Andrew Tate vs Sneako; money rises after DeMoor loss

By Tim Smith - 02/02/2026 - Comments

Andrew Tate’s answer to his Misfits Boxing collapse has been simple and revealing, double the money, chase a smaller name, and try to pull control back after a debut that went totally wrong.


Tate’s professional boxing appearance ended in a loss to Chase DeMoor, a fight that undercut the kickboxing résumé he leaned on during promotion. Since then, attention has drifted toward what comes next rather than what happened in the ring. That context explains why the offer to Sneako has jumped so quickly.

Sneako revealed this week that the proposed purse has risen from $500,000 to $1 million in a short span, a move that reads less like negotiation and more like urgency. According to Sneako, contact came through a Misfits intermediary, despite Tate publicly distancing himself from the streamer after their falling out.

“Andrew Tate is begging to do a fight with me,” Sneako said during a stream. “They just made a counter-offer. They want me to fight for $1million.”

Fighters with options do not double numbers without pressure.

Why the DeMoor loss changed Tate’s position

Tate entered Misfits selling past titles and physical presence. He weighed just under 200 pounds against DeMoor and spoke as though experience alone would carry him. It did not. DeMoor outworked him and exposed how thin Tate’s boxing base really was once the bell rang.

A rematch with DeMoor carries risk. A bout with Sneako offers size, experience, and expectation all tilted in Tate’s favor. Sneako admits as much.

“What is he, like, four weight classes heavier?” Sneako said. “You already lost a lot of the hype for your fight after hyping yourself up for being a four-time kickboxing champion.”

Sneako says he walks around at 160 pounds and has never boxed professionally or as an amateur. From a gym perspective, the appeal is obvious for Tate. From a sporting angle, it raises the same doubts Misfits often attracts.

Why Sneako is not rushing to accept

Despite the money, Sneako has been blunt about the upside. He has questioned what a loss does to Tate after DeMoor already “showed a clinic,” and what a win really earns him against a heavier man with a name problem.

“$1million doesn’t change my life,” Sneako said. “I don’t really see what I have to gain.”

He has also floated taking the fight outside Misfits, preferring Adin Ross’ Brand Risk platform. That detail matters. Control of platform now rivals control of opponent.

Tate has not responded publicly to Sneako’s comments. The silence keeps the offer alive and the conversation rolling. What is clear is this, the money climbed because the debut went wrong, and the next fight is being shaped to fix that.


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