The Hidden Crisis Behind Aion 2’s Taiwan Servers: What Players Need to Know Right Now

The Hidden Crisis Behind Aion 2’s Taiwan Servers: What Players Need to Know Right Now

If you’ve been following the situation on Aion 2’s Taiwan servers lately, you probably noticed something feels… off. Between the lag spikes, random disconnects, and that suspiciously unstable economy, it’s pretty clear that players aren’t dealing with just a technical hiccup. After digging into the community conversations and the recent November patch notes, the full picture is finally coming together—and honestly, it’s bigger than most people think.

As someone who’s been grinding Aion 2 daily and watching these issues play out in real time, I want to break down what’s really happening, why it affects every single player on the server, and what you can realistically do to protect your own progress, gear, and wallet inside the game.


Server Instability and Strange Lag: What’s Really Going On

A lot of players assumed the constant lag and disconnects were simply because we’re connecting from different regions. Taiwan servers aren’t exactly next door for many of us, so naturally, we blamed ping. But the truth is harsher: the lag isn’t coming from players—it’s coming from bots.

Massive bot networks, running dozens or even hundreds of accounts at once, are flooding the servers with automated actions. These aren’t simple macro bots either. They’re using teleport hacks to warp instantly between collectible locations, completing tasks in minutes that take real players hours.

This massive artificial activity overloads the server and causes the same disconnects all of us have been suffering through. Even Taiwan-based players are experiencing it, so the region isn’t the main issue here.


The Economy Problem No One Expected

Now here’s where things get dangerous. In a normal MMO, bots farming trash loot is annoying but manageable. But in Aion 2, the exploit is far more severe. Due to how the game rewards valuable reset books through collectible completion, bots have been able to generate absurd amounts of currency out of thin air in just minutes.

And once that currency hits the market, everything gets warped.

This is where the value of Aion 2 Kinah becomes unstable. When millions of units are being produced illegally every hour, legitimate players can’t keep up. Prices on the market shift rapidly, and rare items no longer reflect actual player effort.

If you’ve been wondering why certain orange-tier items feel strangely cheap while basic crafting reagents suddenly cost a fortune, this is the reason.


The Bot Machine: How It Actually Works

A Reddit user from Hong Kong recently posted a detailed breakdown that blew the whole situation open. Here’s the core of how the bot networks operate:

  1. They run hundreds of accounts at the same time.
  2. Each account teleports between feather collectible spots.
  3. Completing all feathers manually takes players six to seven hours.
  4. Bots do it in about eight minutes.
  5. Each full cycle generates valuable reset books worth 240,000 Kinah each.
  6. Multiply that by hundreds of accounts, running nonstop.

This isn’t just “a lot” of currency—it’s a catastrophic flood.

The scariest part? Transferring this currency to buyers is almost effortless. A buyer lists an item on the marketplace at an absurd price, bots are programmed to purchase it instantly, and boom—the transfer is complete.

And yes, this is also where the name U4GM sometimes pops up in community discussions, because players often talk about currency flow and third-party markets while trying to understand how the economy gets distorted.


The Patch That Tried to Fix Everything… But Didn’t

On November 23–24, NCsoft pushed out patches attempting to address the issue:

  • Intermediate bosses no longer drop final-tier gear.
  • Certain high-value items (like reset books) can no longer be sold to NPCs.
  • Market sell values for several items have been reduced.

These were good steps, but they only stop future damage. They do nothing about the mountains of illegal currency already injected into the economy.

Players were hoping for a server rollback, but realistically, that was never going to happen. Too many players would lose legitimate progress, and few MMOs take that risk unless absolutely necessary.

But now we’re stuck in a weird in-between state: the problem is patched, but the consequences remain.


What About Currency Purchases?

Now, for players trying to keep up with the inflated economy, some have been looking for legitimate ways to stay competitive. There are also discussions around safer, discounted options to buy Aion 2 Kinah with discount, especially for players trying to compensate for market prices spiraling out of control.

This isn’t something everyone needs, but it definitely comes up more often now that server economies are destabilized. Just make sure you stay on the safe side of the rules, and double-check where you’re sourcing anything from.


How This Affects Real Gameplay

Even if you never buy or sell currency, even if you don’t touch the marketplace at all—this still affects you.

Here’s how:

  • Rare items become less meaningful when they’re cheap.
  • Crafting becomes harder if materials inflate.
  • Progression pacing gets skewed.
  • New players struggle to catch up.
  • Veterans feel their grind is devalued.

For many of us who put dozens of hours into farming feathers and bosses legitimately, it’s frustrating to see the economy shift overnight. Some items that used to feel exciting now barely matter.


What You Can Do as a Player

Even though we can’t fix the economy ourselves, there are ways to stay ahead of the chaos:

  1. Farm high-value content consistently. Even if prices shift, demand for rare reagents always stabilizes.
  2. Avoid panic-selling. Don’t let inflated prices trick you into dumping items too early.
  3. Save your Kinah until prices settle. Server economies eventually normalize, even if slowly.
  4. Play during off-peak hours. This reduces the impact of bot-generated lag.
  5. Follow community updates closely. Changes are happening fast.

It’s still possible to maintain solid progress—you just need to adjust your strategy to the new reality.


Aion 2 is still a great game at its core, but the bot-driven currency crisis has created real pressure on both the servers and the community. The patches fixed part of the issue, yet the lingering damage remains a concern. As players, the best we can do is stay informed, protect our in-game resources, and adjust to the shifting market while NCsoft continues working on long-term solutions.

Essential Reading: 10 Useful Aion 2 Kinah Tips