This seems to be an issue that only affects Chrome and possibly Safari (I only tested Chrome, Edge, and Firefox personally). When the username wraps around to the next line, part of it becomes transparent (the text is actually still there). I'll look into the issue as to why the browser doesn't play nice w/ the CSS.
The issue seems to be Chrome (and other browsers like Safari) isn't playing very nice with the background-clip CSS property. Since this information is publicly available (insofar as you can just inspect the web page and you can find this); this is the CSS that is used to achieve the rainbow username effect. Code: background-image: gradient( linear, left top, right top, color-stop(0, #f22), color-stop(0.20, #ff2), color-stop(0.3, #2f2), color-stop(0.45, #2ff), color-stop(0.6, #22f),color-stop(0.75, #22f), color-stop(1, #f2f) ); background-image: -webkit-gradient( linear, left top, right top, color-stop(0, #f22), color-stop(0.20, #ff2), color-stop(0.3, #2f2), color-stop(0.45, #2ff), color-stop(0.6, #22f),color-stop(0.75, #22f), color-stop(1, #f2f) ); background-clip: text; -webkit-background-clip: text; color: transparent; Disabling background clip will get you this on all browsers: Obviously having it enabled will get you this: Or this (where the implementation seems wonky): So the actual colorization is appearing on Chrome (and Safari I would assume) across a line break just as it is on Firefox. It just seems it's not clipping any text that happens after the line break. I'm still looking into it and I apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.
It's not causing any inconvenience man. It's providing a couple yucks while we await an inevitable fix. Thank you for putting in the effort but take your time.