![]() ![]() Voiced by: Yoshito Yasuhara (Japanese older and young adult), Takeyuki (Japanese younger) James A Taylor (English older and young adult), Robin Bufanda (English younger) ![]() She wants to restore everyone to their proper places and bring happiness to the other her. However, her actual visit in the other world has her appreciate her home in spite of her early interest. Although she didn't want to believe her odd encounter, she is excited of her knowledge of a secret parallel world. She lives at her home with her parents and her younger brother. The game's protagonist, Yuri is a mild-mannered and caring teenager who loves to read books. Voiced by: Megumi Hayashibara (Japanese), Danni Wheeler (English) Emit won the 1994 Yomiuri Shimbun Prize in the 1995 Japan Software Grand Prix.Īs a side note, the game's namesake is the backwards spelling of "time" and not the actual word "emit". Koei also released a CD compilation of her original illustrations soon after Emit was released. The scenario was composed by Jiro Akagawa and the character designs were made by Mutsumi Inomata. Voicer-kun was likely planned to be applied for other products, but the only other title made compatible with it was Angelique Voice Fantasy. Emit and Voicer-kun were released on the same day, and an option to buy both products as a companion pack was made available. For consumers who wanted to hear the game's spoken dialogue in the SNES version, Koei developed a secondary hardware named Voicer-kun. The first part is Lost Child of Time, the second is Life-Risking Journey, and the final is Farewell to Me. This game was released as three separate parts. While the English Dream series has been largely forgotten, both titles appeared on Koei's 2003 Winter Thanks Rare Campaign with cheaper prices. ![]() Each game has English consultants with a dual language and subtitle option for players. ![]() The purpose behind both projects is to teach Japanese people the English language with the help of a thrilling narrative. Now before you start thinking boring and stop reading, remember that the Japanese education games are actually more interesting than the so called Multimedia education we have in the west.Įmit is an adventure game that is the first entry of Shibusawa Kou's "English Dream" series -followed by the two-part entry, Dark Hunter. Originally available for the Super Famicom along with an audio CD, EMIT is what's best described as an English tutorial software. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |