The tragic suicide of three minor sisters in Ghaziabad’s Bharat City Society has revealed a disturbing descent into a digital “alt-reality.” While initial reports focused on a “Korean game” task, new testimonies from neighbors and society officials paint a picture of total identity dissociation. The sisters, aged 16, 14, and 12, had reportedly abandoned their Indian identities, adopted Korean names, and lived as a self-styled “Korean Royal Family” within the confines of their 9th-floor apartment. Society members expressed deep skepticism over the family’s claims of financial distress, noting the girls had access to high-end smartphones and Wi-Fi despite being pulled out of school two years ago. Investigations revealed the sisters were recluses who only interacted with each other, even being flagged by tuition teachers for refusing to use their birth names. The police discovered a room locked from the inside, decorated with a ritualistic circle of photos and a notebook filled with Korean cultural obsessions. A final note, secured with a butterfly hair clip, offered a haunting apology to their parents. As neighbors recall hearing frequent household “clashes,” authorities are investigating whether this was a coordinated suicide pact fueled by an online cult or a tragic result of prolonged psychological isolation and digital delusion.
Ghaziabad Tragedy: Ghaziabad Sisters Trading Indian Identity for 'Korean Royalty' Leap to Death in Task


