
A poster on NGA's Genshin Impact board dropped what they thought was a bombshell — claiming that the pose of Genshin's new character Jia Ming looks suspiciously similar to a character from Nu: Carnival, an R18 BL gacha game known for its beefy male cast. Side-by-side screenshots were attached, and OP's tone practically screamed "this can't be a coincidence!"


But then OP undercut themselves in the postscript — first admitting the resemblance was only about both being "shota"-type characters in vaguely similar stances, and more damningly, confessing: "I don't even play the game, I just saw this on Tieba and reposted it." That self-own gave the comment section all the ammunition it needed.
The replies turned into a full-on roast session. The top-voted comment fired back: "This isn't even a unique pose, and they're not that similar either. This gives the same energy as 'Genshin copied xxx because the character is also shaped like a human!'" — a one-line takedown of the "everything is plagiarism" logic that plagues gacha communities.
The second reply was practically prophetic: "OP is about to get featured in the Tang-NGA joke compilation." In Chinese gaming slang, "唐" (Tang) is a label for posts so absurd they become legendary memes — getting "submitted to the compilation" is basically a public execution of your credibility. Reply #3 piled on with a quote-repost, confirming the community had reached consensus.

Reply #12 brought receipts of their own, posting the image above with the caption: "Lock this thread already, I can genuinely find a second match" — proving that this kind of pose shows up everywhere in art and animation, making the comparison meaningless.
Reply #4 nailed the evidentiary problem: "Not a single line even overlaps — you couldn't even be bothered to do an overlay trace?" In other words, if you're going to accuse someone of copying, at least draw some lines and show the overlap. Two screenshots side by side with a vague "looks kinda similar" is zero proof.

Reply #14 went full shitpost mode with the bowing meme image above, and Reply #17 dug out a legendary NGA image macro that has been used to mock plagiarism accusations for over a decade, captioning it: "By this logic, the accusation basically amounts to 'the new character is a person.'" That single line might be the most savage summary of the entire thread.
Reply #10 took a different angle of attack with some top-tier sarcasm: "Got it, OP is just here to flex that they play R18 BL games." The classic deflection move — instead of debating the "plagiarism," question why OP even knows about this game in the first place. OP had no comeback.
Reply #5 predicted the post would end up in the "Xian Er Guan" (NGA's meme-worthy post archive), Reply #6 mockingly offered to "just tell me what screenshots you want, I'll send them myself," and Reply #15 pretended to have mistaken the first image for an actual Genshin character: "I thought the first pic was from Genshin, scared me to death." The entire comment section had one unified vibe: we're here to laugh, and we're not leaving until we're done.
As of now, this post has been firmly classified by the community as "Tang-NGA tier" content — so absurd it loops back to being hilarious. Not a single reply took the "plagiarism" claim seriously. The entire discussion revolved around roasting OP's logic, their Tieba-borrowing habits, and the general absurdity of treating a generic pose as smoking-gun evidence. The lesson here? If you want to cry plagiarism on NGA, you better bring more than "the vibes are kinda similar."
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