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  2. 999: Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/999:_Nine_Hours,_Nine...

    999 features nine main characters, who are forced to participate in the Nonary Game by an unknown person code-named Zero. [2] For the majority of the game, the characters adopt code names to protect their identities due to the stakes of the Nonary Game—most of their names are ultimately revealed over the course of the game, and for several their true identities are important to the plot. [10]

  3. Zero Escape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_Escape

    An Escape section in Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors.The player escapes rooms by solving puzzles, which involves finding and combining items. The gameplay of the series is divided into two types of segments: Novel sections – presented in a visual novel format in the first two games, [5] and as animated cutscenes in the third [36] – and Escape sections, which are escape-the-room ...

  4. Zero Time Dilemma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_Time_Dilemma

    Zero Time Dilemma, [b] also known as Zero Escape: Zero Time Dilemma, is an adventure video game developed by Chime, and published by Spike Chunsoft and Aksys Games.It is the third entry in the Zero Escape series, following Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors (2009) and Virtue's Last Reward (2012).

  5. Zero Escape: Virtue's Last Reward - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_Escape:_Virtue's_Last...

    Virtue's Last Reward features nine main characters who are kidnapped by an unknown individual called Zero. [16] The player character Sigma is joined by Phi, a girl with a "no-nonsense attitude"; Dio, a rude and insensitive man; Tenmyouji, an elderly man; Quark, an energetic young boy; Luna, a kind and quiet woman; Clover, an unpredictable girl who appeared in Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine ...

  6. Ninety-Nine Nights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninety-Nine_Nights

    The game features hundreds of enemies onscreen at any given time, and borrows heavily from other video games of the genre, most notably from the Dynasty Warriors and Kingdom Under Fire series. The game was released in Japan on April 20, 2006, and for other markets in August. A sequel, Ninety-Nine Nights II, [1] was released in 2010.

  7. Ever 17: The Out of Infinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ever_17:_The_Out_of_Infinity

    Neal Chandran at RPGFan called Ever 17 "a fantastic adventure game", and one of the best Japanese games in the genre that are available in English, describing it as a "must-play". He liked the game's writing, finding the conversations with other characters to be deep, philosophical, and intellectual, and said that each character was interesting.

  8. Ninety-Nine Nights II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninety-Nine_Nights_II

    Ninety-Nine Nights II (ナインティナイン・ナイツII, NaintiNain Naitsu II), stylized as N3II: Ninety-Nine Nights, is a role-playing video game with hack and slash game mechanics set in a high fantasy game universe, where a demon army is rising with one million troops.

  9. RoboRally - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RoboRally

    In Europe (German by Amigo, and Dutch by 999 Games), a different series was released. It incorporated a few rules changes and fewer components to make the game simpler. The damage and life tokens are larger and thicker than those of the original American release.