List of .hack characters

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Promotional illustration for .hack//Link featuring most of the series' leads as seen in the bottom from left to right: Kite, Tokio and Haseo, Tsukasa. In the middle row: BlackRose, Tsukasa and Subaru. In the top: Orca, Balmung, Ova, Atoli and Fluegel. .hacklinkleads.png
Promotional illustration for .hack//Link featuring most of the series' leads as seen in the bottom from left to right: Kite, Tokio and Haseo, Tsukasa. In the middle row: BlackRose, Tsukasa and Subaru. In the top: Orca, Balmung, Ova, Atoli and Fluegel.

.hack comprises "Project .hack" and ".hack Conglomerate". It is a Japanese multimedia franchise primarily developed by CyberConnect2 and published by Bandai. The franchise is set on an Earth with an alternate history. In this timeline, a new version of the Internet arises following a major global computer network disaster in 2005. Central to the premise is a mystery about the wildly popular in-universe video game, The World. As most of the story takes place within The World, characters typically play and interact as their avatars.

Contents

The first four video games follow a newcomer called Kite, who goes on a quest to revive his friend, who fell into a coma after his character was killed by an unknown creature. Bee Train also produced an anime series focused on a player named Tsukasa, who has no memory of his identity outside of the game and cannot leave The World. In 2006, Cyber Connect 2 and Bee Train produced two new series: .hack//G.U. and .hack//Roots . The two series involve a returning player by the name of Haseo who, after the loss of his guild, goes on a quest to find the player killer (PK) Tri-Edge who sent his friend Shino into a coma. The latest game by CyberConnect2 is .hack//Link, where Tokio Kuryuu is transported into The World: RX and time-travels across the previous storylines to restore frozen players.

.hack was conceived by CyberConnect2 with the idea of creating a fictional MMORPG in order to simulate a realistic story. The initial characters were designed by Yoshiyuki Sadamoto, while later installments involved additional artists. The critical reception to the original characters has been positive for their designs and realistic traits. The G.U. characters received mixed responses due to Hero's anti-heroic characterization but praise for his growth.

Creation and design

Yoshiyuki Sadamoto designed the characters from the first .hack series and remained as a supervisor for the G.U. trilogy. Yoshiyuki Sadamoto 1.png
Yoshiyuki Sadamoto designed the characters from the first .hack series and remained as a supervisor for the G.U. trilogy.

Development for .hack began in early 2000 with the aim of creating a distinctive product that would shock and surprise the player. [1] CyberConnect2's president, Hiroshi Matsuyama, played a key role in developing the concept for the series. A number of core ideas, including "slaying dragons or being a thief in London" were explored but rejected in favor of an "offline/online game". [2] The developers looked at a number of MMORPGs such as Phantasy Star Online , Ultima Online , and Final Fantasy XI for inspiration, and drew influences from the prior works of character designer Yoshiyuki Sadamoto ( Neon Genesis Evangelion ) and scenario writer Kazunori Itō ( Ghost in the Shell ). [2] Matsuyama stated that the team was proud of having Sadamoto design the cast, despite his lack of previous involvement in gaming, and said that working with him was a great opportunity. Itō noted that casting the player into the role of a subscriber to The World creates a unique story-telling situation that draws the player deeper into the plot. [3]

Sadamoto's character designs follow the fantasy theme, [4] drawing influence from the sword and sorcery subgenre in particular. [5] Character designs also draw on Celtic imagery: Director Mashimo acknowledged similarities between Bear's design and William Wallace from Braveheart , [6] an example of a Celtic warrior. [7] All the characters are given distinctive patterns resembling tattoos that represent Wave, [8] an aspect of the fictional gameplay.

Seiichiro Hosokawa was the lead artist for the .hack//G.U. game trilogy. [9] While CyberConnect2 designed the characters for .hack//G.U., Sadamoto returned as supervisor. As a result, some aesthetics from Haseo's character design featured in the original trailers were removed from the finished product. [10] The trilogy also made a major change by distancing the protagonist, Haseo, from the player in an effort to appeal more to players. [11]

Main characters

The World

The following is a list of the main characters from the first version of the massively multiplayer online role-playing game The World :

The World R:2

The following is a list of the main characters from the second version of The World.

The World R:X

The following is a list of the main characters from the portable version of "The World".

Schicksal

  • Genius (ジーニアス)
  • No. 1, Flügel (フリューゲル))
  • No. 2, Metronom (メトロノーム)
  • No. 3, Cello (チェロ)
  • No. 4, Klarinette (クラリネッテ)
  • No. 5, Orgel (オルゲル)
  • No. 6, Posaune (ポザオネ)
  • No. 7, Trommel (トロンメル)
  • No. 8, Geist (ガイスト)

Supporting characters

The World

The World R:2

Reception

Jeremy Dunham of IGN was impressed by the game's commitment to preserving the illusion of online gameplay and praised the character designs and inclusion of the Japanese voice track, but criticized the camera manipulation, shortness, and lack of difficulty. [20] A Game Informer reviewer praised the way the game captures the sense of community that a real MMORPG offers. [21]

Regarding the cast of .hack//Sign, an Anime Academy reviewer writes that the anime's depiction of the game-world setting is realistic and accurate. [22] Reviewers appreciated the English voice acting: Lauren Synger from DVD Vision Japan feels that "everyone was very appropriate to their characters", particularly noting that Brianne Sidal did an excellent job capturing Saiga's Tsukasa. [23]

IGN suggested that the storyline of GU could be streamlined by allowing e-mail access within The World. Despite deriding the "filler" story of Rebirth, Sullivan found Reminisce to be much more enjoyable due to its more mature storyline. [24] Mania found Haseo's skills useless in combat but liked his relationship with the Twilight Brigade, as it allows the cast to be explored personally since the premise focuses on player interaction. [25] Both Haseo and Atoli's actors, Takahiro Sakurai and Ayako Kawasumi, were highly praised for their work in the OVA. ANN enjoyed Kawasumi's vocal range of emotions with Atoli but had mixed thoughts about how Sakurai can make Haseo more likeable, notwithstanding his otherwise striking performance. [26] [27]

Related Research Articles

<i>.hack//Sign</i> 2002 anime television series directed by Kōichi Mashimo

.hack//Sign is a Japanese anime television series directed by Kōichi Mashimo, and produced by studio Bee Train and Bandai Visual, that makes up one of the four original storylines for the .hack franchise. Twenty-six original episodes aired in 2002 on television and three additional bonus ones were released on DVD as original video animation. The series features each characters designed by Yoshiyuki Sadamoto, and written by Kazunori Itō. The score was composed by Yuki Kajiura, marking her second collaboration with Mashimo.

.hack is a series of single-player action role-playing video games developed for the PlayStation 2 console by CyberConnect2 and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment. The four games, .hack//Infection, .hack//Mutation, .hack//Outbreak, and .hack//Quarantine, all feature a "game within a game", a fictional massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) called The World which does not require the player to connect to the Internet. Players may transfer their characters and data between games in the series. Each game comes with an extra DVD containing an episode of .hack//Liminality, the accompanying original video animation (OVA) series which details fictional events that occur concurrently with the games.

<i>.hack//Legend of the Twilight</i> Japanese manga series

.hack//Legend of the Twilight is a science fiction manga series written by Tatsuya Hamazaki and drawn by Rei Izumi. The twenty-two chapters of .hack//Legend of the Twilight appeared as a serial in the Japanese magazine Comptiq and published in three tankōbon by Kadokawa Shoten from July 2002 to April 2004. Set in a fictional MMORPG, The World, the series focuses on twins Rena and Shugo, who receive chibi avatars in the design of the legendary .hackers known as Kite and BlackRose. After Shugo is given the Twilight Bracelet by a mysterious girl, the two embark on a quest to find Aura and unravel the mystery of the Twilight Bracelet.

.hack//Liminality is an OVA series directly related to the .hack video game series for the PlayStation 2, with the perspective of Liminality focused on the real world as opposed to the games' MMORPG The World. Liminality was separated into four volumes; each volume was released with its corresponding game. The initial episode is 45 minutes long, while subsequent episodes are 30 minutes long. The video series was directed by Koichi Mashimo, written by Kazunori Itō with music by Yuki Kajiura. Primary Animation production was handled by Mashimo's studio Bee Train which collaborated for the four games as well as handled major production on .hack//Sign.

<i>.hack//G.U.</i> Video game series

.hack//G.U. is a series of single-player action role-playing games for the PlayStation 2, developed by CyberConnect2 and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment between 2006 and 2007. The series contains three games: .hack//G.U. Vol. 1//Rebirth, .hack//G.U. Vol. 2//Reminisce and .hack//G.U. Vol. 3//Redemption. As in the previous .hack games, .hack//G.U. simulates a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) called The World—the player controls a character who plays the fictional online game. They were directed by Hiroshi Matsuyama who aimed to address criticisms of the previous series. Its narrative, by Tatsuya Hamazaki, was written concurrently with .hack//Roots, an anime set before the events of the games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Haseo</span> Fictional character

Haseo, real name Ryou Misaki, is a fictional character in the .hack franchise first introduced as the main character in the video game trilogy .hack//G.U. in 2006 by CyberConnect2. He is also the lead character in the anime television series .hack//Roots by Bee Train. A player character from the fictional massively multiplayer online role-playing game The World, he is feared in the .hack//G.U. narrative as the player killer of all player killers. This earned Haseo the nickname "The Terror of Death". Searching for the killer Tri-Edge, who sent his friend Shino into a coma in real life, Haseo comes into contact with the guild G.U.. They seek to use his PC to destroy AIDA, a computer anomaly responsible for leaving players in a coma. Haseo's appearances in .hack//Roots depict his early days in The World as a member of the Twilight Brigade guild led by Ovan, where he first meets Shino. He has also appeared in other printed adaptations based on the .hack//G.U. games.

<i>.hack//Roots</i> Japanese anime television series

.hack//Roots is a 26-episode anime series, animated by studio Bee Train, that sets as a prologue for the .hack//G.U. video games. It is the first .hack TV series broadcast in HDTV (1080i). It is set seven years after the events of the first two anime series and games. .hack//Roots revolves around an MMORPG game called The World R:2, also known as The World Revision:2 and serves a sequel to the original version of "The World".

Sayaka Aida is a Japanese voice actress who is affiliated with the Arts Vision management company. She's originally from the Metropolitan Tokyo Area. Her maiden name is Sayaka Kobayashi..

.hack is a Japanese multimedia franchise that encompasses two projects: Project .hack and .hack Conglomerate. They were primarily created and developed by CyberConnect2, and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment. The series features an alternative history setting in the rise of the new millennium regarding the technological rise of a new version of the internet following a major global computer network disaster in the year 2005, and the mysterious events regarding the wildly popular fictional massively multiplayer online role-playing game The World. The series mainly comprises anime and video game titles which have been subsequently adapted into manga, novels, and other related media.

<i>.hack//Link</i> Video game series

.hack//Link is a single-player action role-playing game developed by CyberConnect2 for the PlayStation Portable. The game was released exclusively in Japan on March 4, 2010.

<i>.hack//Quantum</i> Animated three episode OVA series by Kinema Citrus studio in Japan and presented by Bandai Visual

.hack//Quantum is an animated three episode OVA series for the .hack franchise, produced by Kinema Citrus and presented by Bandai Visual. It was initially scheduled to be released in November 2010, but it was later changed. The first episode was released on January 28, 2011 with the following two episodes to be released in one month intervals. Excluding the all-CGI animation movie .hack//G.U. Trilogy, it is the first animated OVA project not to be produced by Bee Train. It is not related to a planned CGI movie tie-in to the newest game in the .hack series, .hack//Link. Masaki Tachibana of Tokyo Magnitude 8.0 directed the OVA project and .hack// writer Tatsuya Hamazaki scripted. Kinema Citrus animated the series and Kow Otani composed the music. Yuuka Nanri performed the theme song for the series. At Anime Weekend Atlanta 2011, Funimation announced that it had licensed the series and it was released on DVD and Blu-ray on February 14, 2012, making it the first in the franchise not to be licensed by Bandai Entertainment. The UK release was published by MVM Entertainment on July 9, 2012.

<i>.hack//The Movie</i> 2012 Japanese film

.hack//The Movie is a 2012 Japanese CGI anime film written by Kazunori Ito and directed by Hiroshi Matsuyama. It was released on January 21, 2012 in theaters and was released on DVD/Blu-ray on June 28, 2012. The Blu-ray release is a "hybrid" PlayStation 3 disc that includes the film and a fighting game called .hack//Versus.

<i>.hack//G.U. Trilogy</i> 2008 anime film

.hack//G.U. Trilogy is a 2008 Japanese CGI anime original video animation (OVA) directed by Hiroshi Matsuyama based on CyberConnect2's games .hack//G.U.. It was released on January 25, 2008 on DVD and Blu-ray format. The OVA features the voice talents of Takahiro Sakurai, Ayako Kawasumi, Hiroki Touchi and Kaori Nazuka. Its story focuses on an online gamer known as Haseo who seeks to find the player killer Tri-Edge who sent his friend Shino on a coma after her character was killed in the game.

<i>Gundam Build Divers</i> Japanese animation series

Gundam Build Divers. often abbreviated as GBD. is a Japanese science fiction anime television series produced by Sunrise, a spiritual successor to the 2013 anime Gundam Build Fighters, based on the long-running Gundam franchise. It is directed by Shinya Watada and written by Noboru Kimura with character designs by Juri Toida. It was first teased in December 2017 under the title "Gundam Build Next Battle Project" until its official reveal in The Gundam Base Tokyo on February 2, 2018. It premiered on all TXN network stations in Japan on April 3, 2018. Unlike the previous series, which focuses on the Gundam model (Gunpla) aspect of the franchise, Gundam Build Divers focuses on a virtual reality massively multiplayer online game in terms of themes and battles.

<i>Gundam Build Divers Re:Rise</i> Japanese anime series

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hiroshi Matsuyama</span> Japanese game designer

Hiroshi Matsuyama, born in 1970 in Fukuoka, is a Japanese game designer. He is the CEO of the company CyberConnect2. He developed multiple games including the .hack franchise as well as adaptations of the anime series including Naruto and Dragon Ball. Besides developing games, Matsuyama has participated in directing two .hack films as well as voicing a character from the series.

<i>.hack//G.U.+</i> Japanese manga series

.hack//G.U.+ is a shōnen manga written by Tetsuya Hamazaki and illustrated by Yuzuka Morita. Based on CyberConnect2's role-playing game trilogy .hack//G.U. for the PlayStation 2, the series follows an online gamer called Haseo who is on a quest of revenge to defeat the player killer Tri-Edge who sent his friend Shino into a coma in real life. The series was published in Kadokawa Shoten's magazine .hack//G.U. The World between 2006 and 2009 and collected in a total of five tankobon volumes. TokyoPop licensed the series to be published in North America starting in February 2008.

<i>In the Land of Leadale</i> Japanese light novel series

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<i>Romantic Killer</i> Japanese manga series

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References

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