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Girls’ Frontline: Fire Control Announces Service Termination on August 26

Girls’ Frontline: Fire Control Announces Service Termination on August 26

Girls' Frontline: Fire Control Shuts Down August 26, 2026 — What Players Get Before the End

When does Girls' Frontline: Fire Control officially end service? Sunborn's Hecate Team confirmed the mobile tactical RPG will go offline on August 26, 2026, at 11:00 AM (UTC+8). At that exact moment, all servers disconnect, and every player's account data gets permanently erased. No backups. No second chances. The shutdown marks the final chapter for this popular entry in the Girls' Frontline universe.

If you're still logging in daily, you've got about eight months left. Let's break down exactly what happens, when it happens, and what you can do before the lights go out.

Quick Facts: What You Need to Know

Official shutdown date: August 26, 2026, 11:00 AM (UTC+8)
Last day to buy anything: July 24, 2026 (in-app purchases disabled)
App removed from stores: July 24, 2026 (iOS App Store and Google Play)
Weekly compensation: 2,000 free premium diamonds every Wednesday until closure
Paid currency refunds: Under review — details coming in a future announcement
New accounts blocked: July 24, 2026 — no new registrations or downloads after this date

Weekly Compensation: Free Premium Diamonds Every Wednesday

The development team isn't leaving players empty-handed. Starting now and continuing every Wednesday until the final shutdown, all active players receive 2,000 premium diamonds for free. No strings attached. No quests required. Just log in and collect.

We tested this ourselves: the diamonds hit your account automatically. You don't need to claim them from a mailbox or complete any tasks. It's a straightforward thank-you from Sunborn's Hecate Team to the community that stuck with Fire Control through its run.

But here's the catch — these free diamonds disappear when the servers go dark. Spend them while you can. Use them on pulls, upgrades, or whatever gives you the most fun before August 26.

If you've spent real money on premium diamonds, you're probably wondering about refunds. The official word is that a compensation framework for unspent paid currency is under review. That's corporate-speak for “we're figuring it out, check back later.”

Sunborn promised a detailed announcement in the future. Based on our experience with similar mobile game shutdowns, refunds typically come as store credit, gift cards, or direct payment reversals. But nothing is guaranteed yet.

Our advice: stop buying premium currency now. Once microtransactions shut down on July 24, 2026, any leftover paid diamonds become worthless. Save your wallet.

Storefront Removal: Mark July 24 on Your Calendar

Two major changes happen on July 24, 2026:

1. Girls' Frontline: Fire Control gets pulled from the iOS App Store and Google Play Store. No more downloads. No more updates.
2. In-app purchases, new account registrations, and game client downloads all stop permanently.

That means if you delete the game after July 24, you cannot reinstall it. Your account locks you out. Anyone who hasn't started playing by then misses the window entirely.

We recommend keeping the app installed on your device. Don't uninstall it, even if you take a break. There's no going back after July 24.

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Comparing Fire Control to Other Mobile Game Shutdowns

Sunborn's approach here resembles how other gacha games handle endings. For comparison:

| Game | Shutdown Notice | Compensation |
|——|—————-|————–|
| Girls' Frontline: Fire Control | ~8 months notice | 2,000 free diamonds/week + refunds TBD |
| Dragalia Lost | ~6 months notice | Wyrmite compensation + premium refunds |
| Marvel Future Revolution | ~3 months notice | Free premium currency + partial refunds |

Fire Control gives players a relatively generous window compared to some titles that pull the plug with only weeks of warning. The weekly 2,000 diamonds also rival what Dragalia Lost offered during its wind-down.

What Happens to Your Account After August 26?

Once the clock hits 11:00 AM (UTC+8) on August 26, 2026, everything gets wiped. Server data, account progress, character collections, purchases — all gone. The developers stated this clearly: ”all stored player account data will be permanently deleted.”

No surprise here. Most online-only games follow this pattern. Offline modes don't exist for Fire Control, so once servers go dark, the game stops working entirely. You cannot play single-player content, view your profile, or access anything saved on your device.

If you want to preserve memories, take screenshots or record videos of your roster before the shutdown. That's all that will remain.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the exact shutdown date for Girls' Frontline: Fire Control?

The game ends service on August 26, 2026, at 11:00 AM (UTC+8). Servers close at that exact time, and all player data is permanently deleted.

Can I still buy premium currency after July 24, 2026?

No. In-app purchases shut down on July 24, 2026. After that date, you cannot spend any real money on the game. The developers also block new account registrations and game downloads on the same day.

Will I get a refund for unspent paid diamonds?

Sunborn's Hecate Team says a refund plan is under review. They promised detailed information in a future announcement. As of now, no official refund policy exists. We recommend not buying any more premium currency until the refund plan is clear.

How do I claim the free 2,000 premium diamonds?

The diamonds are distributed automatically every Wednesday to all active players. You don't need to open a menu or claim them from an inbox. Just log in during that week, and the diamonds appear in your account.

Can I still play Girls' Frontline: Fire Control offline after shutdown?

No. The game requires an active server connection to run. Once servers go offline on August 26, 2026, the game becomes unplayable. No offline modes, no saved data access. Take screenshots or video recordings to remember your progress.

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A long-standing tech and gaming enthusiast, Mark Louis Salazar holds a special place in GameHaunt's history as the first member of the team from Canada. His addition marked a pivotal moment in the site's evolution, bridging its passionate Filipino roots with a North American perspective and helping to establish the global, dual-market identity that defines GameHaunt today.   Mark's journalistic focus is on some of the most ambitious and technologically demanding games in the industry.