If you imagined that a week of bad press would somehow start the decline of DraftKings and FanDuel, the American public proved your theory wildly wrong. Both DraftKings and FanDuel posted record numbers over the weekend in NFL daily fantasy, firmly rebuffing the idea that players would desert the sites. Adding more than a quarter of a million new users, DraftKings was a particularly big winner.

Here are the DraftKings and FanDuel stats for the NFL’s Week 5, courtesy of daily fantasy analytics website Super Lobby:

DraftKings: $25,046,113.25 in total entree fees (up from $23.9 million in Week 4), with 4.14 million total entries.

FanDuel: $20,576,801 in total entree fees (up from $19.7 million in Week 4), with 3.38 million total entries.

Those numbers, despite all of the talks of “crisis and scandal,” were up from the previous week (DraftKings had 3.75 million entries prior to this weekend, with FanDuel themselves adding from a Week 4 total of 3.18 million). It means that even with a very public backlash against the sites, the two combined to add more than half a million new players in a single week.

It’s a staggering rejection of the notion that somehow daily fantasy would experience even a mere pause in its continual growth. Though questions of industry regulation will undoubtedly persist, the general fantasy public doesn’t seem too concerned.

Also of note is that, for the first time, another daily fantasy site posted a weekly profit other than just DraftKings or FanDuel. Yahoo, having entered the world of daily fantasy earlier in 2015, saw total entry fees of $1,312,625, while paying out $1,286,000. Again, it’s indicative of the popularity of daily fantasy that even in a week when its very legality was discussed, more players joined in on the action.