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That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime is an anime television series based on the light novel series of the same title written by Fuse and illustrated by Mitz Vah. The anime is produced by studio Eight Bit and directed by Yasuhito Kikuchi, with Atsushi Nakayama as assistant director, Kazuyuki Fudeyasu handling series composition, Ryouma Ebata designing the characters, and Takahiro Kishida ...
Gobta (ゴブタ, Gobuta) Voiced by: Asuna Tomari [4] (Japanese); Ryan Reynolds [3] (English) Gobta is a small hobgoblin who serves Rimuru as the leader of goblin riders. Despite how younger, smaller, and dumber he looks than other hobgoblins, he unexpectedly holds great proficiency in sword-skills enough to take down a big m
The main forces of Tempest attack Clayman's army. While Beastketeer Suphia and Gabiru lead their comrades against the Dragon Faithful, Albis manages to defeat Yamza. When he tries to surrender to save his life, Clayman remotely forces him to swallow a piece of Charybdis and turn into a mindless, weaker version of the monster.
Rimuru decides to keep a diary of the adventures experienced in this new world, remembering the trials and the friends made along the way. With the monster city growing, Rimuru and the council hold a meeting to help bring up everyone's morale. The Oni, Orcs, and Dragonewts enjoy their new lives under Rimuru's leadership.
Rimuru visits Kurobe for weapons to put in the dungeon, to which it is revealed that he had become a skilled craftsman after Rimuru evolved into a Demon Lord. Rimuru is hopeful that the dungeon and arena will make Tempest famous as Kurobe provides Rimuru with a new sword, though it is not finished yet.
The game is divided into three modes: battle, story, and communication battle. [4] The "battle mode", also called "vs CPU", allows the player to fight against an AI-controlled character. [4] The "story mode" allows the player to watch the story development of a selected character, with game scenarios written by Kazuma Kamachi. [4]
Kairosoft was founded as a dōjin games developer in 1996, and is currently located in the Nishi-Shinjuku district of Tokyo with only nine employees. They started out developing simulation games for the Windows platform, the first of which was released in 1996 and simulated a used bookstore, and another example was the original Game Dev Story released in 1997, with a sequel released in 2001. [3]
The back cover of Door Door's NEC PC-8801 version, featuring a photo and resume of Koichi Nakamura. Enix was a Japanese video game publishing company founded in September 1975 by Yasuhiro Fukushima. Initially a tabloid publisher named Eidansha Boshu Service Center, in 1982 it ventured into video game publishing for Japanese home computers such ...