
One screenshot, one question — 'Is this legit?' — and the Girls' Frontline 2 community erupted yet again. This time, the drama hit fast and hard: a supposed top-up ad was spotted listing '648-tier currency for just 200 RMB,' immediately putting MICA Team (散爆网络) on blast.

It all started with a gossip-seeking thread on NGA where the OP shared a screenshot allegedly showing a discounted top-up deal for Girls' Frontline 2. The '200 RMB for 648' offer means getting the highest in-game currency tier (normally 648 RMB, roughly $90 USD) for just 200 RMB (~$28) — a deal so good it immediately raised red flags.
The comment section split into several camps. Some users zeroed in on the prime suspect right away: 'Can't speak for other companies, but when it comes to MICA...' — implying this kind of thing is par for the course with the studio behind Girls' Frontline. Others recalled how a well-known KOL (referred to as a 'Templar Knight,' 圣殿骑士) had previously claimed that CEO YuZhong was 'satisfied with the revenue numbers.' The pushback was swift: 'If revenue is so great, surely they can afford to pay their sponsorship fees?'
The second wave of discussion centered on 'self top-up' (自充) — a practice where game companies spend their own money to artificially inflate revenue figures, essentially cooking the books to look more profitable than they really are. Some players flatly declared 'This IS self top-up,' while others offered an alternative theory: 'Maybe it's just bait to lure people into scam top-up services' — suggesting these cheap ads could be phishing traps run by third-party fraudsters.
Not everyone was convinced though. Some users noted the screenshot came from TapTap and called it 'kinda sus,' not ruling out the possibility of fake news or competitor sabotage. But the community's favorite label for the drama was impossible to ignore — one user roasted: 'The real Myanmar Scam of gacha games, can't even pay for sponsored content without running a hustle.' The '缅北二游' (Myanmar Scam Gacha Game) nickname, a dark joke comparing GF2's business practices to infamous Southeast Asian phone scams, clearly struck a nerve.
One eagle-eyed player raised an interesting detail: 'Wait, if someone took a sponsorship deal, wouldn't they at least max out their stamina? I've already seen max-level accounts pop up' — suggesting that if content creators were indeed hired to promote GF2, you'd expect to see corresponding investment in game accounts, but the pieces don't seem to fit.
Others brought out the movie quotes: 'The rich get their money back in full, the common folk split it 70-30' — a famous line from the Chinese film 'Let the Bullets Fly' used to sarcastically describe the alleged profit-sharing scheme. Another user fired shots: 'GF2 is already notorious everywhere — do we really need YOU to promote it? If you don't spread the word, plenty of others will.'
As of this writing, MICA Team has not issued any response. But players are already treating this as daily entertainment: 'Love it, love it — new drama every day, keep it coming!' At this point, the GF2 community gossip pipeline has become appointment viewing for many gamers.
So is the screenshot legit? As one user put it: 'The details are way too specific for this to be staged.' But old hands in the community offered a reality check: 'This feels like bait to get you into scam top-up services...' The truth? Only the people directly involved know for sure.
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