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E7 Vault Work Site

Once the frequency is matched:

(also known as Epic Seven Vault) is a fan-made character portrait viewer and datamining repository for the mobile game Epic Seven . It was originally created as a successor to

to allow players to view high-quality 2D Live2D models, animations, and skins outside the game client. Current Status and Shutdown March 2025 , E7 Vault has officially

. The developer announced that their hosting provider received a complaint (likely a cease and desist), and they were given a 12-hour window to remove the content. The creator decided not to contest the legal pressure and closed the site to avoid personal risk. Site Features (Historical Review) e7 vault work

When it was active, E7 Vault was highly regarded for several key technical features: Portrait Viewer

: It allowed users to view and interact with character "Portraits" (Live2D animations), including hidden or unreleased skins. Engine Upgrades

: The developer worked on converting old Spine v2 models to newer formats to fix visual bugs like "severed heads" or detached weapons on specific characters like Urban Shadow Choux and Apocalypse Ravi. Asset Repository Once the frequency is matched: (also known as

: It served as a vital resource for the community and content creators to access clean assets for guides and videos. Community Impact & Alternatives The loss of E7 Vault has left a significant gap in the Epic Seven community: Lack of Alternatives

: There is currently no direct, stable alternative that offers the same comprehensive portrait viewing capabilities. Data Scarcity : While the original data for E7Herder remains available on

, E7 Vault's improved datasets and custom fixes were not publicly archived by the developer upon shutdown. archived snapshots of the site on the Wayback Machine or look for current Discord communities that still share datamined assets? AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more Drones and wheeled crawlers now perform initial e7


Drones and wheeled crawlers now perform initial e7 vault inspections. A worker never enters a vault just to “take a look.” Remote visual assessment using 360-degree cameras reduces unnecessary human exposure.

In 2019, a subcontractor in Houston, Texas, attempted e7 vault work on a telecommunications vault without ventilation. The vault had been sealed for six months. Within two minutes of descent, the worker collapsed due to nitrogen displacement from decomposing organic material. The surface attendant, untrained in rescue, also entered and lost consciousness. Both were saved by a FD rescue, but the contractor faced $2.1 million in OSHA fines and medical liability.

The lesson? E7 vault work is not a solo endeavor. It requires systemic discipline, not individual bravery.

The industry is rapidly evolving. Three major trends are reshaping e7 vault work: