The recent wave of backlash surrounding Genshin Impact may finally be reaching its conclusion, at least according to many creators and community figures closely following the situation. What began as a massive online protest against HoYoverse over rewards, monetization and long-standing player frustrations has slowly transformed into something far more complicated: creator drama, community division and growing uncertainty about what the future of the game will look like.
One of the biggest turning points came after the release of the new Nicole teaser, which immediately shifted the attention of social media away from the protest itself. The trailer’s mysterious mention of “Phanes” reignited lore discussions across YouTube, Reddit and TikTok, causing many players to abandon the controversy and return to theory crafting and character hype. According to multiple creators, the timing effectively redirected community attention exactly when the protest movement was beginning to lose momentum.
Several Spanish-speaking creators openly discussed how the backlash eventually became fragmented. Instead of remaining focused on improving the game, the conversation reportedly evolved into attacks against creators, arguments between free-to-play and paying players and accusations aimed at community personalities such as Mario Destroyer, Putu and Tana.
A major discussion point during the controversy revolved around whether free-to-play players have the right to complain about monetization systems. Many creators defended free-to-play users by arguing that time, engagement and player data are just as valuable as direct spending in maintaining a live-service ecosystem. Others pushed back by claiming that careful resource management already allows players to obtain most characters without heavy spending.
The backlash also revealed a growing frustration among content creators themselves. Some creators announced plans to reduce spending on Genshin Impact, avoid pulling duplicate constellations and step back from aggressive monetization habits tied to new banners. The discussion became especially intense surrounding Nicole’s upcoming release, with some creators publicly stating they would skip expensive upgrades despite originally planning to fully invest in the character.





