About H-Games!!!!!

xeruel

黒英雄伝説
Mar 22, 2008
591
2
Is there any H-Games with Video????

THX

you came to the right place, we have experts :lols:
try Schooldays, its one game I know have videos in them.... but you could ask reingiolt about H-Games with Video as he's the sexperts in H-games
 

antey2008

Child of Godspeed
Apr 17, 2008
62
1
I thought new releases threads only post anime, they don't contain H-game information.
 

reingiolt

二マ...
Feb 27, 2007
1,114
0
i only post about the good ones and usually on the day in becomes available. although i've stopped right now since there wasn't much interest.
 

redrooster

赤いオンドリ - 私はオタクです!
Staff member
Super Moderator
Sep 25, 2007
18,799
113
i only post about the good ones and usually on the day in becomes available. although i've stopped right now since there wasn't much interest.

if you want please issue own threads for ex containing info in PC games, DVDPG or flash games. We can make it sticky too...

you should only mention please whether games may not be posted (DLsite material, licensed etc.).

You are the specialist here on A-O...

it must not be an announcement thread, I could imagine reviews too. And it must not be a complete information thread but just randomly updated only when there are games worth mentioning.
 

reingiolt

二マ...
Feb 27, 2007
1,114
0
i already thought of doing that before but i figured the threads over at HF are already quite sufficient. plus there aren't that much people here who are really into h games anyway.
 

smallchicken

Member
Nov 13, 2008
93
9
Uhm .. so how do i know which h-games has animation??

Like in getchu.com ... can anyone tell me what to look for if i want H-games with animation???


issit those DVDPG have animations????
 

xeruel

黒英雄伝説
Mar 22, 2008
591
2
Pretty easy to see if the game have animations, look for this text in getchu
カテゴリ [一覧] : アドベンチャー、"アニメーション"
 

Ceewan

Famished
Jul 23, 2008
9,152
17,033
maybe I gave up too easily

I actually started looking other places for info on Hgames, I didn't think people here were that into it. Hongfire and LAH are places I usually visit. I guess I will give this area a little more attention.

If you don't mind an older loli one I would suggest "Sacred Plume", the game has some bugs but I admit not trying it since I made some adjusts in my video resolution. It is a nice RPG game with some hardcore interactive scenes. It is made by the same company as "Schooldays" which I admit I couldn't get in to, though I am planning on trying it again someday.

I enjoyed "Musumaker" to the max and highly recommend it though it is a CG game it is fun in a dark twisted sense that I truly appreciate.

Not understanding japanese is a real bummer for me. I have a whole new respect for the japanese cummunity, that is one hard language. There are thousands of characters to remember, I am not surprised that translation programs like Atlas do such a lousy job overall.
 

Sakunyuusha

New Member
Jan 27, 2008
1,855
3
Not understanding japanese is a real bummer for me. I have a whole new respect for the japanese cummunity, that is one hard language. There are thousands of characters to remember, I am not surprised that translation programs like Atlas do such a lousy job overall.
Tell that to a Japanese guy and he'll say you're the lucky one.
  • Plural S? One dog, two dogs.
  • Subject-verb agreement? I am, you are, he is.
  • More than three categories of verbal stems? Consider that in Japanese the following verbs are conjugated exactly the same way: past tenses of "to run," "to buy," "to sleep," "to write." They say hashirimashita, kaimashita, nemashita, kakimashita. See a trend? We say ran, bought, slept, wrote! XD
I could continue but I've got work to attend to. You get the idea: the grass is always greener on the other side! :) Every language has its hard points and its easy ones. Overall, I'd say that the only two "hard" things about Japanese are the writing system and the grammatical-politeness system. That second one is the English equivalent of this: we say "I ate," "You nobly ate," "I ignobly ate," "I humbly ate," etc. We modify the verb ate with adverbs to describe the manner in which we did the eating. In Japanese? It's a whole new verb. Taberu, kuu, meshiagaru, etc. That's hard, yes, and so maybe is the writing system. But beyond that? They either do things differently than English does (which means its hard for both groups going in either direction, e.g. we count numbers by three 0's and they do it by four 0's, so it's hard for us to picture 300 ten-thousands and it's hard for them to picture 3000 thousands, when both equal 3,000,000) or else they do things way, way easier. ^^;
 

Ceewan

Famished
Jul 23, 2008
9,152
17,033
wow!

I almost understood that, lol.
(And it is really hard for me to get around English type expressions for Japanese such as Taberu, kuu, meshiagaru, etc., because they use english letters. That shit just screws me up, so when Atlas gives me those as a definition I just say...doh!)
I actually have developed the theory that is the difference in the writing system that is the true heart of the differences between many Western and Eastern phlosophies. I mean if the Japanese have 1006 essential characters, (included in the 1,945 General Use characters), it would seem to me to present a more graphical way of thinking and expression.
But yes, your point is taken. There is good and bad in both systems, especially from a grammitical context.
Me, I just want the oppurtunity to learn something new but am frustrated in trying. That doesn't mean I will give up but I do find it difficult to look up words and charcters. I mean in an English dictionary if the word starts with an "A" and is followed by a "b" and so on, finding a definition is easy. If I could only find something like that for Japanese. They count their letters in strokes but counting strokes isn't simple. The word CHU for example is a 4 stroke word but looking at it....they make a rectangle in three strokes! I see how it is done, but it took forever for me to find the word. Oh well, I will keep trying.
 

Sakunyuusha

New Member
Jan 27, 2008
1,855
3
They have dictionaries that are in alphabetical order, Ceewan. They're in Japanese alphabetical order, but that's the point. The order for commonly-used letters is something along the lines of:

あいうえお
かきくけこ
さしすせそ
たちつてと
なにぬねの
はひふへほ
まみむめも
や ゆ よ
らりるれろ
わ   を 
    ん

I'm typing that from memory so I might have gotten some of the rows switched around, but I know that it's right for the most part. It always goes *a *i *u *e *o, where * represents whatever the consonant sound is. The first row begins with the pure vowels (Ah, Ee, Oo, Eh, Oh), the second row begins with the first of the consonants, which is K (Ka, Ki, Ku, Ke, Ko), etc.

As for voiced sounds, those come up alongside the appropriate letter. So for example, in the row:
かきくけこ

If I wanted to look up the word 月間 (gekkan, or げっかん), it would be in the same area as all the ones which start with け (Ke). Specifically, if there was a word kekkan (and there is, 欠陥), that would be immediately before gekkan. And the word after gekkan would probably begin with けっ , げっ , けつ , げつ , or (if we used up all of the Ke + Tsu combinations) a word beginning with けて.

This is probably way more than you wanted, so if you skipped to the bottom, never fear, just click this Amazon.com link! ^_-

http://www.amazon.com/Kodanshas-Furigana-Japanese-Dictionary-Japanese-English/dp/4770024800

I own this book. I would say it's not worth the money if you're planning to take a course in Japanese at college or if you're already at an intermediate level of study ... but if you're a total beginner and are either going to be self-taught or are hoping to pick up while backpacking in Japan, then it might be a good resource. Orrrrrrrrr, you could look into digital alternatives for your much-lighter-weight iPhone, Nintendo DS, PSP, Blackberry, etc etc.
 

Ceewan

Famished
Jul 23, 2008
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