’s name
• Fake diagnoses
• Endless hospital visits
• Tubes tied (sure, Jan)
• Gynaecologist drama
• “Morphine strips” — more likely mole removal
She lies because lies give her attention. It’s her version of a loyalty card.
Online Behaviour & Accusations & Personalities & Creations
According to Kirsty:
• She and Nathan have been together 12 years.
• Kid #1, Jessie, is 8… but also somehow Nathan’s brother’s child.
• Meanwhile, she’s also engaged to:
TJ Hunter, Ajay, Jayme Sylvest, Pheonix, Ricky Rollins…
• They’ve supposedly been on dates, holidays, and emotional journeys together.
• Only issue?
None of these people exist. At all.
Every “fiancé” is a stolen photo from Flickr, Pinterest, or Instagram.
Kirsty has built:
A full family tree
Fake aunties
Fake brothers
Fake cousins
Fake friendship groups
Fake kids
Fake pregnancies
A whole Sims universe — without the charm. Her fake profiles began around 2015, lasting 2 years. The “dead baby” photos only started in 2020, around the time she arrived on TikTok.
We can confirm at least 15 accounts are her.
She uses these accounts to:
• Talk to Nathan
• Tell him he doesn’t deserve her
• Pretend to be jealous exes
• Pretend to be best friends
• Pretend to be family
Nathan thought these were real people.
They were all Kirsty.
Every. Single. One.
Kirsty’s Health Claims & Hypochondria
Kirsty’s relationship with health, illness, and medical storylines is one of the most consistent patterns in her behaviour. Almost every major conflict, exposure, or contradiction in her life is quickly followed by a new medical claim — often dramatic, sometimes medically impossible, and nearly always inconsistent. These claims serve a clear purpose: to regain sympathy, deflect accountability, or shift the narrative when her stories begin to fall apart.
Over the years, Kirsty has referenced an extensive list of alleged conditions, including cancer scares, autism, PCOS, hormonal disorders, repeated miscarriages, fertility issues, and gynaecological emergencies. Many of these appear suddenly with no medical evidence, vanish without follow-up, or contradict earlier statements. She has described taking testosterone while also claiming to be pregnant, announced having her tubes tied while continuing to claim new conceptions, and referenced long-term illnesses that never align with her lifestyle or behaviour.
Her pattern extends into hospital-related storylines, where she frequently reports attending appointments, undergoing tests, or being admitted for emergencies. Yet these incidents rarely match NHS procedures, timelines, or terminology. Instead, they often mirror the experiences of others around her — most notably Caitlyn’s genuine medical crisis, which Kirsty repeated as her own narrative.
Kirsty’s use of health claims appears deeply rooted in attention-seeking through crisis. Whenever she faces exposure, relationship instability, or inconsistencies in her lies, a new medical update conveniently appears. These stories often escalate quickly, involve dramatic symptoms, and rely heavily on unverifiable details. Over time, the volume and variety of claims suggest a pattern of hypochondria blended with manipulative storytelling.
Ultimately, Kirsty’s health narratives aren’t simply personal embellishments — they’re strategic tools. They create sympathy, reset conversations, and shield her from accountability. The problem is not illness itself, but the repeated misuse of medical storylines to control, distract, and manipulate the people around her.
Public Embarrassments
Kirsty has built a reputation for public chaos, with a trail of online and offline embarrassments that follow the same pattern: dramatic claims, extreme stories, and instant contradictions that collapse the moment anyone asks a basic question. One of the most notorious incidents was the Morrisons scandal, where she accused a staff member of inappropriate behaviour, claimed she had to hide her “daughter” (a reborn doll) in a cupboard, and tried turning the situation into a victim storyline. Morrisons reviewed the footage, found the entire tale fabricated, and she was ultimately dismissed.
Her social media “performances” add to the embarrassment catalogue — livestream breakdowns, fake hospital dramas, inconsistent medical stories, and constant arguments with people who don’t exist. She frequently exposes her own lies in real time by forgetting previous versions of her stories.
Kirsty has also repeatedly posted bizarre content involving her headless reborn dolls, fake injuries, dramatic “attacks,” and staged emergencies that viewers quickly pick apart. Every attempt to gain sympathy ends the same way: laughter from the audience, frustration from those involved, and Kirsty deleting comments or blocking anyone who catches her out.
Her public image isn’t chaotic by accident — it’s chaotic because the lies always unravel.
Gender & Mental Health Claims
Kirsty has turned gender identity and mental health into interchangeable props, shifting them to suit whichever storyline she’s pushing at the time. Her claims rarely stay consistent for more than a few days, and they often appear only when she needs sympathy, deflection, or a new dramatic arc.
At various points, Kirsty has claimed to be a transgender man, a non-binary person, or a woman “rediscovering her identity,” yet these declarations are always contradicted by her own behaviour. Moments after insisting she is a trans man, she posts content relying heavily on hyper-feminised sexuality. Claims of “gender dysphoria” vanish whenever the storyline changes direction or when attention moves elsewhere. It’s identity as costume, not consistency.
Her mental health claims follow the same pattern. Kirsty has self-diagnosed with DID, anxiety, depression, PTSD, and more—none supported by evidence, treatment plans, or professional documentation. The DID claims are the most performative: she stages arguments with “alters” on livestreams, switching personalities mid-sentence for dramatic effect. These segments look more like theatre than legitimate symptoms.
Combined with exaggerated medical emergencies, fluctuating diagnoses, and sudden “relapses” whenever she faces accountability, a clear pattern emerges: mental health is her shield, gender identity is her escape route, and both are used to manipulate the people around her.
These claims don’t reflect genuine struggle—they reflect a long-term habit of using sensitive subjects as emotional leverage, content fodder, and protection from criticism. For Kirsty, identity isn’t something she discovers. It’s something she weaponizes.
Family & Children
We Know Kirsty has lied about multiple children, including diseases, as well as creating online fiction in the real world and fabricating it even worse online, so much so, that Hannah, Kirsty's sister has now come out and spoken against her for all her lies and even has confirmed some on live streams. She also confirmed Kirsty only has 1 child, this child has been adopted out and no longer in Kirsty's care, due to Kirsty under feeding her child
Final Thoughts
Kirsty doesn’t just lie—
She world-builds.
A full fantasy universe built from dead babies, stolen photos, and imaginary men proposing under Disneyland fireworks.