
An NGA user posted asking fellow players to help compile a comprehensive 'drama compilation' — essentially a chronological archive of every scandal surrounding Girls' Frontline 2: Exilium. With so many rumors flying around, both confirmed and unverified, they said they were simply 'overwhelmed.' But the comment section responded with collective despair: it's not that nobody wants to help — it's genuinely impossible to keep up.
One commenter nailed it perfectly: the drama updates faster than the game's own hotfixes. 'The version updates so fast, even the old compilations are already outdated by several DLCs,' they quipped. Another pointed out that while there are already multiple compilation threads on the board, 'none of them can keep up within two days.'

Floor 8 simply dropped an image with two words: 'the last page.' Floor 12 took it even further, upgrading the compilation concept to 'Yongle Encyclopedia' level — complete with a meme image implying this amount of drama deserves a national-level historical document.

The replies were full of spicy takes. Someone remarked that the game 'delivers drama in bulk with guaranteed satisfaction.' Another speculated whether the developer Sunborn Network was 'trying to take the heat off miHoYo.' One user suggested 'you'd need to hire dedicated court historians' for the job. A particularly creative commenter used gaming lingo to compare tracking the drama to endlessly grinding a game stage as an unlucky player — you finally finish compiling, then a hotfix drops and you have to start over.
But the true MVP was Floor 16. This heroic commenter produced a chronicle-style timeline stretching from the third closed beta all the way to the latest post-launch developments, meticulously cataloging every scandal:
Third beta: Content packaged without notice, player feedback ignored — the first signs of trouble.
Fourth beta Phase 1: Stingy rewards (only 10+10 gacha pulls total), original-recipe gacha rates (0.6%-0.7%, 80 pity), absurdly long loading times, and the uninstaller deleting the entire root C: drive directory — earning it the nickname 'disk cleanup master.'
Fourth beta Phase 2: The devs going silent caused the fire to spread. Character '95' was found to be 'cuckolding' players in-story, and character Raymond's storyline exploded in controversy (a 1.5-hour fully voiced intimate interaction). Character '191's drinking companion storyline combined with misuse of famous historical quotes enraged the community. Producer Yu Zhong gave speeches on the Korean server circuit.
Fourth beta Phase 3: Devs scrambled overnight to rewrite 191's dialogue, then dropped a 'launch improvement plan' that was mocked as 'worse than what a high schooler could write.' Constellation (character upgrade) splitting became even more severe, and leaks claimed Raymond would undergo a gender swap.
The official launch was a full-blown catastrophe: gacha and rewards remained stingy; the 95 event was absurdly difficult with poorly designed mini-games (random dice + time locks) that enraged everyone from whales to casual players; the promotional video featured a bracelet with what appeared to be a lightning bolt insignia that the devs claimed was just a 'lightning gift'; a deer-horned monster in the PV was interpreted as a cheating reference; and calculated monthly rewards were found to be lower than the beta.
The storyline disasters continued: Raymond's gender-swapped version had terrible writing; the player's 'Commander' character was depicted as increasingly pathetic; the ending showed the Commander limping while character 95 refused to show concern. Deep-dives revealed Raymond's new name 'East' (meaning 'star') matched a previously exposed controversial writer's name; rest room 3D models used lazy shoe scaling; and the monthly pass contract text didn't match the actual benefits, with stamina descriptions hastily deleted.
Off-game controversies were even more explosive: associates of producer Yu Zhong made statements like 'the pure romance routes in older games were just money grabs,' 'Yu Zhong is satisfied with revenue,' and 'players chose the yuri route over romance' — a series of scandalous quotes.
The most explosive controversy was what players dubbed the 'Zionism scandal': rest room exploration uncovered characters reading Jewish religious texts; decorations were identified as Jewish cultural references; the in-game vehicle's English name was changed to the Hebrew word 'elmos'; the book 'The Handmaid's Rest' in the rest room was interpreted as mocking 'Commander' players and promoting radical feminism; a potato flower song was found to be adapted from a folk song about infidelity; and the character Raymond was discovered to share its name with an Israeli handgun, interpreted as 'commemorating an Israeli hero.' Additionally, the letter event voice-overs were suspected of being AI-generated; revenue charts crashed within 20 days of launch; and a hotfix removed the Suez Canal and other geographic markers from the in-game Middle East map. The game's Tieba (forum) moderator was found using the ID 'I am a paperclip' — a reference to a controversial geopolitical think tank.
Faced with this epic volume of drama, one commenter sighed: 'It keeps exploding — feels like ages have passed, but then you look closely and it hasn't even been a month since launch.' Another eagerly awaited the next patch 'to watch the new characters' comedy.' As for the compilation? The comment section delivered its final verdict: this isn't a 'compilation' — it's a 'drama encyclopedia of Yongle proportions.'
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