![]() Two manga adaptations have begun: one by Sarachi Yomi is serialized in Monthly Comic Alive, while the other, by Kenji Mizuta, is printed in Monthly Comic Blade.Ī 24-episode anime adaptation, animated by White Fox, aired starting in April 2011. (However, there are many references to Chaos Head in terms of various character namedrops on what some of the cast from the previous game are up to during this time period, as well as a few recurring plot points and types of in universe fictional characters that are brought up in Steins Gate, though these are likely to go completely over a blind readers' head.) Other than this though, Steins Gate and Chaos Head don't share any heavy direct connections, and the plot can be therefore easily be followed without having played Chaos Head. The player's choices determine what sort of path the plot takes. Text messages include blue hyperlinks that can be selected to reply to the text. Instead of the "delusion trigger" system introduced in Chaos Head, Steins Gate uses the similar "phone trigger": whenever somebody calls Okabe, he can choose whether or not to answer. The sequel to Chaos Head and the second entry in the Science Adventure Series, Steins Gate is set roughly one year after the events of the previous game. Soon, Okabe finds himself truly living his chuuni fantasy, and it is far worse than he could have ever imagined- he must evade the Rounders and their unknown leader, FB, while fixing his grave mistakes and finding a way to save those he loves from a universe that seems intent on killing them, no matter what. A shadowy French research organization called "SERN" has been running their own time-travel experiments, and after they catch wind of what Okabe has discovered, they begin to close in, sending in their agents, the Rounders, to acquire the machine. Unfortunately, they're not the only ones interested in time travel. ![]() ![]() or at least, the ability to send text messages back in time, which is a starting point, right? Investigating further, the team of wannabe scientists discovers that by continuously modifying and upgrading their microwave, they've stumbled across the secret of Time Travel. Shortly thereafter, Okabe runs into a very-much-alive Kurisu, and Daru mentions a garbled text message he received one week earlier. and suddenly everyone around Okabe blinks out of existence, only to reappear a moment later. As they flee the scene, Okabe sends a frantic text message to his Playful Hacker buddy Hashida "Daru" Itaru. One fateful morning - July 28, 2010, to be precise - he and his ditzy childhood friend Shiina Mayuri are attending a lecture when they discover the dead body of Makise Kurisu, a celebrated researcher. However, he's taken this love so far as to declare himself a Mad Scientist who goes by the alias "Hououin Kyouma" and imagines himself fighting all manner of evil government conspiracies. Like many of his friends in the Akihabara district, Okabe Rintarou loves to tinker with different gadgets and inventions. Being stalked by a secret organization doing their own Time Travel experiments and dead-set on capturing or eliminating you? Not so awesome. Converting your microwave so that you can send e-mails to the past? Awesome. ![]() This may also be called God's final ultimatum to those who rebel."īeing a Mad Scientist is awesome. It is more ridiculous for Man to exceed light speed than for fish to live ashore. If they too hold wisdom, they too will be destroyed. History teaches us that those who hold wisdom are often the most foolish. Stars too have a beginning, but are by their own power destroyed. "The universe has a beginning, but it has no end.
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