Tuesday, September 30, 2003

Gad Guard

Gad Guard


Genre: Adventure, Mecha, Science Fiction

Gad Guard (ガドガード, Gado Gādo) is a 26-episode anime television series directed by Hiroshi Nishikiori and produced by Gonzo, which was broadcast across Japan by the anime satellite television network, Animax, and the terrestrial Fuji Television network. It has been licensed for North American distribution by Geneon Entertainment, and also aired on Anime Unleashed in 2005. With FUNimation's "New Show A Go-Go", they have acquired the distribution rights of the anime, and it will be available in early 2009.

Monday, September 29, 2003

Green Green (グリーングリーン)

Green Green (グリーングリーン)


Genre: Comedy, Romance, Slice of life story


Green Green (グリーングリーン, Gurīn Gurīn) is a Japanese, 12-episode anime adaptation of the H-game of the same name. While there are no sexually explicit scenes in the first 12 episodes, the series has a strong focus on nudity. A non-canon sequel exists to the story as a thirteenth episode, which was released at a later date. This 'Episode 13' is unlicensed and not included in the US release due to scenes involving sexual acts.

Media Blasters licensed Green Green for distribution in North America, and the first volume was released on May 16, 2006. They have since released the 12 TV episodes on three DVDs, first separately throughout 2006, and then in two different budget collections in 2007 (the original single volumes in a box) and 2009 (the three discs in one "Litebox" case).


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Green_(anime)

Wednesday, September 24, 2003

Divergence Eve (ダイバージェンス・イヴ)


Genre: Adventure, Science fiction


Divergence Eve (ダイバージェンス・イヴ, Daibājensu Ivu) is a thirteen episode Japanese anime series created by Takumi Tsukumo and directed by Hiroshi Negishi, with production by Operation EVE and animation production from RADIX.

The series is a science fiction story set in the far future, incorporating aspects of space opera. The character-driven storyline focuses primarily on the psychology of the main character, her social interactions, her inhuman abilities, and the conspiracy surrounding them. The technology is often secondary to this, but it is not ignored; several aspects, including their means of faster-than-light travel, are explained and loosely based on modern physics.

In North America, the television series was produced by ADV Films, aired from 2 July 2003 to 24 September 2003, ran for 13 episodes, and was released in 3 volumes on VHS and DVD. A budget-priced 3-DVD collection is also available; however, no extras are included in this set.

The series was a hit in Japan, which led to the creation of a sequel, Misaki Chronicles, which also ran for 13 episodes.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divergence_Eve

Friday, September 12, 2003

Dark Chronicle (ダーククロニクル)


Genre(s)Action RPG
Rating(s)ELSPA: 11+
ESRB: Teen
OFLC: G8+
PEGI: 12+


Dark Chronicle (ダーククロニクル, Dāku Kuronikuru), released as Dark Cloud 2 in North America, is a role-playing video game for the PlayStation 2 video game console. It was developed by Level-5 and published by Sony Computer Entertainment on November 28, 2002 in Japan, February 17, 2003 in North America, September 10, 2003 in Europe and September 12, 2003 in the United Kingdom.

It is the sequel to Dark Cloud, and features similar action role-playing and city-building game mechanics. Returning from the original game is the concept of time travel and world rebuilding. Players control two main protagonists, Max and Monica, who come from the present and future, respectively, to stop the main antagonist, Emperor Griffon who is destroying the present from the past.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_Cloud_2
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_Cloud