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Several drama CDs were published; Scitron released a series of two drama CDs—Guilty Gear X Vol. 1 and Vol. 2—between October 24, and November 24, 2001, [34] and two series of drama CDs based on Guilty Gear X2 were released by Team Entertainment: Red and Black—a series— were released in 2003 between July 16, and August 20. [32]
Guilty Gear Strive received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic. [44] [45] [46] IGN said "Guilty Gear Strive is a milestone 2D fighting game that raises the bar for anime-like fighters in terms of its visuals, online netcode, and sheer creativity found in all aspects of its design."
There are many musical references in the Guilty Gear series, including various characters' names and moves, which were inspired by rock and heavy metal bands like Queen, Guns N' Roses, and Metallica. [3] [4] [5] For instance, the main character, Sol Badguy, was named after Queen's lead vocalist, Freddie Mercury. Both his real name, Frederick ...
Guilty Gear (subtitled The Missing Link in Japan) is a 2D fighting video game developed by Team Neo Blood, an Arc System Works production group led by Daisuke Ishiwatari, and published by Arc System Works.
Daisuke Ishiwatari (石渡 太輔, Ishiwatari Daisuke, born August 14, 1973) is a Japanese video game developer, illustrator, musician, composer, and voice actor.He is best known for creating the 2D fighting game series Guilty Gear.
Guilty Gear XX Slash: NAOMI, PlayStation 2, PSP Sammy Studios/SEGA 2006 Guilty Gear XX Accent Core: NAOMI, PlayStation 2, Wii: Sammy Studios/Aksys Games (US) 2007 Guilty Gear 2: Overture: Xbox 360, Windows Arc System Works/Aksys Games/505 Games: Battle Fantasia: Taito Type X2, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Windows Arc System Works/Aksys Games/505 Games
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The second installment of the Guilty Gear series, Guilty Gear X was developed over a period of about two years after the first game's success. It was released in July 2000 for Japanese arcades , re-released on Dreamcast in December 2000, and later ported to PlayStation 2 in November 2001 and Game Boy Advance in January 2002.