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In general, simulation games such as Densha de Go! or Tokimeki Memorial were more popular in Japan than in America which preferred more action orientated video games. [2] The 2004 title Densha de Go Final! was so named to signal that it was intended to be the last in the series. While still popular in an absolute numbers sense, the series had ...
In general, simulation games (such as Tokimeki Memorial) or the train sim like Densha de Go! were more popular in Japan than in America which preferred more action oriented video games. [ 4 ] Games such as Sakura Wars and Persona (both series started in 1996, the latter would add dating sim elements in 2006 ) are RPGs with dating sim elements.
Train Simulator (トレインシミュレーター, Torein Shimyurētā, or abbreviated "TS") is a Japanese train simulation game series produced by Ongakukan. The game is significant as it was one of the earliest of its kind since the series started in 1995.
Tokimeki Memorial (Japanese: ときめきメモリアル, Hepburn: Tokimeki Memoriaru, lit. "Heartbeat Memorial") is a dating simulation series by Konami. It consists of eight main games in addition to many spin-offs. The games are notable in the dating sim genre for being highly nonlinear. Their nickname amongst their fans is the contraction ...
A Ressha de Ikō MD (A列車で行こうMD, "MD A-Train") is a simulation game involving the construction of a railroad in order to boost the city's mass transit system. [citation needed] The game was released to an exclusively Japanese market; with no release ever being attempted for the North American or European markets.
Amagami (アマガミ, Amagami, lit."Gentle bite" [FN 1]), is a Japanese dating simulation game for the PlayStation 2 and the spiritual successor to KimiKiss, both of which were developed and published by Enterbrain.
The game is cited as a little-known forerunner of virtual-life simulator games to follow. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] One of the earliest dating sims , Tenshitachi no gogo , [ 5 ] was released for the 16-bit NEC PC-9801 computer that same year, [ 6 ] though dating sim elements can be found in Sega 's earlier Girl's Garden in 1984.
The game's protagonist enters Tokimeki High School and runs into a girl wearing glasses who looks identical to Miho Nakayama. [5] Though the game is a standard text command-style adventure game similar to the later Famicom Detective Club series, in important scenes, the player is required to select a facial expression in addition to a verbal response.