【試聴】ドラマCD「スロウ・ダメージ DramaCD Vol.1 Taku AfterStory」

Ойын-сауық

ニトロプラス キラル最新作、“その場所”へ堕ちていくADV『スロウ・ダメージ』のエンディング後を描くドラマCD第1弾「Taku AfterStory」の試聴ムービーです。
※『スロウ・ダメージ』ゲーム本編の核心やエンディングに関わる要素が含まれています。ご注意ください。
トワを見守り続けてきたタクとのその後の物語を、脚本担当“淵井鏑”による書き下ろしシナリオと、原画担当“山田外朗”による描き下ろしジャケットでお届けします。
出演:
トワ……柊 三太
タク……胸肩 腎
and more...
●ドラマCD「スロウ・ダメージ DramaCD Vol.1 Taku AfterStory」
発売日 :【CD版】2022年3月25日(金)
     【ダウンロード版】2022年3月26日(土)0時~ DLsiteがるまにで配信
価格  :【CD版】3,850円(税込)
     【ダウンロード版】3,300円(税込)
シナリオ:淵井鏑
イラスト:山田外朗
音楽  :EDテーマ「predawn」(歌:THE ANDS)
発売元 :株式会社ニトロプラス・株式会社コネクトハーツ
販売元 :株式会社コネクトハーツ
レーベル:Ars Cattleya -アートカトレア-
www.nitrochiral.com/game/slow...
©2022 NITRO ORIGIN/ConnectHearts
▼“その場所”へ堕ちていくADV『スロウ・ダメージ』
脚本  :淵井鏑
原画  :山田外朗
キャスト:トワ……柊 三太
     タク……胸肩 腎
     レイ……田中 一朗
     斑目……一之瀬 昴
     藤枝……宮尾 章
対応OS :日本語版 Windows 8.1/10
対象  :18歳未満購入禁止
www.nitrochiral.com/game/slow...
©2021 NITRO ORIGIN
#CHiRAL #スロダメ #slowdamage
▼ニトロプラス キラル
Website:www.nitrochiral.com/
Twitter: / nitropluschiral

Пікірлер: 13

  • @NANA-me9tj
    @NANA-me9tj2 жыл бұрын

    I’m going to go fall off a cliff they’re too cute together. Can’t wait for Taku to join my cast of great ossan love interests like Motomi and Bardo.

  • @spectral__

    @spectral__

    2 жыл бұрын

    The ossan routes never get enough love

  • @izumymkk
    @izumymkk2 жыл бұрын

    昨日無事とどきました! 最初の「おかえり」と「どれだけお前を待ってたか分かるだろう」って言葉が タクとのEDを迎えてトワの心境の変化が伺えて喜びで泣きそう。 受け止めてくれるパートナーが出来たことで彼はこれから新しい記憶を作っていくんだなって。 第二弾も楽しみです🙏ありがとうございました!

  • @deneuveamy
    @deneuveamy Жыл бұрын

    Taku the best route

  • @user-mo5ju5ys3l
    @user-mo5ju5ys3l2 жыл бұрын

    またスロウ・ダメージの世界に浸れて幸せです…ありがとうございます

  • @murasaki0913
    @murasaki0913 Жыл бұрын

    I don't understand Japanese but I love it

  • @alina_winkler
    @alina_winkler2 жыл бұрын

    Nitro chiral ありがとうございます。 前年 slow damage を何としてでも読みたかったです。全人生日本語を勉強したかったですけど、ついに実行しなかった...けど、前年発売発表を見た時に 「読たい。絶対に読みたい!」と思いました。「漢字を読めないと決して分かるようにならない。特にふりがなのない18+作」と思って、少しずつこのきっかけで漢字と単語を勉強始めました。辞書がない時にまだ全然読めないが、このビデオほぼ全部分かるようになりました。今年やっとワーホリで日本にいきます。BLの魅力だけで私の人生がどれだけ変わったかはすごくない?? 😂❤ 勉強始める勇気ありがとうございます! (そして世界で一番エロい主人公も😌) after stories を楽しみにします!

  • @krazyxki

    @krazyxki

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry, I know you speak German and Japanese, not English. Hopefully translator will work for you. Can you write (in whatever language you are comfortable) how you were able to do it? I want to learn how you did!

  • @alina_winkler

    @alina_winkler

    Жыл бұрын

    @@krazyxki English is fine for me :) I started out with just randomly writing down some words I could hear clearly here and there when watching anime or listening to songs and revising them with flashcards. I also read the Genki I and II books. From there I basically jumped to "real" Japanese content immediately for about 60-70% of my studying sources. For example I try to buy Japanese manga chapters online and write down words I don't know (and also look up grammar structures I don't know as I read). I use physical flashcards for vocabulary and digital ones for Kanji (I also only practice reading and not writing them). At first I focused on building up a bit of vocabulary knowledge and didn't study Kanji, but at some point I'd recommend working on reading as well, as there will come a point where it will hinder your progress (in my opinion) if you can never read anything at all. I also listen to podcasts for Japanese learners sometimes. As a general rule, I'd say it's good to use various sources and not just rely on a single one (e.g. listen to a lot of different people's podcasts). It's important not to let yourself get comfortable unfortunately 😂😅 Once I feel I can relatively easily understand a person's videos or conversations about a certain topic I try to look for something different and new (e.g Taku's CD has some vocabulary related to medicine, some manga have vocabulary related to war/ battles etc, so once you realize you don't have to look up a lot of words anymore switch the source) I'd say the benefits of this method are that I can memorize the words and Kanji better because they come from a context I'm really interested in, but it's also really REALLY frustrating for the first year at least 😅 (In the beginning I had to pause CDs like these sooo many times and rewind the recording about 6, 7 or 8 times to understand a single sentence).

  • @krazyxki

    @krazyxki

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alina_winkler OMGG Thank you SO much for the detailed information!!! I have been getting back into taking my studies seriously and actually a lot of people who really learned the language recommend your way as well, with immersion into native content rather than a whole bunch of textbooks and stuff (save for the basics). How many years of studying have you done and what is your level now? I am so proud of you! I think it would help me majorly if I had a good source of studying vocab, do you recommend any? Or did you just do vocab from what you read and made flashcards for them? All of this was SUPER helpful, omg tysm I'm so grateful! >.< Also, how often were/are you studying actively per day? I just always get passionate but when it comes to motivation, I always end up lacking it especially since I'm an adult with a job and am just tired after everything 😮‍💨 It's important to study every day but I struggle to get on that study schedule. Sorry for the trembling haha I'm just super impressed with what you've accomplished as a polyglot.

  • @alina_winkler

    @alina_winkler

    Жыл бұрын

    @@krazyxki Thank you haha it truly isn't easy ^^' As for vocab I guess it doesn't hurt to learn along with the Kanji in the order they are taught in Japanese schools (at least as a general orientation), but I mainly get my words from the stuff I read and listen to. You'll quickly figure out what the commonly used words are :) I think I've been studying seriously for about a little more than a year and a half but it's hard to say exactly. There were some days where I studied for 3-4 hours, but I also had periods where I didn't study for two to three months at all. I think the most important thing is just getting started without pressuring yourself. Just start with doing a few words each day (maybe on your way to work?) without any major expectations and you'll be able to get into it more and more as you move on. It's good to always go back to content designed for learners I think though (e.g. podcast or KZread videos where they talk a bit more clearly and slowly or generally just more easy content) so as not to get too frustrated and get a chance to see your progress every now and then. "A journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step" ;D

  • @user-wp7wb2hr4u
    @user-wp7wb2hr4u4 ай бұрын

    太棒了好喜欢

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