He’s already calling himself “The Robin Hood of McNuggets.”

Former McDonald’s employee Cody Bondarchuk is being hailed a “hero” after he revealed in a now-viral tweet that he secretly gave out extra chicken McNuggets for two years — unbeknownst to his employer.

The 26-year-old from Edmonton, Canada says he put an extra nugget in every 10-piece box when he was employed at the fast-food chain from 2007 to 2009.

“I worked at McDonald’s for two and a half years and I put 11 nuggets in almost every 10-piece I made,” he writes.

Of course, Twitter went wild with comments calling Bondarchuk a “hero,” “St. Nuggets” and a would-be Nobel Peace Prize award-winner.

“How to win the class war, one chicken nugget at a time,” one fan wrote. Another chimed in: “Not all heroes wear capes, just name tags.”

After a fan referred to him as “the Robin hood of nugz,” the Canadian even added it to his profile bio.

One Twitter user even made an attempt to tally the monetary value of Bondarchuk’s good deed, estimating it could be nearly $40,000.

Bondarchuk’s admission also brought out more secrets from fellow fast-food workers, including one Twitter user who fessed up to piling on the cheese when making tacos at Taco Bell for over a year and a KFC worker who admitted to putting four or five pieces of chicken in every 3-piece meal.

Bondarchuk wasn’t alone in his act of defiance either, telling local news CTV News Edmonton his co-workers did it, too.

“It was something that a lot of my coworkers did as well,” he said. “It was really easy to overfill them without it looking weird when it was on the delivery line, and of course there are no cameras on the kitchen line.”

After his tweet, which now has 899,000 likes, went viral, Bondarchuk joked that he “underestimated the world’s love of both nuggets and free stuff.”

“I’m seeing a lot of comments about y’all not deserving a hero but I just wanted to say that EACH AND EVERY ONE OF YOU DESERVES THOSE BONUS NUGGET,” he adds.

“Anything that’s a little dig at corporate overlords is popular,” he tells CTV News Edmonton. “I saw that Elon Musk liked it, which is very cool.”

Of course, not everyone thought his Robin Hood-like act was a good deed. The former fast-food worker, who has a podcast called “Heart Half Full” to deliver a “weekly dose of hope and optimism,” also hit back at those who thought he cheated McDonald’s, including one who called it “corporate theft.”

“I’m doing charity for McDonald’s. If anything I am owed a consulting fee,” he writes.