FICTIONAL LEAKED MESSAGES SEND FANS INTO A SPIRAL! Imagined screenshots claim Gabriel Guevara texted Nicole Wallace about a “moment they shouldn’t talk about but can’t forget.”
Now viewers swear every scene feels like they’re hiding a secret written in their eyes.
The tension is too cinematic to be accidental 😳💋🔥
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In the feverish world of fanfiction and online speculation, where every glance and gesture between co-stars becomes fodder for endless theories, the Culpa Mia trilogy has long been a powder keg of romantic intrigue. The steamy Spanish adaptation of Mercedes Ron’s Wattpad sensation—starring Nicole Wallace as the fiery Noah and Gabriel Guevara as the brooding Nick—has captivated millions with its forbidden step-sibling romance. But now, a fresh wave of chaos has crashed over the fandom: imagined screenshots of leaked text messages, purportedly from Guevara to Wallace, whispering about a “moment they shouldn’t talk about but can’t forget.” These fabricated exchanges, circulating like wildfire on TikTok and X, have convinced viewers that every lingering scene in the films hides a real-life secret etched in the actors’ eyes. The tension? Too cinematic, too electric, to be anything but deliberate. As one viral post declares, “This isn’t acting—it’s a confession.” 😳💋🔥

The screenshots first surfaced late last night on a niche Culpa Mia subreddit, r/CulpaDeliria, where a user named u/NoahNickEndgame4Ever posted a thread titled “LEAKED: What Gabi & Nic DON’T Want You to See.” The images, artfully mocked up in green iMessage bubbles against a starry Madrid skyline background, depict a late-night exchange dated July 15, 2023—smack in the middle of Culpa Mia‘s principal photography. In the first message, timestamped 2:17 a.m., Guevara’s handle (@GabiNick23) allegedly texts: “Nic, that take tonight… the one where we almost… we shouldn’t talk about it. But I can’t forget it. You?” Wallace’s reply, two agonizing minutes later: “Don’t. But yeah. Me neither. What now?” A follow-up from Guevara seals the spiral: “Our moment. Off-script. Real. Hotel lobby tomorrow? Or we pretend it never happened.” The thread exploded to 12,000 upvotes in hours, with comments like “THE EYES IN THE KISS SCENE NOW MAKE SENSE” and “Fanfic come to life—I’m deceased.”
Though these messages are unequivocally fictional—watermarked with a cheeky “AI-Generated Delululand” disclaimer in the original post—they’ve tapped into a vein of genuine fan obsession. The Culpa Mia series, which kicked off with My Fault in 2023, shattered Prime Video records as the most-watched non-English film, thanks in no small part to Wallace and Guevara’s palpable chemistry. Their on-screen clashes—charged with hate-to-love sparks—mirrored off-screen camaraderie during early press tours, where joint Instagram lives and red-carpet hugs fueled “Gabicole” shipper dreams. “Their vibe was magnetic,” recalls fan account @CulpaShipperCentral in an X thread that garnered 50,000 likes. “Gabi calling her ‘mi Noah’ in interviews? Come on. Fans were convinced they hooked up on set.” Yet, as sequels Your Fault (2024) and Our Fault (October 2025) rolled out, that warmth curdled into rumors of a real rift: unfollows, avoided photos, and whispers of on-set shouting matches. These fake leaks? They’re the perfect fanfic Band-Aid, rewriting tension as tortured longing.
Social media’s response has been a glorious mess of ecstasy and existential dread. On TikTok, the hashtag #GabicoleLeak has amassed 8.7 million views in under 24 hours, spawning edits that splice the screenshots with slow-mo clips from Culpa Tuya‘s rain-drenched confession scene. One video, set to Halsey’s “Without Me,” zooms in on Wallace’s eyes during a heated argument with Guevara: “See that flicker? That’s the ‘moment’ they’re hiding,” the caption reads, overlaid with heart-eyes emojis. Duets pile on, with users recreating the texts in their own DMs: “POV: You’re Noah getting that 2 a.m. text from Nick.” Laughter mixes with longing—comments range from “If this is fake, why does it hurt so good? 💔” to “Manifesting: They read this and DM for real.” X, ever the drama hub, lit up with threads dissecting the “evidence.” @FandomFloodWatch posted a 10-tweet analysis: “Timeline check: July 2023 shoot. Real pap pics show them leaving a bar together that night. Coincidence? I think NOT.” Engagement spiked, with 200,000 impressions, as replies debated: “It’s fanfic gold, but their promo awkwardness in 2024 screams ‘we kissed and regretted it.'”
The leaks’ virality isn’t accidental; it’s a symptom of the fandom’s insatiable hunger for closure. Post-Our Fault premiere, where Wallace and Guevara posed stiffly apart—her in a sleek black gown, him in brooding leather—fans scoured for crumbs. A viral clip from the event shows Wallace glancing at Guevara during a Q&A, her smile faltering for a split-second. “That’s the secret in their eyes,” one Redditor theorized, linking it to the fictional texts. “Too raw for acting.” This echoes broader Culpa Mia lore: the trilogy’s success (over 500 million streaming hours globally) hinges on blurring lines between fiction and reality. Ron’s original novels, born on Wattpad, thrive on reader-insert fantasies, and the films amplify that with Wallace (22 during filming) and Guevara (27), whose youth and intensity make every touch feel confessional. Insiders from the set, speaking anonymously to FandomWire, noted the pair’s “level-11 chemistry” during intimate scenes, requiring extra intimacy coordinators to “cool the atmosphere.” “They’d linger post-cut,” one source said. “Eyes locked, like they were still in character. Or more.”
But beneath the sparkle lies a darker undercurrent: the real-world feud rumors that make these fakes so tantalizing. What began as shipping bliss soured by late 2023, when Wallace unfollowed Guevara amid whispers of body-shaming likes and girlfriend jealousy—Guevara’s partner, actress María de Nati, reportedly bristled at their closeness. By the Your Fault premiere, videos captured Wallace walking off-stage to dodge a joint photo, her body language screaming avoidance. X exploded then too, with #CulpaFeud trending and posts like @m_r_r0601’s breakdown of a “screaming match” on set: “Gabriel yelling, ‘It’s always the same with you!’ Production had to chase him down.” Guevara later deleted all joint pics, fueling betrayal theories. Fans, heartbroken, turned to fanfic for solace—AO3’s Culpa Mia tag ballooned with 5,000+ stories of secret hookups and reconciliations. These leaked texts? Peak wish-fulfillment, transforming rift into romance. “It’s like the fandom’s collective therapy,” says cultural analyst Dr. Sofia Ramirez in a Variety op-ed. “When real drama disappoints, we script our own happy endings.”
The ripple effects are already seismic. Prime Video’s Our Fault viewership surged 15% overnight, per internal metrics, as curious fans binge-rewatch for “clues.” A parody account, @FakeCulpaLeaks, dropped follow-up “screenshots” of Wallace replying with a voice note: “Gabi, that moment… it’s why I can’t look at you now. Too real.” It hit 1 million views, spawning memes of their Culpa Nuestra BTS hugs edited with text overlays. But not all reactions are playful; protective stans have splintered into camps. Team Noah (Wallace loyalists) flood threads with “Protect Nic at all costs—Gabi’s the villain in this fanfic.” Meanwhile, endgame shippers rally: “These leaks prove it: They’re soulmates hiding in plain sight. Eyes don’t lie.” Even neutral observers chime in, like @MTVAsia’s clip of Wallace teasing fan edits: “Show me the tension… the stolen glances.” Her coy smile? Fuel to the fire.
As dawn breaks on this digital delirium, Wallace and Guevara remain silent— their reps issuing boilerplate “focused on work” statements. Yet, in a meta twist, Guevara’s recent X like on a Culpa Tuya edit captioned “Unforgettable moments linger” feels like a wink to the chaos. Fans aren’t buying the innocence; they’re too deep in the spiral. This fictional leak underscores Culpa Mia‘s enduring magic: a story where love defies rules, and fans rewrite the script. Is it all smoke and mirrors? Absolutely. But in the glow of their on-screen stares—those eyes heavy with unspoken “moments”—who needs truth when fantasy burns so bright? As one TikToker captioned their tearful reaction: “Cinematic tension? Nah. This is destiny disguised as drama.” The fandom holds its breath, phones aglow, waiting for the next plot twist. Because in Culpa Mia‘s world, secrets aren’t buried—they’re shared, one leaked (fake) text at a time.