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Girls' Frontline 2's Infamous Copywriter 'Star Sister' Allegedly Transferred — Yet Her Signature Ellipsis-Heavy Love Lines Persist, NGA Players Recoil in Horror: 'Imagine a Middle-Aged Woman Wooing You Like This'

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The Girls' Frontline 2 (GF2) community is never short on drama, but this time the tea isn't about power creep or event flops — it's about a legendary figure players call 'Star Sister' (星姐). An NGA post dripping with sarcasm read: 'GF2's stock is gonna moon after the holiday… scary… but Star Sister is still here… so it's fine… Star Sister is the best' — instantly catapulting this mysterious copywriter back into the spotlight.

Let's set the scene for those unfamiliar. 'Star Sister' is a known narrative copywriter for GF2, and the community has long since doxxed her as a woman — reportedly pushing 40, described by players as a 'plump middle-aged lady.' More notably, she has an unmistakable writing signature: an obsessive overuse of ellipses ('……'), dubbed the 'six-dot style' by the community. It's become so infamous on NGA that one player quipped: 'Even after getting caught beefing on the forums, she STILL writes like this. The absolute audacity.'

Rumors had been circulating that Star Sister had been quietly transferred to an admin role, effectively removed from writing duties. This post blew that theory apart — she's not only still at it, but her signature style hasn't changed one bit. One player gasped: 'Holy sh*t I'm literally scared. She hasn't changed a thing.' Another seethed: 'Got caught fighting people on the forums and she's STILL writing 'I love you' in her trademark six-dot style. Disgusting.'

The real crux of the controversy? Star Sister's romantically-charged game dialogue — the sweet, flirty lines designed to make male players feel loved by their waifus. When the community discovered these lines were penned by a middle-aged woman, the immersion shattered instantly. One player put it bluntly: 'Imagine a plump, nearly-40-year-old woman talking to you like THAT.' Another player replied: 'Ugh, how disgusting to start the new year with this mental image.'

The most upvoted take in the thread came from a user called 'Consumable Admiral' (消耗品提督), who dropped a story that resonated with the entire community. He recounted how when a rival game's copywriter did a livestream reveal, a comment said 'So THIS spicy romantic dialogue was written by some barefoot northeastern dude all along' — and he immediately lost his immersion. But then Star Sister appeared in GF2, and he realized: 'Compared to a battle-axe auntie's nauseating attempts at romance, at least the barefoot dude gets me. And just like that, I made peace with myself.' This comment was quoted by at least six different users in the thread, becoming the de facto manifesto of the discussion.

From this nucleus, the community quickly coalesced around a new meme: 'Only men truly understand what men want.' One user piled on: 'The barefoot dude at least gets into character while writing, then forgets about it after. But an auntie? She'd insist even pebbles have to be star-shaped.' Another added: 'At least he understands us.' Someone went even further: 'It's 2024 already, stop fantasizing that pick-me girls (XXN) can give regular guys (郭楠) any emotional value...' — only to be immediately countered: 'Rage, disgust, laughing through tears, and finally acceptance — THAT'S emotional value too.'

The identity lore runs deeper still. Some players claimed Star Sister and the 'Six O'Clock Lady' (6点姐) are different people, while others cited insider leaks that 'the six-dot lady and Shi Da aren't the same person.' The community's obsessive detective work on copywriter identities is its own form of entertainment. But regardless of who's who, 'Star Sister' has become an inescapable meme in the GF2 ecosystem. As one player put it with mock reverence: 'She was here, and she shall remain forever. Star Gate (合十).'

One clever reader pointed out that the original post's writing style gave off serious 'Erii' (绘梨衣) vibes — a reference to the tragically sweet character from the novel Dragon Raja. Another nailed it: 'Oh great, she's pulling an Erii-style emotional gut-punch on us on New Year's Eve. Thanks for nothing.' And the thread's best closer came from a player who summarized the community's love-hate relationship with Star Sister in one sentence: 'Just imagining Star Sister pinching her nose while typing 'Commander~ Commander~' makes me lose it every single time.' That, right there, captures the complicated cocktail of cringe, disgust, and reluctant attachment that defines the GF2 community's eternal entanglement with their most infamous copywriter.

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