WESTERN GAMING JUST KILLED 2B’S ICONIC DESIGN! 📉💀

The Overwatch x NieR: Automata collab is officially here, and the “Censorship” is even worse than the leaks predicted! Fans are absolutely livid as Blizzard gives Kiriko a “sanitized” 2B makeover—adding longer skirts, removing iconic details, and completely flattening the character’s legendary aesthetic. 👗🚫

Is “Beauty” now banned in Western games? While Eastern titles like Stellar Blade embrace the source material, Blizzard is playing it “safe” and charging $70 for what fans are calling “Temu-quality cosplay.” No custom voice lines, no special VFX—just a watered-down version of a masterpiece. 😤🔥

Is this a “Technical Hurdle” or a deliberate attack on feminine character design? The side-by-side comparisons are BRUTAL. 👇

It was supposed to be the “Collab of the Year.” When Blizzard Entertainment announced a partnership with Square Enix to bring the hauntingly beautiful world of NieR: Automata to Overwatch 2, the hype was astronomical. But as the “Project YoRHa” skins hit the shop this week, that excitement has curdled into a full-scale community revolt.

The controversy, which has set Reddit and X (formerly Twitter) ablaze, isn’t just about high prices or “skin fatigue.” It has become the latest flashpoint in a much larger cultural debate: Is Western gaming intentionally moving away from “traditional beauty” in character design?

The “Cosplay” Compromise

The collaboration features five legendary skins: Kiriko as 2B, Vendetta as A2, Wuyang as 9S, Mercy as Commander White, and Lifeweaver as Adam. However, the centerpiece of the collection—Kiriko’s 2B skin—has become the primary target of fan ire.

Critics pointed out immediate and glaring differences between the Overwatch version and the original 2017 design by Akihiko Yoshida. The “Overwatch 2B” features a significantly lengthened skirt, the removal of the iconic “boob window,” and a general “flattening” of the character’s silhouette.

“If you’re going to collab with an IP known for its specific, elegant, and yes, sexy aesthetic, you either commit to it or you don’t do it at all,” wrote one user on the Blizzard forums in a thread that has garnered thousands of upvotes. “This isn’t 2B; it’s a PG-13 safety-version that misses the entire point of the character’s gothic lolita inspiration.”

“Temu Quality” and Missing Details

Beyond the anatomical and outfit changes, fans have slammed the technical quality of the $70 bundle. Unlike the previous Hello Kitty or One Punch Man collaborations, which featured unique sound effects and voice lines, the NieR skins are largely “silent.”

Perhaps the most viral complaint involves a tiny but “iconic” detail: 2B’s mole. Data-miners and eagle-eyed fans discovered that Kiriko’s 2B skin is missing the character’s signature beauty mark—a detail fans claim is essential to her identity.

“They charged $30 for a single skin and couldn’t even include the mole?” one Reddit user commented on r/Overwatch. “It proves this was a lazy cash grab. They want the NieR money without respecting the NieR art.”

The “Western Standard” vs. Eastern Aesthetics

The backlash has reignited the “Western vs. Eastern” design debate. Many players are drawing unfavorable comparisons between Blizzard’s approach and recent Eastern successes like Stellar Blade. The latter, developed by Korean studio Shift Up, was praised by its community for embracing “unapologetic beauty” and high-fidelity feminine designs.

A viral video titled “Nothing’s ALLOWED to be Beautiful in Western Gaming?” has amassed over a million views in 48 hours, arguing that Western studios are under “corporate directives” to de-emphasize femininity and curves in favor of more “gender-neutral” or “safe” designs.

Blizzard, for its part, has historically attributed these design choices to “technical hurdles” regarding hitboxes and maintaining the “visual silhouette” of its heroes to ensure competitive integrity. However, many fans aren’t buying it.

“We’ve seen what they can do with skins like Widowmaker’s Cote d’Azur,” said one popular gaming commentator. “The technology is there. The desire is what’s missing. There is clearly a cultural push within these studios to ‘correct’ characters they deem too provocative, even if it’s a guest character from a different franchise.”

A “Successful” Failure?

Despite the “brutal” social media reaction, early metrics suggest the collaboration is a massive financial success. The game’s lobbies are currently filled with 2B Kirikos and 9S Wuyangs, proving that for many casual players, the “brand recognition” of NieR outweighs the design grievances of the hardcore community.

“I’ve seen enough 2Bs tonight to convince me this collab was entirely successful from a business standpoint,” noted one observer on X. “Capitalism doesn’t care about a missing mole if the sales numbers are up.”

The Future of Collaborations

As the “Project YoRHa” event continues until March 23, the fallout leaves a lingering question for future crossovers. If Western developers continue to “sanitize” Eastern IPs to fit modern corporate standards, will Japanese and Korean studios continue to lend their characters out?

For the “anti-woke” segment of the gaming community, this is a defining loss. For Blizzard, it’s a profitable week marred by a PR nightmare. But for the fans of NieR: Automata, it feels like a “curse and a punishment”—a reminder that in the current era of Western game development, even a legendary android isn’t safe from the “safety” filter.