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Girl Friend Note (ガールフレンド(♪), Girl Friend (Onpu)) is a spin-off rhythm game developed by R-Force Entertainment and published by CyberAgent for Android and iOS. Released on December 1, 2015, [27] the game underwent a two-week long maintenance due to unforeseen complications regarding various game systems. Maintenance ended on ...
Momoka finds a treasure map she had drawn when she was a kid, so the group go to her hometown to search for treasure. Later, the girls try to help out an idol named Yammy, who has gained an incredible amount of weight after being heartbroken. Afterwards, the girls find themselves being hunted by a mysterious being during a jungle exercise.
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.
Pages in category "Fictional Japanese people in video games" The following 74 pages are in this category, out of 74 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The game was a commercial and critical failure. While there are claims of the game only selling 100 copies in the first week, these claims have no proof behind them and is a hoax that was spread by numerous publications. [2] [3] Famitsu awarded the game a score of 22 out of 40 (5/6/6/5). [4]
The project focuses on various anthropomorphised Sega consoles, known as "Sega Hard Girls" or "SeHa Girls" for short, each with their own unique personalities. The anime series follows three such girls; Dreamcast, Sega Saturn, and Mega Drive, who must graduate from Sehagaga Academy, a special school located in Haneda, Tokyo, by venturing into the worlds of various Sega games and earning medals.
A bishōjo game (Japanese: 美少女ゲーム, Hepburn: bishōjo gēmu, lit. "pretty girl game") or gal game (ギャルゲーム, gyaru gēmu, often shortened to "galge") is "a type of Japanese video game centered on interactions with attractive girls".
On January 30, 2006, their first game was released apparently made a big hit and ranked 3 at Getchu.com's sales ranking, [1] which was the born of the spin-offs. As of February 23, 2007, Hiro Suzuhira left Navel due to her poor health, [2] with "Ne~ pon? Raipon!" as her last game with the company, and becomes a freelancer.