It’s Showtime Arrangement
Artist: The Noble Demon
Original Composers: Naoko Mitome, Chika Sekigawa
Original Work: Super Paper Mario - It's Showtime
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More female Wii Sports Miis
(I’ve attempted to find a new way to draw Sakura’s nose shape when it’s front facing)
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For any Mii, due to recent lore:
When playing the board version of Miitopia, who is most likely to take the Game Master role? Also, an optional add on: is there any particularly hilarious moment that has stood out in the middle of a game?
Chika: But amongst the Wii Miis, Luca does it best. But it's usually Laura.
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Extra Sport Champions
In the Wuhu lore me and my friend have been working on, there are a few new sports that are officially competitive (aka, the skill level ones). So here they are and their respective beginners and champions!
SURFING (Beginner: David - Champion: Cole)
MARTIAL ARTS (Beginner: Daisuke - Champion: Saburo)
FIGURE SKATING (Beginner: Chika - Champion: Patrick)
These are only Wii based, idk about the Wii U generation.
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yooo im curious im curious!!! who are your favorite cpus from both the wii and wii u era??? :Oc
ooc but would it be cool with u if i drew your mii?? methinks they look neat-o :D
OMG YAY!! ok so from the wii u era my favs are sho, pian-pian, elena, and yuya!! my favs from the wii era are chika, gwen, cole, alex, and sakura :3 i dont have a particular reason for why i like them but,,, i do!!
also YES YES YES YOU CAN DRAW MY MII!! i love it when people draw my sonas and ocs shoutout to everyone who has done that ever
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Meitantei Conan: Giwaku No Gouka Ressha
The manga's plot mostly revolves around high school student Shinichi Kudo (amazingly, the italian adaptation chose not to butcher any of the names, leaving the originals!), a young aspiring detective that usually tags along with the police and helps solving cases; during one of these investigations, Shinichi gets captured by a crime syndicate, the Black Organization, that drugs him with an age regressing substance. Appearing now as a sixth grader, he adopts the pseudonym Conan Edogawa and goes living with his childhood friend (and crush) Ran and her father Kogoro Mori, a private detective.
Other recurring characters appear in later episodes, like some kids that form a "junior detective club" with Conan or another victim of the age regression serum, but the main gist of every episode is that Conan follows Ran and Kogoro, solves a case, can't say it publicly due to him looking like a child, so he uses a tranquilizer needle to put Kogoro to sleep and impersonates him using a voice changer to reveal the culprit. All the while Ran is almost always shown concerned for Shinichi's whereabouts, totally unaware that he's actually right beside her.
As mentioned previously, there are a lot of Meitantei Conan videogames on several consoles which get more complicated as the original story continued over the years, but its debut on Game Boy in 1996 came in when the plot was just starting off, so the cartridges shown in these posts have the more streamlined backstory described just above.
A great deal of these adaptations has been developed by Bandai (which also takes care of the majority of Meitantei Conan's action figures, by the way), though the chapters for GBC in particular have all been handled by their subsidiary Banpresto, for some reason, and boy were them prolific with these. There's more Conan main games than Pokèmon generations on Game Boy, let that sink in.
These are, from oldest to last, Chika Yuuenchi Satsujin Jiken (1996), Giwaku No Gouka Ressha (above, 1998), Kigantou Hihou Densetsu (2000), Karakuri Jiin Satsujin Jiken (2000) and Norowareta Kouro (2001). No need to mention that not even a single one of these has been officially translated for the western audience (english speaking detectives would have to wait until the Wii to get a Meitantei Conan game, and even then, it only got released in Europe), and fans have issued translation patches only for the two chapters released in 2000.
Translated, the titles would read, again from oldest to newest: "Murder at the Underground Amusement Park", "The Suspicious Luxury Train", "Legendary Treasure of the Rocky Island", "Murder at the Temple of Karakuri" (Karakuris being some kind of classic japanese automaton toys), and finally "The Cursed Ferry".
From the titles, it's easy to understand that each of these cartridges can be treated as an interactive manga volume or anime episode (if my research is correct some of these cases are indeed taken straight from the original source), and unfortunately for us westerners, the amount of japanese language in these is HUGE. Not only that, but the games also make heavy use of Kanjis instead of the usual Hiragana alphabet (there's even a lot of it on the cover), making it quite a challenge for uninitiated japanophiles to translate smoothly. To put things into perspective, even japanese kids and some teens have difficulty remembering or writing Kanji! Even more in quite some Meitantei Conan cases, the solution to the murders is hinted in Kanjis with similar form or pronounce but with very different meaning. Perfect language knowledge is an absolute requirement in order to fully enjoy these games!
Are you an... otaku enough dude to solve these mysteries? XP
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