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When the manga began serialization, Arakawa was considering several major plot points, including the ending. She wanted the Elric brothers to recover their bodies—at least partly. As the plot continued, she thought that some characters were maturing and decided to change some scenes. Arakawa said the manga authors and Hiroyuki Eto are her main inspirations for her character designs; she describes her artwork as a mix of both of them. She found that the easiest of the series’s characters to draw were , and the little animals. Arakawa likes dogs so she included several of them in the story. Arakawa made comedy central to the manga’s story because she thinks it is intended for entertainment, and tried to minimize sad scenes.
Video games based on have been released. The storylines of the games often diverge from those of the anime and manga, and feature original characters. Square Enix has released three (RPG)—, , and . has released two RPG titles, and , for the on March 25 and July 22, 2004, respectively, and one, , for the . They also released an action game, for the in Japan on October 15, 2009, and in Australia and Europe on June 17 and July 1, 2010, respectively. In Japan, Bandai released an RPG for the PlayStation Portable on May 20, 2010. Bandai also released a game, , for the PlayStation 2. For the , was released in Japan on August 13, 2009. A direct sequel of the game, , was released by Square Enix on December 10, 2009, for the same console. For the 20th Anniversary of the series, Square Enix released for and devices on August 4, 2022; the game ended service on March 29, 2024. Of the twelve games made in Japan, , , , and have seen international releases.
The has received several artbooks. Three artbooks called were released by Square Enix; two of those were released in the US by Viz Media. The first artbook contains illustrations made between May 2001 to April 2003, spanning the first six manga volumes, while the second has illustrations from September 2003 to October 2005, spanning the next six volumes. The last one includes illustrations from the remaining volumes.
Developed by 5pb. and Nitroplus, STEINS;GATE was awarded Famitsu magazine’s coveted annual Game of Excellence award and was voted one of the most emotionally charged “tear-inducing games” ever made, in a Famitsu poll. It is a gripping and moving Visual Novel, which has already spawned manga and anime adaptations.
Moto Mizuno’s When I Reincarnated, I Was the Heroine, and He Was the Hero is very similar to Life With an Ordinary Guy Who Reincarnated into a Total Fantasy Knockout, which came out a year prior. The difference is that the two leads were originally high school students rather than salarymen, and the manga began as a webcomic via Mizuno’s Twitter account. It made the leap to print via Comic Gardo, where it has yet to receive an official English translation.






























