
Chinese Ecchi Game 'Lost Paradise Star Map' Hits Steam With Wild Artwork — But Its Community Drama Is Even Wilder: Mods Told Players 'AWWBWG' & Claimed a Body-Sold Roboticized Heroine Is a "Virgin"
A game called "Lost Paradise Star Map" (失乐星图) quietly appeared on Steam, and the mere store page screenshots sent the NGA community into a frenzy — the art direction, the compositions, the sheer levels of fan service had players instantly labeling it a "Chinese-made waifu adult game."



The comment section exploded instantly. One user asked "why does this look exactly like an eroge?" while another celebrated it as a "domestic gacha waifu adult game." Some even compared it to the notoriously suggestive title Fallen Doll, questioning whether this would become "the second must-be-online adult game for the youth."
But the real tea wasn't in the artwork — it was buried deep in the comments. User "若星汉空" dropped a lore bomb about the game's troubled community history. The most infamous incident: someone in the official fan Discord asked why there was a male character, and a community manager literally responded with "AWWBWG" (are you gonna let me in or what — a crude Chinese abbreviation for 'take it or leave it'), telling them to "leave your spot for someone who actually wants to play." That attitude instantly set the community on fire.


Even wilder were the character backstories. According to the leak, the main heroine's lore literally states she "sold herself to a wealthy merchant who then had her entire body roboticized." Another character is canonically a "widow." When these lore details sparked controversy in the community, someone went and asked the CM: "Are these two characters virgins?" The CM's reply? A flat "virgins."



This "virgin" claim was met with absolute roasting. One commenter delivered a surgical burn: "Okay, the widow one could work if her husband died on their wedding day. But the body-sold one? How's she a virgin — did they just swap in unused parts?" Another went straight for the jugular: "Ah yes, the Virgin Mary approach."
Beyond the legendary quotes, players also flagged other red flags. One recalled the game as one where "your character can barely walk straight," warning others to "lower your expectations." Another noted the male protagonist is also playable, essentially making this "a Cross Stella clone minus the female lead."
Perhaps the biggest concern: the game requires an always-online connection. One player sighed, "My brain tells me there's probably nothing the community is hoping for, but my other brain still wants to keep an eye on it." Many drew parallels to Mirror 2, infamous for its bait-and-switch — suggestive marketing that delivered absolutely none of what was promised. Players feared this could be another case of "cyber fraud."
Insiders noted the game's producer previously worked on Person of Blue Sky (青空之人) and that NetEase has invested in the project. But given the mountain of past drama and questionable marketing, the community response was a mix of skepticism and popcorn-chomping enthusiasm: "Is this legit though?" and "Can you even say this publicly?" Because in the world of Chinese gacha and waifu games, you never truly know if something is genuinely edgy or just another meticulously engineered hype play.
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