
A "wish letter" meant for players in a gacha game was flagged by an AI detection tool as having an 88% probability of being AI-generated — the writing team of Girls' Frontline 2 has truly reached new heights of "efficiency."
Recently, a Bilibili content creator (video ID: BV1Xe411U76i) ran an AIGC detection analysis on the "T-Doll Wish Letter" text from Girls' Frontline 2. The result showed an 88% probability of AI-generated content. Screenshots of the detection results alongside the original letter text were posted on NGA, immediately setting the community ablaze.


Many players had already noticed something was off about the letter's text. One commenter bluntly stated, "The way this letter is written is extremely weird — it doesn't read like it was written following normal Chinese grammar at all." Another remarked, "Anything that actually sounds normal doesn't seem like something the writing team would produce" — implying that the rare instances of decent writing in the game had become the real anomaly.


As the controversy erupted, the NGA comment section quickly fractured into factions. One group unleashed fury at the writing team's lack of professionalism: "They can't even be bothered to write — not a shred of professional ethics — and they still expect to swindle money from consumers?" Others responded with dark humor. One player quipped, "T-Dolls are robots, so what's wrong with robots having robots write for them?" Another went full sci-fi mode: "Sunborn isn't a physical entity — it's a collective of cybernetic lifeforms whose every product and action is an attempt to mimic humanity. The sci-fi prophecy has come true — beware the machine uprising."

It's worth noting this isn't the first time the GFL2 writing team has courted controversy. Players dug up older NGA threads as supporting evidence, saying this was "nothing new." Others pointed fingers at the writing team's attitude toward ML (Master Love) content — romantic or affectionate character interactions directed at the player. One sarcastically commented, "How could our righteous, progressive writers possibly pen such 'vulgar' content?" — suggesting the writing staff fundamentally resists producing this type of fan-service material.
A veteran player who started with the original Girls' Frontline in 2017 shared their frustration, noting they had oathed two T-Dolls and spent thousands of yuan on skins in the first game. "Sunborn's move of stabbing veteran players in the back really pisses me off," they wrote, adding that regarding the suspected AI ghostwriting, "at this point, I'm just here for the show."

Facing the wave of criticism, some players cracked jokes like "Don't worry, they'll hotfix it tonight" — a nod to the GFL2 team's track record of rushing out overnight patches whenever controversy erupts. Others riffed, "Girls' Frontline: 2024 is officially serialized," comparing the game to an ongoing cyber-drama, with someone adding, "Might as well call it Girls' Frontline 2077 — after all, that one also promised to redefine open-world gaming as a new benchmark."
As of now, Sunborn Network has not issued an official response to the AIGC detection findings. Whether the letter was actually written by AI remains at the level of player suspicion and third-party tool analysis — nothing confirmed. But the controversy has undeniably deepened the trust crisis surrounding GFL2's writing quality. After all, if even the "love letter" to players might not have been written by a human, the plotline of this drama alone could fill an entire season.
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