Queen Diamond TikTok Gifts Hit GH₵2,000 After Viral Shay Concert Video

Queen Diamond, the Ghanaian lady who became an overnight sensation after her energetic dance moves at Wendy Shay’s Shay Concert went viral, has cashed in over GH₵2,000 in TikTok gifts during a single live session just days after the incident.
The 23-year-old content creator from Accra attracted more than 5,200 concurrent viewers on Tuesday night as fans flooded her stream with roses, lions, and universe gifts to show support following the controversial clip that initially sparked mixed reactions online.
The viral moment happened last Saturday at the National Sports Stadium when Queen Diamond, dressed in a striking yellow two-piece outfit, was filmed dancing between two male revellers.
Many viewers initially misinterpreted the footage as inappropriate, but she later clarified that she was actually reacting to pepper spray deployed by security during a small disturbance nearby.
Once the truth emerged, public sentiment quickly shifted from criticism to celebration, turning her into one of the fastest-rising TikTok personalities in Ghana this week.
Her follower count tells the story best. Before the concert, Queen Diamond had fewer than 800 followers and posted casual dance and lifestyle content that rarely broke 2,000 views.
By Wednesday morning, her TikTok handle @queendiamondgh had surged past 66,000 followers, with the original concert clip alone reaching 12 million views across platforms.
Brands and local promoters have already started sliding into her DMs, and she confirmed during the live session that several collaboration requests are under review.
During the two-hour stream, viewers kept asking her to recreate the famous dance move that started it all. Instead, Queen Diamond laughed it off and thanked everyone for turning what could have been a damaging moment into a career breakthrough.
“I never expected this kind of love. From the pepper spray pain to now receiving roses worth real money, God is amazing,” she told the audience while pinning comments from top gifters.
The gifts came thick and fast. One user from Kumasi sent three universes worth GH₵900 alone, while dozens of others dropped lions (GH₵300 each) and smaller tokens.
TikTok converts these virtual presents into real earnings, and Queen Diamond revealed she plans to withdraw the money this weekend to help her mother complete a small shop extension in Madina.
“This money is going straight to family. Fame is good, but bills don’t pay themselves,” she said honestly, earning even louder cheers from viewers.
She also announced plans for another live session tonight, promising to wear the exact yellow outfit from the concert for the first time since the incident. “I was scared to touch it again because of the bad comments at first, but now I’m ready to own the look,” she declared.
Fans immediately began sharing the countdown across WhatsApp and Instagram stories.Ghanaian TikTok stars like Jackline Mensah and Asantewaa have publicly welcomed her to the big league, with Asantewaa commenting fire emojis on every post.
Meanwhile, event bloggers report that ticket inquiries for upcoming concerts featuring similar high-energy vibes have spiked as promoters now actively seek “the Queen Diamond effect” for crowd engagement.
Mental health advocates have praised how quickly the online community flipped the narrative once her explanation dropped, calling it a rare example of Ghanaian social media choosing empathy over cancellation.
Queen Diamond herself urged young ladies to stay strong during misunderstandings online. “One bad angle can change everything, but truth and good energy always win,” she advised during the stream.
As her follower count continues climbing by the hour, many are predicting brand deals worth five figures before December ends.
For now, Queen Diamond remains focused on engaging her new audience, teasing dance challenges and possible meet-and-greet events in Accra and Kumasi early next year.
From an accidental pepper spray victim to Ghana’s newest TikTok millionaire in gifts, her story has become the feel-good viral moment of the month.
