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Video games based on anime and manga also known as anime-based games, this is a list of computer and video games that are based on manga or anime properties. The list does not include games based on western cartoons , which are separately listed at List of video games based on cartoons .
Needy Streamer Overload is a 2022 denpa-inspired visual novel video game created by Japanese developer Xemono and published by WSS Playground for macOS, Microsoft Windows, and Nintendo Switch, and by Alliance Arts Inc. for PS4 and PS5.
Anime enthusiasts have produced fan fiction and fan art, including computer wallpapers, and anime music videos (AMVs). [214] Many fans visit sites depicted in anime, games, manga and other forms of otaku culture. This behavior is known as "Anime pilgrimage". [215]
Ico [b] is a 2001 action-adventure game developed and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 2.It was designed and directed by Fumito Ueda, who wanted to create a minimalist game based on a "boy meets girl" concept.
Stitch! is the Japanese anime spin-off of Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise and the successor to Lilo & Stitch: The Series. It debuted in Japan in October 2008. The first show features a Japanese girl named Yuna in place of Lilo, and is set on a fictional island in the Ryukyus off the shore of Okinawa instead of Hawaii. Its popularity resulted ...
Tsukihime (Japanese: 月姫, lit. ' Moon Princess ') is a Japanese adult visual novel game created by Type-Moon, who first released it at the Winter Comiket in December 2000. . In 2003, it was adapted into both an anime television series, Lunar Legend Tsukihime, animated by J.C.Staff, and a manga series, which was serialized between 2003 and 2010 in MediaWorks shōnen manga magazine Dengeki ...
Skullgirls has a variety of single-player and multiplayer game modes, including story mode, arcade mode, versus mode, tutorial mode, training mode, and online play. [12] The story mode features small, non-canonical vignettes for each playable character, detailing "what if" scenarios playing out across alternate timelines. [13]
Jun'ya "ZUN" Ōta, who was then a mathematics student at Tokyo Denki University [6] working under the name "ZUN Soft", developed the first five Touhou Project games for the PC-98 computer, utilizing the platform's 16-bit color graphics and 6-channel FM synthesis audio. The games were published by Amusement Makers, a student game development ...