Let’s start with the first piece of the puzzle: Swfchan.
Swfchan (pronounced "swiff-chan") is an online archive dedicated to preserving Adobe Flash (.swf) files. Launched in the late 2000s, Swfchan became infamous for hosting a raw, uncurated collection of thousands of Flash animations, games, and interactive experiments from the golden age of the internet (roughly 1998-2012). Let’s start with the first piece of the puzzle: Swfchan
Unlike Newgrounds or DeviantArt, Swfchan had no rating system, no comments section, and no curation. Files were uploaded with minimal metadata—often just a random filename or an ID number. This is where the number 215302 becomes significant. I decompiled the SWF using JPEXS Free Flash Decompiler
Analysis of "215302": On Swfchan, each uploaded file receives a unique numeric ID. 215302 suggests a file uploaded sometime between 2013 and 2016 (as Swfchan IDs in the 200,000 range are from that era). Searching Swfchan’s surviving database for this ID yields no direct match, likely because the file was either deleted, never existed, or is hidden behind a dead link. However, the existence of such an ID number is plausible. here are the most likely possibilities:
The "Exclusive" tag: This is a user-added descriptor. On imageboards, "exclusive" often means the file was a commission, a private leak, or a rare version not available on mainstream portals like Newgrounds.
I decompiled the SWF using JPEXS Free Flash Decompiler. Here is the play-by-play without spoiling the full gut-punch:
Assuming the file did exist at some point on Swfchan under ID 215302, what would it contain? Based on the naming conventions of similar lost Flash files from 2013-2016, here are the most likely possibilities: