
The gacha community just got another hilarious scheduling fumble: Azur Lane (碧蓝航线) and Girls' Frontline 2: Exilium (少前2:追放) have their new version livestreams slotted at the exact same time. Stream collisions happen all the time in the gaming world — but the comment section turned this mundane coincidence into pure comedy gold.


You'd think players would just watch whichever game they prefer. But the NGA comment section reached a near-unanimous verdict: everyone is tuning into GFL2's stream — not for the game, but for the inevitable chat meltdown. The logic is surprisingly practical: Azur Lane's waifu skin reveals can always be watched via replay, but the spectacle of GFL2's live chat erupting into 'Raymond' (雷蒙) spam — the infamous NPC that single-handedly broke the community's trust — is a once-in-a-lifetime live event.
One top-voted comment captured the sentiment perfectly: 'Sorry, naval girls, but GFL2's stream is where the real content is. I can catch skin reveals later, but missing the live chat going absolutely feral with Raymond memes? That's an actual loss.' Another player put it even more bluntly: 'Screenshots of lewd skins will find their way to me eventually, but the memes? You gotta be there live.'
Some galaxy-brained gamers suggested watching both simultaneously — mute Azur Lane for the visual content, keep GFL2 at full volume for the chaos. Others invoked the classic gacha community meme of a 'Raxxila Ritual' (拉克希尔仪式), framing this scheduling clash as a trust vote between two games: 'Let's see who the real high lord is!'
Not everyone was sold on the hype though. Some pointed out that producer Yu Zhong (羽中), mockingly nicknamed 'Lao Chong' (牢翀, a play on his name implying he's locked up in his own bubble), has a well-documented track record of dodging controversy and pushing merch during streams regardless. His legendary stubbornness and ability to pretend nothing happened while selling products mid-crisis has become something of a meme in itself.
But the overall vibe is unmistakable: GFL2 has cemented its status not as a serious gacha contender, but as the community's favorite 'live performance art show.' Players tune in not to learn about new content, but to witness the collective unhinged reaction in real time. For a game that launched with sky-high expectations, being reduced to must-see comedy programming is... not the flex the developers were hoping for.
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