
The Commander busts his ass rebuilding the observatory, and the Doll goes stargazing with an old man instead? Girls' Frontline 2 just broke its players.
A recent NGA forum post has sent the Girls' Frontline 2 (GFL2) community into a frenzy. The original poster shared two in-game screenshots and furiously called out the developers: the player's Commander character worked tirelessly to rebuild an observatory, only for the story to have the Doll character Tololo go stargazing at that same observatory with an old man — while the player character is conveniently written out of the scene. The OP exploded: "What kind of 'friendzoned simp' move is this? It even feels like a deliberate dig at the player. What are they trying to pull?"


The comment section erupted instantly. One player bluntly stated: "The female writers don't understand otaku culture at all — would it kill them to actually cater to the audience?" The implication being that the writing team has zero understanding of what the core fanbase of a gacha waifu game actually wants. Instead of delivering the 'fan-service' that players expect, the storyline feels deliberately antagonistic.

Players were quick to zero in on the irony of the Doll's name. The character is literally called 'Observatory' (Tololo), and one commenter quipped: "Everyone gets to play with her, except you — the one with the broken legs." The pointed observation being: a Doll named after an observatory is sent stargazing with an old man at the very observatory the player rebuilt, while the player character isn't even allowed to attend. The malice seems hard to miss.
Others turned the absurdity into memes. One legendary reply — "Tololo going to the observatory — that really gave me a laugh" — was so perfectly crafted that fellow users begged to repost it. Another commenter took it further with a pun-laden jab: "The old man and his 'star slave' sure had a blast" — a wordplay that pushed the absurdity of the situation to its peak.

Some players tried to cope through irony, arguing that "Tololo is a mature woman, not a loli — she's an adult, just like Daiyan, so the stargazing is technically 'legal.'" Clearly, this was dripping with sarcasm.
One of the most detailed breakdowns came from a commenter who essentially wrote a rational manifesto of frustration. They argued that in any normal waifu game, even if the protagonist was injured and couldn't walk, the devs would have other characters carry him to the romantic scene — because the whole point is player satisfaction. Instead, GFL2's story has Tololo send a letter saying she knew it was already over so the protagonist wouldn't come. "Don't you dare decide for me whether I show up or not!" the commenter fumed. In a Master Love (ML) game where players are meant to be the romantic lead, missing a key flag event is the ultimate sin. The kicker? There was no follow-up scene suggesting "next time, let's go together" — making it feel entirely deliberate.
Perhaps most damning was another commenter's theory: this storyline was likely originally written as Tololo's personal character arc, completely independent of the player — following the same pattern as the infamous "Raymond's Wife" (Daiyan) incident. After that scandal forced the devs to rewrite Daiyan's storyline, the commenter suspects the writing team still couldn't resist their urge to subtly antagonize players, so they compressed the original Tololo script and snuck it into a minor event.
The community's exasperation was palpable. "Who says the writers aren't into anime culture? You'd need to be deep into NTR (cuckold) content to write something this outrageous. Where's the AI? Just let ChatGPT write it!" — a sentiment that perfectly captures the despair at the current state of the game's storytelling.

And perhaps the most succinct summary came from one final commenter: "How does this game manage to blow up literally every single day?" — accompanied by a meme image perfectly capturing the community's exhausted disbelief at yet another GFL2 controversy.

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