Dead of the Brain
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Dead of the Brain | |
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Developer(s) | FairyTale |
Publisher(s) | IDES |
Director(s) |
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Writer(s) |
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Dead of the Brain ~Shiryou no Sakebi~ is a Japanese horror adventure game, developed by FairyTale and released in 1992 by IDES for the PC-9801. A port bundled with its sequel to the PC Engine CD was published by NEC in 1999, making it the final official PC Engine game to be released.
Development[edit]
After the Saori incident (a scandal about erotic content in Japanese games caused by a teenager stealing a copy of the eroge Saori) and the arrest of the Kirara's president for distribution of indecent material, Kirara rebranded to IDES. FairyTale quickly began experimenting with non-eroge titles, like Shinjuku Monogatari, and violence-themed eroge. Thus, their Nightmare Collection series was formed, with Dead of the Brain and its sequel among its most prominent titles.[1]
Multiple of Dead of the Brain's developers, including scenario writer and director RUSH-TEAM and composer MARINA, originally worked on Saori.
Fan translations[edit]
The game has received several English translation patches: One machine translated in 2019 by Retronomicon and a more accurate translation released on October 31, 2023 by WINE for the PC-98 version, and another one for the PC Engine on October 31, 2023 by Dave Shadoff. All are independent from each other.[2]
Legacy[edit]
The Nightmare Collection series continued in 1993 with Marine Philt in March and Dead of the Brain 2 in November, the latter being a direct sequel to the original.
Fairytale continued releasing horror-themed titles in 1994 under their Fairytale Hardcover brand with Necronomicon, a title based on the works of H.P. Lovecraft, and Ballade for Maria.
References[edit]
- ^ Kalata, Kurt (2019-11-14). Hardcore Gaming 101 Presents: Japanese Video Game Obscurities. Unbound Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78352-765-6.
- ^ Yarwood, Jack (2023-10-31). "Cult Horror Title 'Dead Of The Brain' Gets English Fan Patch For PC Engine Super CD-ROM²". Time Extension. Retrieved 2024-02-07.
External links[edit]
- Video game articles needing translation from Japanese Wikipedia
- 1992 video games
- FM Towns games
- Japan-exclusive video games
- MSX2 games
- NEC PC-9801 games
- Point-and-click adventure games
- Video games about zombies
- Video games developed in Japan
- Visual novels
- Single-player video games
- X68000 games
- Adventure game stubs
- Visual novel stubs