
How unhinged can a gacha game's plot get? Code Name: V (代号鸢) just set a new bar — Zhuge Liang gets eaten by refugees, Zhang Jiao meets the same fate, and there's even a storyline where a beautiful female teacher's body is dismembered and her parts are stitched onto other people. This isn't fan fiction; it's actual in-game content.
It all started when someone spotted a die-hard fan (known as 「结晶」or "crystal" in CN gacha slang — someone so devoted they've become translucent) trying to defend the "Zhuge Liang eaten by refugees" plot by arguing "well Zhang Jiao got eaten too." Instead of deflecting criticism, this backfired spectacularly and drew even more attention to just how wild the game's writing actually is.
The comment section erupted. One player recalled the "wildest part" being a storyline where a beautiful female teacher was dismembered into pieces and stitched onto others. Others immediately compared it to Retsu Kaiou's arc from Baki, or the notorious dark manga Sadistic Blood, joking "please cite your sources next time."

Players were baffled by the purpose of these shocking plot elements. "What is the writing team trying to say — that it's tragic? I genuinely don't understand the point of writing this stuff," one asked. A top-voted reply nailed it: "Self-important edgelord writing masquerading as epic worldbuilding." Another roasted the devs' typical excuse — "it's not deliberate, the setting demands it" — calling out the double standard: "Oh really, Crystal Sisters? So it's 'historical brutality' when convenient and 'romance vibes' when you want to sell husbando merch?"
Even more ironic: the game's world-building features a "refugees eating people" wartime backdrop, yet in-game character Xiao Qiao writes BL (boys' love) fanfiction that sells hundreds of thousands of copies. One commenter quipped "truly peak otome game energy," only to be corrected: "Actually, this isn't even an otome game — it's a proudly 'general audience' title." The whiplash between cannibalism horror and CP shipping content is genuinely unreal.
One player delivered the kill shot: "Do these assembly-line waifu game writers even understand art? This is clearly a magnum opus... *gags* excuse me while I throw up." The writing team got nicknamed "necromancers" for conjuring such nightmarish plots. And the final verdict from the thread: "What the actual f*** is this? They call this the 'most human game'?" — a sarcastic twist on the game's marketing tagline.
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