By Jay / / Games

Infinity Nikki, once praised as a cozy, open-world gacha game that celebrated fashion, creativity, and storytelling, has recently found itself in hot water. The release of Version 1.5 was expected to bring fresh content and improvements—but instead, it’s sparked one of the loudest backlashes in gacha history. From storyline changes to monetization shifts, here’s a full breakdown of why this update disappointed many fans and what it means for the game’s future.


Infinity Nikki A Beloved Fantasy Story, Now Retconned

Before the update, Infinity Nikki charmed players with a whimsical world that blended magical fashion and heartfelt storytelling. Nikki’s adventures felt like a soft blend of fantasy and creativity, where clothes had souls and the journey was as important as the outfits.

That tone was wiped clean in 1.5. The narrative was replaced with a jarring new setup where Nikki becomes an amnesiac space traveler. Longtime fans were thrown into a restructured tutorial that made previous storylines irrelevant.

This shift, designed to support new co-op mechanics, lacked the emotional continuity that many players had grown attached to. Instead of expanding the story, the change felt like a full reset—confusing for veterans and uninviting for newcomers.


Game-Breaking Bugs and Technical Failures

Aside from the story controversy, the technical performance of Infinity Nikki plummeted after the update. The new version introduced a wave of bugs:

  • Frequent crashes and login issues
  • Soft locks and broken quest triggers
  • Missing voiceovers
  • Co-op mode malfunctions
  • Severe lag and input freezing
  • Paid cosmetics turning glitchy or invisible

While developers have issued some patches, the game remains less stable than it was pre-1.5. Many players reported that their experience became nearly unplayable, even on high-end devices.


Monetization Changes Crossed the Line

One of the biggest pain points in this update was the overhaul of the game’s monetization system, especially around cosmetics and gacha mechanics.

1. Dye System Becomes Paywalled

A feature once celebrated for being free and creative—custom outfit dyeing—now requires rare materials or duplicate gacha pulls to unlock new colors. Players who loved experimenting with outfit colors suddenly found themselves blocked by paywalls.

2. Gacha Set Inflation

New outfit sets now contain 11 items instead of the usual 9 or 10. That might seem small, but it means more pulls are required to complete a set. Combined with hidden drop rate adjustments, players are now spending significantly more—some report up to 400 pulls—to finish a collection.

3. Misleading Pricing

A $10 bathtub cosmetic was advertised as 80% off, misleading buyers and triggering regional consumer protection complaints. The listing was eventually adjusted, but the damage to player trust was already done.

4. Decreased Rewards

Despite promising a more “optimized” endgame, the update slashed core currency rewards by a third. This slowdown came without transparent explanation and left players grinding more for less.


Community Boycotts and a Weak Corporate Response – What You Need to Know as a Player!

Player frustration reached a tipping point. Across social media, Discords, and Reddit, calls for boycotts surged. However, many of these discussions were censored in official spaces—the word “boycott” even became auto-deleted on certain forums. Infold, the developer, responded with a formal apology. Unfortunately, it only acknowledged technical bugs. It did not address the deeper community concerns:

  • No rollback or adjustment to the new gacha model
  • No meaningful fix to the dye system monetization
  • No plan to restore the old narrative
  • Only 20 free pulls given as compensation

Infinity Nikki was once a standout title in the gacha space, especially for its approach to inclusive, story-rich gameplay that didn’t revolve around combat. But Version 1.5 has undermined the very qualities that made it special.

The combination of a retconned story, bug-filled gameplay, and aggressive monetization threatens the game’s long-term future. While technical issues might be fixed over time, the deeper damage to player trust won’t be so easy to repair.

If Infold wants to recover, it needs to do more than patch bugs. It needs to listen, reverse exploitative systems, and rebuild the emotional connection that drew players in to begin with. Because in a market full of gacha games, it’s not just the fashion or mechanics that matter—it’s the respect shown to the players who keep the game alive.


About Jay
A Content writer for Roonby.com Contact me on [email protected], we can't reply to gmail for some reason.