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  2. Girls' Frontline: Neural Cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girls'_Frontline:_Neural_Cloud

    The game's art design is consistent with the style of Girls' Frontline, and the game's UI design is flatter than that of Girls' Frontline. Mobile Games Review commented that it is consistent with the worldview of Project Neural Cloud, which is set in a virtual network system. [ 68 ]

  3. List of gacha games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_gacha_games

    Gacha games are video games that implement the gashapon mechanic. Gashapon is a type of a Japanese vending machine in which people insert a coin to acquire a random toy capsule. In gacha games, players pay virtual currency (bought with real money or acquired in-game) to acquire random game characters or pieces of equipment of varying rarity and ...

  4. Gacha game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gacha_game

    Gacha mechanics have been compared to those of loot boxes. A gacha game (Japanese: ガチャ ゲーム, Hepburn: gacha gēmu) is a video game that implements the gachapon machine style mechanics. Similar to loot boxes, gacha games entice players to spend in-game currency to receive a random in-game item. Some in-game currency generally can be ...

  5. The Idolmaster Cinderella Girls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Idolmaster_Cinderella...

    The Idolmaster Cinderella Girls (アイドルマスター シンデレラガールズ, Aidorumasutā Shinderera Gāruzu, officially stylized as THE iDOLM@STER CINDERELLA GIRLS) is a Japanese free-to-play simulation video game co-developed by Cygames and Bandai Namco Studios for the Mobage social network platform for mobile phones.

  6. Goddess of Victory: Nikke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goddess_of_Victory:_Nikke

    The game is free-to-play and features a gacha game system, through which in-app purchases are used as a method for monetization. It garnered over US$70 million in its first month of release. Goddess of Victory: Nikke set in a post-apocalyptic future where the surface of the Earth was overthrown by mechanical aliens, called Raptures. The ...

  7. Gashapon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gashapon

    [19] [20] Gacha mechanism, or gacha, is essentially a monetization model which the user pays with in-game currency to enter a draw in order to obtain the character or item they want. [21] If a player does not obtain what they hoped for, there is the option of paying with their own money for more draws, and this is the main way to monetize the ...

  8. Fate/Grand Order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fate/Grand_Order

    Fate/Grand Order (Japanese: フェイト・グランドオーダー, Hepburn: Feito/Gurando Ōdā) is a free-to-play Japanese gacha mobile game, developed by Lasengle (formerly Delightworks) using Unity, [1] [2] and published by Aniplex, a subsidiary of Sony Music Entertainment Japan.

  9. Loot box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loot_box

    Mock-up image of opening a loot box in a video game. In video game terminology, a loot box (also called a loot crate or prize crate) is a consumable virtual item which can be redeemed to receive a randomised selection of further virtual items, or loot, ranging from simple customisation options for a player's avatar or character to game-changing equipment such as weapons and armour.