Chasing Kaleidorider update: A look at the waifu gacha game's status

A YouTube investigation questions whether Chasing Kaleidorider is cancelled. Here's what we know from the source.
A recent video from the YouTube channel bluescreenoftech has raised a question that haunts every gacha game player: Is Chasing Kaleidorider cancelled? The channel, which focuses on mobile and anime-style games, posted an update on the waifu gacha title in May 2026, promising to dig through available information to answer that question.
The video description includes a link to the channel, inviting viewers to see the full investigation. But even without watching the video, the existence of this update tells us something important: the game's development status is uncertain enough to warrant a dedicated video. For fans who have been waiting for Chasing Kaleidorider, that uncertainty is the real news.
Chasing Kaleidorider is a waifu gacha game, a subgenre of mobile games where players collect anime-style female characters (the "waifus") through a randomized lottery system known as gacha. These games often combine character collection with role-playing elements, visual novel storytelling, and competitive or cooperative gameplay. The genre has exploded in popularity thanks to titles like Genshin Impact, Fate/Grand Order, and Arknights, but it also has a dark side: many announced games never make it to launch, or they enter a limbo of silent development.
That limbo is where Chasing Kaleidorider appears to be stuck. The bluescreenoftech video asks directly whether the game has been cancelled, and the creator states they dug through what information is available. Without having seen the video's conclusions, we can still assess the situation based on the pattern of gacha game announcements.
Gacha game development is notoriously opaque. Developers often announce titles years before they are ready, using concept art and trailers to build hype and secure funding. But when a game misses its projected release window and communication goes silent, players are left to speculate. The typical signs of cancellation include a developer shutting down social media accounts, staff leaving the company, or a publisher removing the game from store pages. Sometimes the signs are subtler: a lack of new character reveals, no updates to the official website, or a community manager going quiet.
For Chasing Kaleidorider, the fact that a third-party channel is dedicating time to investigate suggests that official communication has been sparse. That is a red flag, but not a definitive answer. Some gacha games have gone dark for years before resurfacing with a beta or a release date. Others have been quietly shelved when a developer pivots to a new project.
The bluescreenoftech channel is not a huge outlet, but in the gacha community, small creators often fill the gap left by official sources. They comb through patent filings, job postings, and registration databases to piece together what a studio is actually working on. The fact that this video exists indicates that someone is paying close attention to Chasing Kaleidorider, which means the game still has a following.
But a following does not guarantee a launch. The gacha market is saturated, and many early-stage projects fail to secure the ongoing funding they need. A waifu gacha game requires a steady stream of new characters, voice acting, and events to keep players spending money. Without a clear monetization plan or a publisher willing to take the risk, developers may decide to cut their losses before the game even reaches beta.
There is also the question of the development team. The Chasing Kaleidorider project, assuming it exists, would need artists, programmers, writers, and game designers. If the studio is small or inexperienced, delays are almost inevitable. If the studio is part of a larger company, the game could be competing for internal resources against other titles. Either way, silence is rarely a good sign.
That said, some gacha games have defied the odds. A notable example is the game that eventually became Blue Archive, which was announced years before its eventual release and went through multiple delays. During that time, the developer said almost nothing, leading many to assume the project was dead. It was not. The difference is that Blue Archive's developer continued to hire staff and file trademarks throughout the silent period. If bluescreenoftech found similar activity for Chasing Kaleidorider, that would be a positive indicator.
Without access to the specific findings in the video, we can only speak in generalities. But the broader lesson is important: The gacha game industry is built on hype and uncertainty. Developers benefit from early announcements because they generate interest and potentially attract investors. Players, however, are left in the dark, not knowing whether their investment of time and hope will pay off. Channels like bluescreenoftech perform a valuable service by cutting through the noise and asking the hard questions.
If Chasing Kaleidorider is indeed cancelled, it will join a long list of waifu gacha games that never made it to the App Store or Google Play. If it is still in development, the community may need to be patient for a while longer. Either way, the May 2026 update from bluescreenoftech is a reminder that the line between a game being delayed and a game being dead is often invisible to outsiders.
For now, the only concrete fact is that someone asked the question, and someone tried to answer it. That is more information than most waifu gacha projects ever get.
Staff Writer
Zoe writes about game releases, indie titles, and gaming culture.
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