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Her uncle took her in his farm as an assistant at first, but adopted her after her and the Goblin Slayer's families were massacred by Goblins. She clearly cares deeply for Goblin Slayer, though he seems oblivious to the depths of her affection. Guild Girl (受付嬢, Uketsukejō) Voiced by: Maaya Uchida[3] (Japanese); Sara Ragsdale[4] (English) A young woman who runs the Guild's front office as a receptionist and hands out
contracts to adventurers. She shows
concern for the villages pleading for help against the goblins, and is exasperated at how few experienced adventurers would take such jobs. This problem would leave inexperienced rookies to die from them, or worse. She holds great
amounts of respect for Goblin Slayer, due to his willingness to take on many goblin contracts that others would not touch. High Elf Archer (妖精弓手(エルフ), Erufu) Voiced by: Nao Tōyama[3] (Japanese); Mallorie Rodak[4] (English) A 2,000-year-old High Elf (上森人(ハイエルフ), hai erufu, lit. "high forest (hu)man") adventurer of Ranger (野伏(レンジャー), renjā) class. She came with Dwarf Shaman and Lizard Priest to find Goblin Slayer and recruit his help. They face some trouble early in the story as they are unable to pronounce "Goblin Slayer" and refer to him by other names (mostly Orcbolg and Beardcutter), until they find him. They reveal their objective; due to the increase in other monsters, there are not enough people to deal with goblins and the elf army cannot mobilize for mere goblins as it would create suspicion and panic.
Around this time frame (1992 into 1993), the Sega CD and TurboDuo systems burst onto the scene. Neither system would prove successful in the long run, but the buzz generated by the introduction of the CD-based storage format suggested that the future of home video game systems would rest with cheaply manufactured high-capacity discs and not the expensive low-capacity cartridges that had long been the norm. The AES console's greatest disadvantage was the high cost of its games, which
sold for roughly $200 a pop. In addition to the development costs associated with a full-featured game, the memory chips and circuit boards in a NeoGeo cartridge were extremely expensive. One of the advantages of CD-based consoles is that game discs literally cost nothing to manufacture. If SNK could cut its expensive cartridge format out of the equation, the company would be able to
sell its games for between $40 and $60, a price level that would help the NeoGeo compete against the otherwise lesser-powered Super NES and Genesis.
^ "Castlevania: The Adventure for Game Boy". GameRankings. CBS Corporation.
Archived from the original on July 21, 2010. Retrieved August 11, 2010. ^ "Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge for Game Boy".