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Anime Entertainment Games

Anime 'Visual Novel' Game DVDs Debut In West 68

Thanks to Insert Credit for pointing to a Namako Team story revealing new Japanese 'visual novel' DVDs coming to the West via publisher Hirameki. Insert Credit explains: "Hirameki has been slowly releasing English-language ports of Japanese dating sims in the US. They play basically the same on a PC, DVD player, PS2 or Xbox [using Dragon's Lair style branching narrative], which is the appeal of the format." The new "Summer 2004"-due DVD releases include the wonderfully named Tea Society Of A Witch, as well as Hourglass Summer, apparently "A summer vacation that crosses the boundaries of space and time."
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Anime 'Visual Novel' Game DVDs Debut In West

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  • Re:Interesting (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 08, 2004 @05:38PM (#9647314)
    Of course, I take issue with the idea that any dating sim has an "interesting story," but that's another debate.

    Even if you limited the discussion to dating sims (which technically describes a much smaller set of games into which none of the Hirameki titles falls), I'm not sure how you can write off an entire genre as never going to have an interesting story.

    But the Hirameki games are what the Japanese call adventures and visual novels (the latter term is the one Western fans prefer, since "adventure game" suggests something along the lines of Monkey Island). And if you can, with a straight face, dispute that any visual novel has an interesting story, then I can only conclude that you don't know the first thing about the subject.

    Consider Fate/stay night, for example, which is based around a group of mythical heroes being summoned from the past to take part in a ritual battle for the Holy Grail - and features a plot so intricate that the entire game has to break off at one point while a particularly clever contrivance is explained with diagrams. How uninteresting - it's obviously just a shallow cover for underage sex, right?

    Or Key's famous AIR, which is so lacking in plot that it's currently being made into a movie and a TV series simultaneously. Oh, sure, along with its predecessor Kanon it spawned an entire industry of merchandising and doujinshi, but hey, just 'cos its story has reduced hardened critics to tears doesn't mean it's interesting, right?

    Or Kid's Infinity series - who could ever be interested in games that rely on quantum physics to drive plots based around time loops and people exchanging bodies? Oh, how dull and derivative these games are...

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