Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Qifuyizhan (qfui.com) is a personal blog built on Typecho. Based on the currently crawled content, its core focus is heavily centered on the online game Black Desert, especially the Taiwan server client, Simplified Chinese patches, account registration, client downloads, and information about China server testing. It is not an official game website; it is closer to a player-run resource and tutorial site.
The site’s main value lies in helping mainland Chinese players solve practical issues when accessing, downloading, and updating the Taiwan server version of Black Desert. Its articles provide download options such as the official installer, Quark Cloud Drive, and Baidu Netdisk, along with notes on different ISPs, game accelerators, and IDM multi-threaded download tools. It also includes steps for manual patch updates, such as checking the version number via update.log, downloading the corresponding patch, and placing it in the patch_temp folder. The site also provides Simplified Chinese patches for the Taiwan server and posts information about China server pioneer test dates, eligibility checks, and player chat groups.
The site itself is free to access, and there is no visible membership system, paid download model, or on-site transaction mechanism. However, the actual download process may rely on third-party tools or services such as cloud drive memberships, Baidu Netdisk SVIP, Quark Cloud Drive membership, or IDM. These fees are not charged directly by the site.
The main advantage is that the content is highly focused, offering fairly detailed, hands-on instructions for Black Desert players dealing with downloads, updates, and language patches. The pages are lightweight and easy to read. The drawbacks are also clear: it is a personally maintained site, so update consistency and link availability cannot be guaranteed; redistributed resources such as compressed client packages and patches carry integrity and security risks; and some accelerator recommendations are mixed into the tutorials, so users need to judge for themselves whether commercial promotion is involved.
It is suitable for mainland Chinese players who want to play the Taiwan server version of Black Desert but are dealing with slow official downloads, difficult patch updates, or inconvenient Traditional Chinese display. It may also be useful for beginners following China server testing news or looking to join player groups. It is not ideal for users with strict requirements around resource provenance, file verification, or official compliance; those users should prioritize the official game website.
Judging by its content and site format, qfui.com targets Chinese-speaking users, and its pages can be crawled normally, so it appears to be directly accessible. However, external services it references—such as the Taiwan server official site, game downloaders, cloud drives, and accelerators—may be slow or unstable depending on ISP, region, or network conditions.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on qfui.com official site.
qfui.com is an China Gaming provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 2.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach qfui.com directly.