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[73] Video games[edit] The series was also slated to be adapted into a series of video games, developed for the Nintendo DS,[74] PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 2 platforms, which was published by Namco Bandai Games. [75][76][77] All three games have been available in only Japanese, although an incomplete unofficial patch for the Nintendo DS game exists on the internet that partially translates the game into English. [citation needed] A release on the Wii platform was cancelled for unknown reasons. [75] The official website for the first Nintendo DS game launched on July 16, 2007, with the game being released a few months later on October 25. [78] A second game, titled Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion Lost Colors, was developed for the PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 2, and released in Japan on March 27, 2008. [79] It is a visual novel game which follows a new protagonist named Rai (ライ), who suffers from amnesia. He has a Geass ability similar to Lelouch's, but activated by voice. The third game for the Nintendo DS is a collection of minigames featuring chibi forms of the characters. The player moves along a board through dice rolls, landing on different spots to activate minigames. The minigames are parody-style events with multiple genres. These include helping Jeremiah grow oranges, racing against C.And the cloying love stories in Horimiya are enough to put a dentist in cardiac arrest. Horimiya primarily follows the budding love romance of two high schoolers: Kyouko Hori, the most popular girl in school, and Izumi Miyamura, the class recluse (see what they did there?). What makes Miyamura so interesting is that he is hiding a secret from his class that Hori stumbles upon by mistake: he’s a goth kid. And a stylish one at that. These acquaintances, who’ve mutually agreed to hide his secret, blossom into a full-blown romance so potent and infectiously wholesome that it has their classmates itching for their own high school romance. AdvertisementPrevious SlideNext Slide5 / 14List slidesVivy: Fluorite Eye’s SongList slidesVivy: Fluorite Eye’s Song AdvertisementHere’s the elevator pitch for Vivy: Fluorite Eye’s Song (probably): Hatsune Miku halts her dream of making the world hers after she’s called to action to put down her microphone and pick up a gun à la Major Motoko Kusanagi from Ghost In The Shell to prevent an AI uprising that wipes out humanity 100 years in the future. If you’re sold on that premise, you should check out Vivy: Fluorite Eye’s Song. I was surprised to see that Vivy branched a typical sci-fi action series into a thoughtful exploration of what makes us human. The show has many hearty episodes that focus on the complex natures of jealousy, greed, and loneliness. Some of the standout episodes even rival that of an introspective Cowboy Bebop episode (the anime not the live-action show) in how they let ideas and heartbreaking scenes breathe. Plus, when the action hits, it hits.
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