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Girls' Frontline 2 Producer Yuzhong Drops ANOTHER Bombshell — Players Lose It: "There's More?!" Nearly 10 Scandals in a Single Day

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"Yuzhong?! What the hell are you trying to do?!!!!" — When this post title appeared on NGA, GFL2 players knew immediately: another watermelon had ripened in the melon patch. The OP attached a screenshot of what appears to be leaked chat records directly implicating Girls' Frontline 2: Exilium producer Yuzhong (real name Huang Yifeng, CEO of Sunborn Network). But the real kicker isn't the leak itself — it's the timing. Nearly 10 scandals had already exploded that very same day.

For context, let's rewind to early 2024. GFL2 had been a lightning rod for controversy since launch — from the infamous Raymond NTR storyline that enraged players, to the official Tieba account naming itself 'PaperClip' (回形针, identical to a controversial anti-China science channel exposed in 2021), to a cascade of PR disasters and mounting player dissatisfaction. By January 7th, the floodgates opened: leaks were dropping one after another like a machine gun, making it the gacha community's 'Black Monday.'

In the exposed screenshot, what appear to be QR codes and partially blurred-out content can be seen. Sharp-eyed commenters immediately called it out: 'What about those two QR codes? The blurred-out portions probably have even more bombs.' The implication is clear — the full, uncensored version of this image is likely far more devastating, and the leaker deliberately redacted sensitive parts.

The comment section's vibe? Pure absurdist comedy. User @脏蛇宝 cracked: 'Can Yuzhong just delete my account for me? I only downloaded the game and played for a few hours. I genuinely had no idea about any of this. Then I suddenly remembered — didn't they say you need a selfie with your ID card to delete your account?' The subtext being: in a game that requires real-name verification, you can't even run away when drama hits. Someone hit back with the perfect reply: 'Just buy a power-leveling service on Taobao, bro.'

Another player went full doomer: 'It's over. In a few days, won't the authorities be calling me? I literally played for less than 20 minutes.' Obviously tongue-in-cheek, but it perfectly captures the tense atmosphere of the moment — the melon-eating had gotten so intense that players were half-joking about getting caught up in the fallout.

Commenters also dug up cautionary tales from the past: 'The last dev team that loved pulling stunts like this was that one mecha game — the one whose first event was a Japanese shrine or something. It's dead and buried now. Guess when you've had it too good for too long, you just can't resist stirring the pot. RIP.' The implied message: GFL2 might be heading the same way. Someone else delivered the most savage one-liner of the thread: 'The new gold standard for gacha games is becoming more flexible than Ruyi Jingu Bang' (the Monkey King's shape-shifting staff) — a burn suggesting GFL2 has gone from industry benchmark to a shapeless joke.

With the relentless barrage of leaks, the community's emotional state had evolved from genuine anger into full-on popcorn mode. One user lamented: 'Holy shit, I thought GFL2 had already exhausted every trick in the book, but turns out that was just the tip of the iceberg.' Others were chanting 'Send in more scouts!' and 'Keep the intel coming!' and even 'Is this the tournament of Mount Hua or something?' The thread had transformed from melon-eating into a spectator sport — a collective performance art piece by the gacha community.

As of writing, Sunborn Network has yet to issue any official response to the avalanche of leaks that dropped that day. But judging from the community's reaction, the road to reputation recovery for GFL2 looks longer than anyone can see. Leave it to one NGA commenter to perfectly sum up the mood: 'GFL2, whatever you do, please don't die' — after all, the melon feast isn't over yet.

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