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King of Glory's AG Super Play World Champs FMVP Controversy Escalates to Doxxing — Idol Fan Culture Shocks the Anime Community

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AG Super Play just clinched the King of Glory World Championship — a moment that should've been pure celebration. But the heated debate over who deserved the Finals MVP (FMVP) award turned the fan community into a powder keg. Today at noon, that powder keg finally detonated: a doxxing post appeared on AG Super Play's official Weibo super-topic (超话, a fan forum feature on Weibo).

According to the original NGA post, the doxxer was a fan of player 一诺 (Yinuo) — the very player who won the contested FMVP. The post sparked immediate backlash in the comments, with users begging for deletion. Weibo removed it within minutes.

NGA commenters were quick to react: 'This might finally blow up the whole doxxing mess beyond just the gacha/anime bubble.' But others pushed back: 'You think doxxing came from the anime community? The idol fan (饭圈, fànquān) side leaks a tiny bit over here and it's already this terrifying — over there they're doing it at industrial scale every single day.' Another user noted that idol fan communities have fully organized, institutionalized doxxing campaigns complete with 'memory revision' (岁月史书) tactics — something even gacha communities can't match.

The comments section also turned into a comedy of mistaken identities — some users thought 'AG' referred to the Pokémon team, others thought it was about 'AG-sensei' (a well-known VTuber). Upon learning it was about a King of Glory pro player, they collectively shrugged: 'Well, that tracks.'

User #14 provided crucial context on how the conflict escalated. The core feud is between 一诺's hardcore fans, nicknamed '锦衣卫' (Jǐnyīwèi, the Imperial Guards), and fans of team 北京WB. It wasn't just about the FMVP — the real trigger was WB fans demanding the starting roster stay intact after the finals loss and blaming the coach's drafting (BP). When WB's coach went online to argue with fans during the tournament, tensions snowballed: online insults → fabricated sexual rumors about 一诺 and the coach → and now, full-on doxxing of private individuals. User #14's verdict: 'A little taste of idol fan culture shock for the gacha community.'

Apparently, this kind of fan violence is par for the course in the KPL (King of Glory Pro League) scene. User #12 noted that KPL fan wars have always included 'offline defamation, Photoshopped memorial photos of players, and human flesh searches' — concentrated mainly among rival 'prince fan' (太子粉丝) factions.

User #11 brought up precedent from the VTuber (虚拟主播) community: a doxxing case there once hit #4 on Douyin's (TikTok China) trending list. The perpetrator turned out to be a minor who bought personal data through illegal channels and got 10 days of administrative detention — proof that doxxing isn't an isolated problem but a systemic plague across fan communities.

Many users called for regulatory crackdowns: 'Hope the authorities step in' and 'If they don't take this seriously, it's going to become a full-blown social issue.' But others were pessimistic — noting that the legal bar for prosecuting doxxers is too high, evidence collection is notoriously difficult, and the recent 'cyberspace cleanup' campaign only netted a handful of high-profile cases in a whole month.

From an FMVP trophy dispute to doxxing private citizens — from esports idol culture to gacha games and VTuber fandoms — the doxxing epidemic is spreading faster than anyone anticipated. When fan culture morphs from 'cheering for your fave' to 'doxxing for your fave,' the NGA community nailed it: it's time someone stepped in.

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