"Emotional Anti-Fraud Simulator" is a love simulation interactive video game from a first-person perspective. It is produced by Hong Kong director Wu Yiu-fai and a film-level professional team. The story is completely fictional and the content focuses on emotional anti-fraud themes. The original name of the game is "The Girl Hunting Game".

Recently, the game officially released news stating that their game has been removed from the Douban platform.

The official said that they "reviewed the game for a long time and never thought why it was suddenly removed from the shelves." After all, this game has been on Douban for some time. Previously, the actor Xu Yue, the male protagonist Wu Yulun, also sent a congratulatory message with a score of 8.5.
They also tested other live-action interactive video game works to confirm that this removal was not just for video games.

The game official gave some possible reasons: "Is it because we are too real? Is it because we have exposed too many "pig-killing plate" routines in the game? Or is it because we teach everyone in the plot how to identify "green tea" methods and how to protect their wallets and dignity in relationships? Or, maybe some people broke their guard and reported it?"
But "we haven't received the official notification yet, and we don't dare to make wild guesses."

At present, Douban has not responded to this matter, and the game production team has not made further updates on the incident. The specific development remains to be seen.

A live-action interactive video game that had been on the shelves for a long time and had a rating of 8.5 was suddenly "disappeared" by Douban without any notice. Did the content touch some unspeakable red lines, or was it another familiar "reported - removed from the shelves first - discussed later"? Do you think this delisting is more like a cold treatment of system rules, or a collective discomfort after reality has been stung? Welcome to express your judgment in the comment area.