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Cherry Tree High Comedy Club Review

Cherry Tree High Comedy Club
Publisher: Capcom, Nyu Media Ltd (Localisation)
Developer: 773
Platforms: PC
Release Date: 27/04/2012
Price: $7.99 Available Here

Overview:

Digital distribution has given many independent and passionate video game developers an opportunity to share their creations with the rest of the world, giving them a chance to jump all the distribution hassles and charge bargain prices to consumers. Platforms like Xbox Live Arcade and Steam have allowed many great ideas to surface, coming from talented individuals from all over the globe. Gamers will remember a little independent and free PC title called Cave Story, which would later be picked up by Nintendo for a proper release on the Nintendo Wii and Nintendo 3DS.

Cherry Tree High Comedy is a dating simulator style game developed by an independent Japanese developer, 733, and picked up for localisation by Nyu Media Ltd and being distributed digitally by Capcom. The game is available for purchase on the official website now with release on other digital platforms to follow.

Story:

Before I get into the premise and setting of Cherry Tree High Comedy Club, it’s worth noting that the localisation didn’t just involve translating the original Japanese script as accurately as possible into English, it involved a heavy bit of Westernisation, much like the Ace Attorney games. This means that many changes have been made to the original context to make it more Western oriented. The original Japanese version takes place in Japan but in this localisation the game takes place in North America. With that, the character names and profiles were changed in order to make them fit into the new sitting, and much of the dialogue and culture references have been altered as well. That said, the setting still looks very Japanese as the main town has a Japanese temple even, but the translation team have cleverly covered their tracks as convincingly as possible by making it seem like a multi-cultural American town. With that in mind, let’s move on to what this game is really about.

Cherry Tree High Comedy Club takes place in quiet countryside locale called Cherry Tree Town, and players play the role of a high spirited high school student by the name of Miley Verisse. Miley is a passionate fan of stand up comedy and loves the idea of making people laugh, and with that passion she decides that she wants to start her very own Comedy Club at her school, Cherry Tree High. However her rival, Octavia Richmond, who is also the head of the student council, informs her that starting a proper school club isn’t a simple ask as she will need at least five willing members to formally join the club before it can be established. Not only that, but the deadline is at the end of April and when the game starts it’s already March, so she has very little time to work things out. Miley quickly realises that finding additional people who share a similar passion for comedy is not going to be a simple task.

It’s a fairly simple plot akin to those of slice of life comedies you see in Japanese animation. It’s all very light hearted and happy, and contains a lot of humour and charm. There is a fair bit of characterisation involved here as you interact with the game’s colourful cast. There are some serious undertones just to make the setting and characters more relatable, but it is generally quite uplifting. Apart from the main underlying plot of starting a Comedy Club, the experience that you have with the town and characters really depends on you. It’s one of those player driven experiences that allows you to choose how you interact with the game world and what characters to interact with and how. Overall, it’s a nice game world that lets you escape and unwind a little.

Visuals and Audio:

Being an independent game developed by just a handful of inviduals, Cherry Tree High Comedy Club looks decent enough. It looks like one of those free browser based video games built with flash. It’s still a decent enough 2D effort with simplistic character models and backgrounds, and the colour scheme is appealing enough. What really stands out about the game is the artwork, as you’ll get to see plenty of beautiful character illustrations. The character designs are quite nice, nothing unique but still charming enough.

The soundtrack is as upbeat and happy as the rest of the game, with fast paced  jazzy pop tunes akin to a Shin Megami Tensei: Persona video game. The music is pretty catchy but there isn’t much variety, and so it can get pretty boring fast.

Gameplay:

Cherry Tree High Comedy Club uses a dating simulator like game structure, where you essentially engage in various activities and simply socialise with the game’s many characters. The goal here is to build on Miley’s character and also her relationships with other characters. In a way, the game structure is a lot like the dating simulator portions of Shin Megami Tensei Persona 3 and Shin Megami Tensei Persona 4.

The game progress on a day by day basis, with each day divided into Morning, Afternoon, and Evening. Activities generally involve socialising with characters or engaging in activities like doing homework, watching television, playing video games, and various other things.

As Miley, you need to work on her repertoire of conversation topics, and these topics include video games, music, fashion, and several others. You build Miley’s knowledge on these topics by engaging in various activities like reading magazines and watching television. It’s important to build on Miley’s repertoire as it helps her communicate with characters more effectively.

Miley’s goal is to recruit three people into her Comedy Club, as she already has herself and her best friend Harriet as members. There are six potential recruits, and you have to essentially max out your relationship level with at least three of these potentials before the game duration ends (end of April). Knowing the character’s likes and dislikes is key to knowing which topics to talk about in order to speed up the relationship development.

It’s a fairly interesting game that’s nicely paced, and you need to manage your time and days before the deadline at the end of April. It’s a challenge to figure out whether you want to spend time building your own repertoire that will help in socialising, or trying to figure out the characters better in order to pick the right conversation topics.

The localisation is actually quite good, as the dialogue is fun and the characters are expressed really well and have a lot of personality. The localisation team did a nice job retaining the flow and charm of the dialogue and the Westernised elements actually blend in quite well. It’s a very short game that can be completed in a couple of hours or so, but it’s a fun and relaxing ride. Still for its price it could have used a lot more game time but there is some minor degree of replay value given that there are six potential relationships to maxmise.

Overall:

Cherry Tree High Comedy Club is a nice little indie video game with very modest production values. However, it’s still a nicely executed dating simulator style game with some fun characters, good dialogue, and pleasant and colourful art style. It’s a fun and relaxing game that’s good for what it is. Graphically and musically it’s nothing really special as it resembles those free browser based flash video games, and it’s actually really short since you can complete it in a couple of hours with some minor incentive to play it again. For its price, it could have been a lot better but if you’re curious to try an independent Japanese video game localised for your convenience, then give Cherry Tree High Comedy Club a shot.

7-0-capsules-out-of-10

WIN – Casshern Sins


Episode 06 of CC: Anime is now live. Each month, thanks to our good friends at Siren Visual, we will be giving away a prize in a monthly competition held through CC: Anime.

To win, listen to the podcast for the question and once you have an answer email it in along with your name and address to [email protected]. At the end of the month, a winner will be randomly selected from the pool of entries. The winner will then be announced on the next podcast.

This month, we will be giving away a copy of Casshern Sins – The Complete Series, thanks to our good friends at Siren Visual. If you have yet to listen to CC: Anime you can do so here.

Listen to the podcast and then send your answer in along with your name and address to [email protected] Good Luck!

Competition only open to Australian and New Zealand residents.

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Check out our other Competitions here

CC Anime Episode 06 – Hiatus x Hiatus

Welcome to another episode of CC: Anime, Capsule Computers Monthly Anime Podcast! In our sixth episode, the CC: Anime crew discuss the latest anime and manga news, take part in the “Anime Anarchy” game show segment, as well discussing anime endings.

We also have a huge giveaway this month. Do you want a chance to win a copy of Casshern Sins– The Complete Series from Siren Visual? Follow this link to find out how.

Cast: Luke Halliday, Travis Bruno, Benjamin ‘Linkage Ayexe’ Webb and Simon Wolfe

We hope you enjoy CC: Anime Episode 06, be sure to let us know what you think.

 

 

• Subscribe to our iTunes Podcast Channel

• Subscribe to Podcast RSS Feed

• Download the Episode from iTunes

• Download the Episode directly – (right click and save as)

Listener’s Corner:

This month we had some fan art sent in from Sanjay from New Zealand, who drew an amazing artwork which he calls ‘Mainstream Graveyard’. You check out his fan art below (click to enlarge):

Send all your anime, manga or podcast questions, hints, suggestions and feedback to [email protected]

Stories covered in this podcast:

Thanks for listening. Copyright Capsule Computers Pty Ltd – All Rights Reserved

Ubisoft set to Launch Silent Hunter Online

Forget about Steel Diver or any other submarine experience, as Ubisoft have recently announced Silent Hunter Online, a new browser based multiplayer game based on the ever-popular series. Crafted from the same team who delivered PC classics such as The Settlers and Anno, Ubisoft Blue Byte, Silent Hunter Online lets players dive deep into a ” realistic, constantly evolving submarine simulation”, powered by Adobe Flash Player 11.
Here are a few first details:

Silent Hunter Online sees the return of the large array of historically accurate submarines that made the franchise famous, and invites players to experience them online in new ways. At the heart of the game is “the Battle of the Atlantic”, an innovative dynamic campaign in which individual successes impact all other players through asynchronous game-play. Also, for the first time in the Silent Hunter series, players will be able to play every mission of the campaign in co-op.

 “This is the most innovative Silent Hunter experience ever created and we can’t wait to let our fans dive into the game,” said Christopher Schmitz, Head of Production at Ubisoft Blue Byte.

As of now, players can get early access to the game by visiting www.silenthunteronline.com and applying to be part of the closed beta. You can also check out the first trailer down below, no sub necessary.

The Dictator Takes on The Project

It seems that even a Middle Eastern dictator has time to appear on an Australian show, with General Aladeen phoning in on an episode of The Project. The Dictator, as can be expected, made some wildly insulting but super hilarious jabs at Australian prime minister, Julia Gillard, and North Korean supreme leader, Kim Jong-un. But what else can you expect? He is a dictator after all.

The interview itself runs for about three minutes (4:00-7:00), and can be found on The Project website HERE.

Is that not enough to whet your The Dictator appetite? Well check out the short clip below of The Dictator trying to fit in with American society while chatting with Anna Faris.

Promising to be yet another highly offensive, and crazy entertaining film by Sacha Baron Cohen, The Dictator will definitely be one of those movies that you have to check out. If you love that kind of humour that is.

The Dictator is due for release on May 10th.

New The Bluecoats: North vs South Trailer Released

Anuman Interactive has pushed out a brand new trailer for The Bluecoats: North vs South today. The trailer features game play clips and footage of the mini games set to period appropriate music. The game takes place during the American Civil War where the Union soldiers of the North fought Confederate soldiers of the south. The Bluecoats: North vs South boasts dynamic strategic game play as players fight for the Union army. The Bluecoats: North vs South is the reboot to the cult classic released by Infogrames in 1989. The game will be released on May 10th, 2012 for iPhone, iPad, PC, and Mac.

New The Witcher 2 Enhanced Edition Developer Diary

CD Projekt RED has released a brand new Developer Diary video detailing the new content found in The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings Enhanced Edition. The video features artists from CD Projekt RED detailing new characters, quests, and locations found in the enhanced edition. These new quests will expand the epic tale and history of Temeria. The video also shows off some great looking in game footage and concept art. The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings Enhanced edition was released on April 17th, 2012 in North America for the PC and Xbox 360 and features enhanced environments and 4+ hours of game play new to the enhanced edition.

Incase Box Case for iPhone 4/4s Released

Square is hip again. If you are sick and tired of your iPhone 4’s smoothly curved edges, Incase has the perfect solution for you. Incase has released the Box Case today. The Box Case is made from a soft rubberized material for impact resistance. Thanks to the large sharp corners, there is extra material to protect your iPhone from drops on the vulnerable corners. The soft flexible material also makes it extremely easy to install the Box Case onto your phone. The Box Case comes in four colours: black, gray, frost, and pink. The frost colour is a slightly transparent white case. The Box Case can be purchased from Incase’s website fro $29.95

Black Butler: Complete Second Season Review


Black Butler: Complete Second Season

Studio: A-1 Pictures
Publisher: FUNimation
Format: DVD & Blu-Ray
Release Date: April 3, 2012
Price: $69.98 – Available Here

Overview:
After reviewing the Black Butler: Complete First Season, Black Butler as a series seemed like a closed case, encompassing everything a viewer could ask to really see in terms of characters and development.  The idea of a second season in many ways seemed perverse and only harmful to the series as a whole, after all what more could there be after an ending like that.  Could the second season take it in an actually interesting direction without compromising the first?  Would it use the same formula for a new set of characters?  Keep reading to find out.

Story:
Black Butler Season Two begins with Alois Trancy making a very familiar contract with a demon, Claude Faustus, that takes the form of a spider.  The entire first episode lays the ground for this new master/butler pairing, except that it lacks the same spark as Ciel and Sebastian did last season.  It isn’t until the end of the first episode that the viewer is clued into what the season will truly be about when a mysterious stranger turns out to be the Black Butler himself, Sebastion.  After the fake out, the viewer comes to find out this new pairing aren’t the stars of the second season, but in fact the main villains.

Season Two is actually about Alois and Claude trying to get the soul of Ciel from Sebastian, each for their own reasons.  A much shorter season than the first, the episodes are almost entirely plot related, bringing them closer or another turn in the dance that is the revenge game of their lives.  The hardest part of the season; however, is figuring out when it actually takes place.  Does it intercept the season one plot or does it truly come after.  This unfortunately doesn’t get answered until a few episodes in where they finally explain why everything seems as it once was.  It even settles the problem of how perfectly the first season ended and why the series is continuing on at all, instead of sidestepping the issue completely.  A great story, it builds from the previous season more perfectly than one would expect and concludes with an ending even more tragic than the first season’s.

With the episodes numbering less than half those of the first season, the box set also includes 6 OVAs.  The OVAs range from a retelling of Alice in Wonderland with the favored Black Butler characters, a one off story in partial first-person viewing, a comical making of as if the characters actually existed as actors making the show, an episode for exploration of the Trancy household characters, and the back stories of the grim reapers Will Spears and Grell Sutcliffe.

For the most part the OVAs are great, the weaker OVAs being the “Ciel in Wonderland” and “Welcome to the Phantomhives”. Not that the episodes were bad, but the strength of the series has always been comedy, when not the seriousness of the plot, and those simply miss the mark.  The best is “The Making of Black Butler II”, which plays the comedy perfectly and ends with a better fake trailer than Black Sushi Chef from season one.

Visuals:
Remarkably, this season stacks up just as well to the visual standards of the first.  The art is almost more beautiful than the first on average, as the focus on plot keeps the comedic art to an absolute minimum.  There is however much, much more fanservice, at least for the male audience, as Sebastian was plenty of fanservice for the more feminine and Grell audience in Season One.  Much more adult oriented than ever before the visuals on some of the characters are a keen reason to keep this from too young of viewers.

The visuals weren’t all amazing however, there were some problems, though not many.  There seemed to be a lot more CGI than before, which not a bad thing in and of itself, the distraction of the horse animation does not come to mind as apparent as it seemed this time through.  In some places the CGI worked, such as the train, but not fully in some of the other places.

Audio:
Season Two also maintains the same level of musical quality.  The opening song “SHIVER” by The Gazette does a great job fitting the entire season’s tone from the action of the demons fighting to the matter of lost souls.  Interestingly, there were two closing songs this season as well, the main being “Bird” by Yuyu Matsushita that captures the shows idea of Ciel’s nature of being a trapped soul in an unavoidable fate and the other being “Kagayaku Sora No Shijima Ni Wa” by Kalafina, which is only used for one episode as a farewell to one of the characters.  The other music within continues with matching the setting and tone from instruments to choirs, even including the unique glass harmonica as a point in one of the episodes.

The voices for Black Butler remained the same and with the addition of Alois and Claude, fit right into the rest of the cast of characters.  The English dub continued to utilize the quality of voice for accents and characters, but the lip synch didn’t seem as up to par as they were in season one.  Though the most unique aspect was how they did the voices different for “The Making of Black Butler II” to offset the fake actor from the onscreen character displaying a good range for the voice actors.

Extras:
The extras this time around seemed slightly more lacking.  Only one commentary per disc, and all of them the standard actors or director talking about the episode itself.  The OVA disc contained the only extras outside of commentaries, having trailers for other series and the real trailers for both seasons of Black Butler, title free opening and closings, and an outtakes.

Of them all, only the outtakes seem a solid watch, outside of really enjoying the music.  The outtakes takes some of the messed up lines from the recording booth and puts them over the animation for the scene.  Not spectacular, but enjoyable non-the-less.

Overall:
Black Butler Season Two is definitely a welcomed edition to the series.  It fits within the rules it sets for itself, without need for changing the viewers understanding of the world it portrays.  While the first brings everything to a tragic end, this season tops its tragedy and even brings better closure to the wider cast of characters.  The visuals and audio also keeps up the snuff, though the OVAs were a bit hit or miss.  For the same price for about three-fourths the total amount of episodes of Season One, it is up to fans to decide if they shell out the cash, but it is certainly a perfect addition to lovers of the first season.

8-5-capsules-out-of-10

Mortal Kombat Vita also contains klassic kostumes for Mileena and Skarlet

Previously we learned that a large number of klassic kostumes for all of the male ninjas of Earthrealm and Outworld would be coming exclusively to Mortal Kombat Vita. However none of the female ninjas were given any extra costumes at the time of that announcement.

However there is no reason to fret because Warner Bros announced today that all of the female ninja warriors will be getting outfits as well. Mileena will be getting her costume from Mortal Kombat 2 and Skarlet will be getting both her costumes from MK2 and Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 and even an extra alternate costume added to her wardrobe. Unfortunately, Kitana and Jade will not be getting any new costumes at this time. The outfits can be seen in the trailer below and used when Mortal Kombat Vita is released next week.