The Airbnb squatter feels no remorse. In fact, he would do it again.

Maksym Pashanin — or someone with access to his Kickstarter account –this weekend posted a comment on the crowd-funding site’s page for a campaign where he raised $40,000 last November for a videogame that never materialized.

“Okay guys, what’s the latest deets on the drama? 10/10 would squat again,” the post reads.

It’s been eight days since Pashanin achieved worldwide notoriety after The Chronicle broke the story of the brothers who moved into Cory Tschogl’s condo and wouldn’t leave. The incident has gone viral with scores of news articles, TV and radio reports, and even a joke in Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue last week. Tschogl has identified Maksym Pashanin to The Chronicle as the man who booked her place via Airbnb, stopped paying, refuses to leave and sent her text messages threatening legal action.

Maksym and his brother Denys Pashanin — who, according to Tschogl, also occupies the condo — are the principals behind Kilobite Inc., which ran the successful Kickstarter campaign for Confederate Express, a zombie game. Instead of delivering the game, they launched another campaign seeking $25,000 for a different game.

While their case illuminates holes in the safety net for “sharing economy” sites like Airbnb and Kickstarter, it also shows the wisdom of the crowd — one of the sharing economy’s tenets. Hundreds of commenters on SFGate, Kickstarter and a landlord’s website where Tschogl sought advice have ferreted out information about the brothers — not all of which could be verified.

People who backed the game on Kickstarter are furious and asking for their money back.

“He may squat again but he won’t scam again,” wrote one Kickstarter backer in response to the post. “This guy is tainted for life. Hope Kickstarter shuts down his other con and kicks the scumbag parasite out.”

Another backer wrote: “Never in my life have I felt so betrayed and ashamed of having given money to someone.”

The saga has inspired many readers to turn amateur detective, including a sizable number who are floating the theory that there is just one brother and the other is no more real than Norman Bates’ mother. However, a YouTube video for the Kickstarter project shows two distinct, albeit very similar appearing, men promoting it.