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Girls' Frontline 2 Datamine Uncovers Alleged Hidden Religious/Political Content — Players Threaten to Report to Authorities

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Hidden inside a gacha game's asset files, something like *this*? A Tieba power-user cracked open Girls' Frontline 2's code and the contents left the entire community shell-shocked — one player quipped: "This isn't a game with hidden payloads, it's a hidden payload with a game stapled on!"

It started when a Baidu Tieba user used Intel GPA (Graphics Performance Analyzers) to perform a deep datamine of Girls' Frontline 2, uncovering a trove of hidden assets allegedly laden with political and religious undertones.

The NGA thread erupted instantly. The top commenter nailed it: "This isn't a game with hidden payloads — it's a payload that happens to have a game attached." The implication: there was barely any legitimate game content; the smuggled material was the real show.

Players were quick to point out the critical issue: even if the devs rush out a hotfix to delete the assets, the data once existed on players' local clients — and datamine screenshots are permanent proof. "Absolutely insane," one user remarked.

The gravity of the situation became clear as the comments shifted from gossip to dead-serious discussion. One player declared: "This can be used as evidence for a formal report — promoting religious content in a game is extremely sensitive right now." Another went further: "Someone ping me when there's enough evidence to report this to 12339" — that's China's national security tip hotline, a number you absolutely do not want a game associated with.

Some players attempted to decode the meaning behind the assets. One reading suggested the content was meant to "accuse us of being anti-Semitic." Another speculated it might be a case of the character Muren (a game figure/community meme) being mocked as a 'cyber Jew' and the devs inserting a personal rebuttal. But the sharpest take was blunt: "The less charitable interpretation is that it's time to audit Yuzhong's (the game's producer) overseas revenue streams." Someone else distilled the whole thing into one devastating one-liner: "On my phone I have a Zionism simulator (sad)." Zionism, the political movement for a Jewish homeland — the sarcasm was dripping.

Veteran gossip-thread regulars brought up precedent. One recalled another game that once hid personal agenda content *inside character eye pupils on gacha card art* — but that was just fan-idol material for a boy band. Compared to that, "Chong-gege's (the community's mocking nickname for producer Yuzhong, playing on his name) payload is on a whole other level." When pressed on the comparison, another user clarified: "That was the Ensemble Stars CN server hiding a real Chinese boy-band member's face in card art — they at least apologized after the backlash. Chong-ge doesn't seem to have any plans to apologize." This comparison catapulted the Girls' Frontline 2 controversy into entirely new territory.

The drama peaked that same night. Past 1 AM, players were still camped in the thread. "Someone's not sleeping tonight," one predicted — clearly referring to producer Yuzhong. Another threatened: "I want to see the 'Zhao missile' (community slang for an official crackdown or ban) — Yuzhong-gege, can you give us some fireworks for the holidays?"

As of the posting, developer Sunborn Network had issued no official statement. But with datamine evidence in hand, players threatening formal reports, and the community showing no signs of calming down, this drama is far from over. As one player summarized: "I was just saying the other day — I'm tired of the same old drama, can we get something new? Of course it's you — you never disappoint." Equal parts mockery and exasperation, it perfectly captured the community's long-simmering frustration with Girls' Frontline 2's endless controversies.

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