![]() The music for the game was also composed by the Academy Award winning musician Ryuichi Sakamoto. The plot and characters were inspired by the Japanese folk tale Jiraiya Goketsu Monogatari (with the protagonist's name deliberately misspelled, per the fantastic theme). The first game Tengai Makyō: Ziria (1989), released for the PC Engine CD-ROM² system, was notable as the first RPG released on CD-ROM and the first in the genre to feature animated cut scenes and voice acting. The stories of the games, though primarily of 'fantasy' fare, are inspired by and a parody of misconceptions about Japanese culture by Western societies. ![]() The main series is composed of three separate games within the land of 'Jipang' (a fictional feudal Japan using the name given by Italian merchant Marco Polo), each follows a descendant of the 'Fire Clan' and supporting cast in battles against a range of often comical villains. Despite selling over 2.2 million copies in Japan, the series is largely unknown in other territories, with only one game released overseas. Though originally intended to be only three games, it has grown to encompass a number of remakes, gaidens and genre spin-offs across a variety of platforms. Its success was partly because the original Tengai Makyō was the first RPG released for the new CD-ROM format, which it utilized to create a bigger game and introduce fully voiced animated cut scenes and CD music to the genre. The series became popular in Japan, where it was one of the most popular RPG series during the 16-bit era, along with Enix's Dragon Quest and Squaresoft's Final Fantasy. The series was conceived by Oji Hiroi and developed by Red Company, debuting on the PC Engine CD-ROM² System in 1989. Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.Tengai Makyō, also known as Far East of Eden, is a series of role-playing video games released in Japan and Taiwan. I will probably order a new photo transistor at some point, or possibly a new glass bezel! Posted by Porchy at 5:50 pm Tagged with: arcade, justifier, lethal enforcers, repair log I removed the bezel glass from my cab as it is slightly tinted and the BLUE gun now works perfectly. ![]() I know this shouldn’t be a problem with mine but I also know that components degrade over time too. This is usually a common problem with older monitors as their brightness fades over time and the guns fail to register the screen flash. I retested the guns and the RED one works perfectly but the BLUE one doesn’t register shots fired around the edges. Ive taken a couple of pictures just in case anyone else needs to know how the spring actually goes back in. The hardest part of this repair was getting the bloody spring back in place and to keep it there for long enought to put the gun back together. I decided to give this lens a clean too as it had a big greasy fingerprint right on the middle of it. I cleaned up the solder holes and resoldered the part back onto the small PCB. The photo transistor had simply been dislodged. When I opened the blue gun a few bits dropped out, the photo transistor and the spring that pushes the trigger back out. I fixed the RED gun simply by removing and cleaning the lens. On testing I found that the RED gun aiming was off a little to the right and the BLUE gun didn’t register a shot on screen but it did register when the trigger was pressed.
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