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The game is set ten years after the events of the final campaign chapter of Girls ' Frontline.The T-Dolls, having previously been exclusively referred to by the names of the firearms they've been imprinted onto within their fire-control cores, begin choosing to adopt new, more human-like personal names as their callsigns, either for personal or professional reasons.
Girls ' Frontline (simplified Chinese: 少女前线; traditional Chinese: 少女前線; pinyin: Shàonǚ Qiánxiàn) is a mobile strategy role-playing game for Android and iOS developed by China-based studio MICA Team, where players control echelons of android characters, known in-universe as T-Dolls, each carrying a distinctive real-world firearm.
Dolls obtained repeatedly will become Neural Kits. Which can be exchanged for Neural Fragments in the Supplies Shop in Game. Collecting a certain no. of Neural Fragments can improve the Doll's level. The initial states of Dolls in the game have different levels, and all Dolls can be upgraded to the highest level. [11] [12]
The game was a commercial and critical failure. While there are claims of the game only selling 100 copies in the first week, these claims have no proof behind them and is a hoax that was spread by numerous publications. [2] [3] Famitsu awarded the game a score of 22 out of 40 (5/6/6/5). [4]
CY GIRLS (also known as CY Girls or Cy Girls, and as COOL GIRL in Japan) is an action figure series by Takara Tomy and Blue Box Toys under the brand bbi collectible (an official bootleg), featuring an elite unit of female crimefighters, [1] combining the elements of both a doll and an action figure.
Tokyo RPG Factory Co., Ltd. (Japanese: 株式会社Tokyo RPG Factory) was a Japanese video game developer and subsidiary of Square Enix, a company known for its work in the role-playing genre. The company was founded in August 2014 under the name "Tokyo Dream Factory" by Yosuke Matsuda, who became president of Square Enix in 2013.
Figures based on anime, manga and bishōjo game characters are often sold as dolls in Japan. Collecting them is a popular hobby amongst Otakus. The term moe is otaku slang for the love of characters in video games, anime, or manga, whereas zoku is a post-World War II term for tribe, clan or family.
In the late 1980s, role-playing video games such as Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy helped popularize tabletop role-playing games in Japan. [6] [7] Around the same time, the Japanese game publisher Group SNE pioneered a new book genre called replays. Replays are logs of TRPG play sessions, arranged for publication in a similar style to light novels.