If you skipped the debate last night, a quick look at Twitter might give the indication that #TrumpWon.

That's the hashtag that has climbed to the top of Twitter's trends on Tuesday morning, as pundits, journalists, politicians and armchair political scientists digest Monday night's debate.

You better believe Trump noticed.

The #1 trend on Twitter right now is #TrumpWon - thank you! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 27, 2016

A spokesperson for Twitter said the trend was organic, and had not received paid promotion. The Trump campaign had previously paid to have some hashtags trend.

While #TrumpWon was trending, its sentiment wasn't necessarily felt by all. A search of the hashtag showed plenty of people mocking the notion.

Other stayed true to the #TrumpWon message.

Let's be honest-

Without pampering & coddling from the media Hillary's a lackluster granny totally unfit to be President.#TrumpWon #MAGA — CC (@ChristiChat) September 27, 2016

#TrumpWon because we are tired of smug elitists who laugh at all criticism and accept no responsibility for their actions. #DebateNight pic.twitter.com/sQWJwMYE9s — Deplorable AJ (@asamjulian) September 27, 2016

As for who actually won the debate, the general media consensus seemed to lean toward Hillary — or at least away from Trump.

The Republican candidate appeared to be battling some slight cold or allergy, and was audibly sniffing throughout much of the night. That might have been an otherwise uninteresting detail except for the fact that the health of the candidates — particularly that of Clinton — has been a hot topic in this election cycle.

Trump's reaction to the debate afterward also did not seem to indicate that the candidate thought he won. Trump reportedly canceled an appearance at a "victory party" and also claimed that his microphone had been working properly.

It wasn't just on Twitter where Trump's "win" was surfacing. Display ads appeared on Politico and the Wall Street Journal touting The Donald's debate performance.

LOL, look the story headline. Look at these ads: https://t.co/2sgroAWPRu pic.twitter.com/vwKK6pE5MY — andrew kaczynski (@BuzzFeedAndrew) September 27, 2016

Clinton, meanwhile, had her own win-touting ads on the Washington Post.