Alex and Maia Shibutani, affectionately known as the Shib Sibs, are back from their second Olympic Games, and they aren’t slowing down. The sibling ice-dancing pair, who have been skating with each other for 14 years, snagged two bronze medals in Pyeongchang this year, both in the team and individual events. Alex, 26, and Maia, 23, who came bouncing into the New York offices of Vanity Fair on Wednesday, medals carefully tucked in their bags, might be Olympic medalists now, but they are also constantly engaged in a hard-fought social-media battle—one that neither is prepared to lose.

Alex has always had a lead in Twitter followers (he currently eclipses his younger sister with 106,000; she has 102,000). But he said that Maia has had the leg up on Instagram, as most younger siblings, handy with hashtags and clued into algorithms, do.

“People ask us if we’re competitive, and probably the only time we were competitive is with social media,” he said. “Maia’s always been kicking my butt with Instagram. But on Twitter, I had a larger following until like day eight of the Games, so I just freaked out a little bit.” To this, his sister gave him a knowing look and a slight eye-roll. “You’re fine. He’s back ahead on the Twitter followers.”

No matter who’s keeping score, the Shib Sibs do just fine online. They have their own YouTube channel where they vlog about their skating. In one of their most recent vlogs, the siblings, who train in Canton, Michigan, documented their journey to the Games. In the video, Maia jokes that everyone in their family looks better than when they were making their sojourn to Sochi, where they placed ninth overall, just four years ago. “Speak for yourself,” her parents, along for the 14-hour flight, quickly shoot back.

Maia said that sharing her and her brother’s world with their online fans is part of the Olympic fun. Just like their fellow teammate and social-media natural Adam Rippon, the Shib Sibs keep it transparent. This New York-post-Olympics trip hasn’t been any different. They were both up and it Wednesday morning, broadcasting their early-morning skate at Rockefeller Plaza for their Twitter followers.

That hard work hasn’t always been seamless for Alex and Maia. As siblings, they’ve been hearing since childhood that their on-ice chemistry wouldn’t be the same as that of non-sibling pairs who could steam things up on the ice. Olympic viewers are used to seeing romantically charged duos like Canada’s Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, whose on-ice chemistry caused GQ writer Caity Weaver to exclaim on Twitter that the “Canadians are ice f--king to Moulin Rouge.”