What other long-form investigations has Outlaws of Chivalry published since 2023?
Executive summary
Outlaws of Chivalry, a Substack by Lisa Noelle Voldeng, published a small archive of posts beginning in March 2023 and including multiple longer pieces through October 2023 and into early 2026, with at least one multi-part long-form essay and associated audio material highlighted on the platform [1] [2] [3] [4]. Public reporting tying Voldeng’s Substack to viral audio releases has amplified attention to those long-form posts and audio, but outside of the Substack archive the reporting is limited and sometimes focused on the audio leak controversy rather than a catalog of investigations [5] [6].
1. The Substack archive: a short but visible run of posts
The Outlaws of Chivalry Substack archive lists posts beginning March 23, 2023, with additional entries through September and October 2023, showing at least three early posts that form the nucleus of the newsletter’s output [1] [3] [2]. These archived entries are the primary public record of what the publication has released since 2023; the archive page itself is presented as the full collection of posts on the Substack site [3].
2. A named long-form: “Don’t worry. Boys are hard to find.”
Among the items visible on Substack is a multi-part piece titled “Don’t worry. Boys are hard to find.” (Part 1 o2 appears in Substack listings and platform notes), which has been promoted within Substack and social channels as a significant long-form installment associated with Outlaws of Chivalry [7] [4]. The existence of parts and the Substack note placement indicate this was presented as a serialized long-form investigation or narrative within the newsletter rather than a single short post [4] [7].
3. Audio clips and a focal controversy amplified the work
Outlaws of Chivalry’s Substack has been used to host audio clips tied to material that later circulated widely; social commentary and posts urged readers to “check out the audio clips on Substack” and characterized them as difficult but necessary listening, signaling that audio was an intentional component of the reporting or materials published under the Outlaws banner [8]. Major outlets and aggregators reported on Voldeng’s role in releasing audio tied to Sasha/Sascha Riley and alleged Epstein-related content, connecting the Substack to a separate viral controversy about leaked recordings [5] [6] [9].
4. Media coverage focuses on the leak, not a full catalog of investigations
Multiple news outlets profiling Lisa Noelle Voldeng framed her primarily as the Substack author who published or leaked audio and highlighted her location and profile, but those reports do not provide a complete inventory of every long-form investigation; they instead spotlighted the viral audio episode and her identity as the newsletter’s creator [5] [6] [9]. Consequently, public reporting is robust on the leak and on Voldeng’s role, but thin on a systematic list of independent long-form investigations beyond the items visible in the Substack archive [5] [6] [3].
5. What can be concluded — and what remains unknown
Evidence from the Substack archive and linked posts confirms Outlaws of Chivalry published several substantive posts since 2023, including at least one serialized long-form piece and audio material hosted on the platform, and that the newsletter’s archive is the authoritative public source for those outputs [3] [4] [8]. It remains beyond the available reporting to produce a comprehensive list of every long-form investigation the newsletter has conducted because mainstream reporting emphasizes the audio leak and profile pieces rather than cataloging all Substack content; therefore any broader claim about additional investigations beyond the archived posts would exceed the documented sources provided here [5] [6].