Variable Geo

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Variable Geo
Developer(s) TGL, Giga
Publisher(s) TGL, Giga
Designer(s) Takehiro Kimura
Platform(s) PC9800, Turbo CD, Super Nintendo Entertainment System, PC, PlayStation, Sega Saturn
Release date Flag of Japan 1993
Genre(s) 2D Vs. Fighting/H game/Bishōjo
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously
Input methods 8-way Joystick, 4 Buttons
This article refers to the the video game series, for the OVAs, see Variable Geo (anime).

Variable Geo (ヴァリアブル・ジオ?), also known as V.G., is a Japanese 2D fighting game series developed by Technical Group Labroratory (also known as TGL) and Giga. It focuses on an all-female martial arts competition where participants are required to promote various family restaurants by acting as waitresses when not fighting.

Contents

[edit] Gameplay

Similar in many respects to other versus fighting games of the day, gameplay in Variable Geo utilizes a four-button layout, with two buttons each for punches and kicks of differing strength and speed. Special moves are initiated by keying in various movements using the control pad or joystick and punctuated with the press of one of the punch or kick buttons.

Following the trend of other fighting games such as Street Fighter and The King of Fighters series, later games would add a special meter that would fill as the player inflicts or receives damage. Filling the bar would result in a stock of "Energy" being acquired, which could either be used for one of a number of enhanced super special attacks, or saved for later use in the match. Some moves also require more than one Special Stock to be acquired before being able to use them.

Both characters begin any given fight with a full health bar that is depleted as they take damage from attacks. The first character to have her health completely depleted is the loser. In a single player game, defeating a CPU-controlled character yields a reward, showcasing the defeated character in an imaginary situation where she is either forced to commit an embarrassing (usually sexual) act in public or private, or is raped/gang-raped by an unseen assailant or assailants.

However, unlike other hentai games, the V.G. series is known for improving upon its gameplay quality with each subsequent edition, adding, removing, or changing moves and characters to provide a more enjoyable experience.

[edit] Plot

Set in a near-future version of Japan, the games tell the story of a martial arts tournament created to determine the country's strongest woman. The tournaments are sponsored by a number of family restaurants, who in exchange for their sponsorship, are given promotion in the form of having a tournament entry work as a waitress. As a result of the popularity of the tournaments, the restaurants experience a boom in patronage.

The winner of the tournament is awarded the title "Virgin Goddess", as well as a large cash prize of ten billion yen, and a house erected anywhere on the planet they should choose. However, when a given waitress is defeated, they are required to publicly strip themselves of their clothing (self-fondling and public masturbation may be forced upon the loser, and in the most extreme cases, the loser is raped/gang-raped, either in private or in front of an audience), in order to teach the so-called "true" shame of defeat. In spite of such humiliation, the tournaments often draw many competitors, each placing their pride and their dreams on the line as they battle for the top.

[edit] Games

Title Platform Publisher(s) Release Date
V.G. - Variable Geo PC9800 Giga July 09, 1993
Advanced V.G. Turbo CD TGL July 22, 1994
V.G. II - THE BOUT OF CABALISTIC GODDESS PC9800 Giga November 25, 1994
Super Variable Geo SNES TGL July 21, 1995
Advanced V.G. Sega Saturn TGL March 27, 1995
Advanced V.G. PlayStation TGL March 19, 1996
Advanced V.G. 2 PlayStation TGL September 23, 1998
V.G. Custom PC Giga February 19, 1999
V.G. Max PC Giga September 10, 1999
V.G. Adventure PC Giga March 17, 2000
V.G. Rebirth PC Giga September 28, 2001
V.G. Rebirth Dash PC Giga March 23, 2002
Advanced V.G. 2 PlayStation TGL February 27, 2003
V.G. NEO PC Giga December 19, 2003

The first game in the series largely ignored a major storyline in favor of focusing more on the fighting system and hentai sequences. Players take control of one of six VG waitresses and battle the other five in order to win the tournament. Kaori Yanase and Reimi Jahana serve as the game's sub and final boss characters respectively unless the player is controlling one of them, in which case Yuka takes the place of the player-controlled character.

An updated version of the first game which adds three new playable characters, a storyline which features Yuka as the main character (who has a clone), and includes a pair of "True" bosses, the genetically engineered "Hybrid" warriors K-1 and K-2. This game would later be re-released on the Sega Saturn and Sony PlayStation with updated graphics and sound. The only major difference between the two versions is that the Saturn version retains the "Graphic Mode" setting which allows the viewing of the hentai scenes. This option was omitted from the Playstation version.

Kotoe Kashima, a childhood rival of Reimi, creates her own V.G. tournament in order to prove once and for all that she is far stronger and more beautiful than the Jahana Heiress. All of the previous fighters return and must face each other through a series of bouts. After defeating the other characters, the player must then face Kotoe's bodyguards before fighting Kotoe herself in a final match. This game was later declared non-canon by TGL.

A stripped down version of Advanced V.G. that removes the Hybrids and Graphic Mode option.

The sequel to Advanced V.G. centers around a plot-driven "Story Mode" which features new protagonist Tamao Mitsurugi facing all of the previous competitors, as well as new faces Kyoko Kirishima and Saki Shindou before going on to face the new boss characters Material and Miranda Jahana, Reimi's mother.

Another remake of Advanced V.G., this game features the same cast as Super V.G., but includes the same style of graphics and sound used in Advanced V.G. 2, along with reusing all Humiliation sequences from V.G. II: Bout of Cabalistic Goddess (though the dialogue was changed) and (non-canon) endings. Tamao Mitsurugi is a hidden character in the game and playable in versus and practice modes once unlocked.

A game in which the V.G. waitresses are rendered as super deformed style characters akin to Pocket Fighter. Includes the original six V.G. contestants, as well as Satomi Yajima from Advanced V.G., Tamao Mitsurugi from Advanced V.G. 2, Yumiko Watanuki from V.G. II and new character Masako Houjouin.

A text-based adventure game featuring the V.G. waitresses. The player takes control of Tamao Mitsurugi as she attempts to locate the missing Yuka Takeuchi and foil Miranda's latest plot. Fights are executed in a rock-paper-scissors fashion. With each successful attack, energy is added to a super meter that appears under the fighter's lifebar. Once full, the fighter can unleash a powerfully (in most characters' cases) unblockable attack. While Tamao is the only playable character in the storymode, there is a CPU versus mode that allows the player to pick from any character in the game.

A visual novel game in which the player plays the part of a reporter working on a story about the V.G. competition. The game also introduces the new character Hiyori Sakuragi. Depending on the choices the player makes, he/she will be paired with Yuka, Tamao or Reimi.

An update to V.G. Rebirth which includes nearly every other non-boss character (Ayako Yuuki is absent as she is a lesbian) as an option to pair with the player. It also introduces the new character Keiko Hatano.

The latest visual novel returns the series to its roots as a fighting tournament and features an entirely new cast, much in the same vein as Street Fighter III and Garou: Mark of the Wolves.

[edit] Characters

The V.G. series is notable as being one of the few games in the genre to feature an entirely female cast (the only exception is K-1, who only appeared once).

[edit] Introduced in V.G.: Variable Geo

  • Yuka Takeuchi: The main protagonist and a practitioner of karate. She enters the tournaments in order to test her skills and to grow stronger.
  • Chiho Masuda: A ninja who has run away from her clan in search of freedom. She participates in hopes of using the prize money and free real estate to finance her new life.
  • Jun Kubota: A wrestler who was barred from competing in the Olympics due to her rough and unsportsmanlike behavior. She enters in order to fight strong opponents and to prove herself as the strongest woman in the world.
  • Manami Kusunoki: A young girl who uses a wild style of fighting based on the temper tantrums of a child. She enters due to the fact that she sees the competition as a giant game and has her eyes on the prize money.
  • Kaori Yanase: A computer technician and Taekwondo practitioner who enters in order to prove herself. Upon losing to Reimi, she develops a friendly rivalry with her and returns to each subsequent tournament in the hopes of defeating her.
  • Reimi Jahana: Head of the Jahana Group, which supervises the V.G. tournaments. She herself is a three-time champion with a nearly flawless winning streak. Although initially antagonistic towards the other fighters, after being defeated by Yuka, she reforms and re-enters the tournament with the hopes of regaining her title.

[edit] Introduced in Advanced V.G.

  • Satomi Yajima: Yuka's best friend and childhood rival who also practices Karate and mixes it with pyrokinetic powers. She and her younger brother are impoverished, and thus Satomi enters in hopes of making a better life for the both of them.
  • Ayako Yuuki: A native of Osaka who fights with a style based on breakdancing. Enters the tournaments with the supposed goal of getting to see as much of the other contestants' bodies as possible, but in actuality is hoping to give the prize money to charity.
  • Erina Goldsmith: Born to American parents in Osaka, she has faced prejudice for the greater part of her life and became a fighter in order to take out her aggressions on her opponents. She hopes to use the prize money to bring her paternal grandmother to Japan from the United States (Texas).

[edit] Introduced in Advanced V.G. 2

  • Tamao Mitsurugi: A devoted fan of Yuka who enters the tournament in hopes of meeting her idol. She possesses a vast amount of power in spite of her young age and relative inexperience with fighting.
  • Kyoko Kirishima: A member of one of the Masuda clan's branch families and Chiho's distant cousin. She is sent to compete under orders to either force Chiho back into the clan or kill her.

[edit] Non-recurring characters

The following characters were only featured in a single game, usually serving a position as a boss or sub-boss. The only exception is Yumiko.

[edit] From V.G. II: Bout of Cabalistic Goddess

  • Yumiko Watanuki: The first of Kotoe's bodyguards who specializes in Chinese martial arts. She would later reappear as a playable character in V.G. Max.
  • Terumi Kannazuki: The second of Kotoe's bodyguards. She uses Muay Thai and treats Yumiko as if she were her younger sister.
  • Kotoe Kashima: A childhood rival of Reimi. She organizes the Bout of Cabalistic Goddess tournament in order to prove that she is superior to Reimi in every way. Extremely vain and antagonistic.

[edit] From Advanced V.G.

  • False Yuka: A clone of Yuka. She has more powerful versions of all of Yuka's own techniques.
  • K-1 (Keiichi): The first model of Miranda Jahana's "Hybrids", genetically engineered supersoldiers. He has the distinction of being the only male to appear in a combat role in any V.G. game.
  • K-2 (Keini): The second model of Hybrid sent to attack anyone who could prove more powerful than Reimi. She and her brother were killed after being defeated by Yuka.
(Note: False Yuka only appears in the original Turbo CD version of the game. K-1 and K-2 take her place as the final bosses of all subsequent versions.)

[edit] From Advanced V.G. 2

  • Saki Shindou: A sadistic, cold-blooded killer who fights for the sake of her own bloodlust. She competes in the V.G. tournament after being hired by Miranda. She also has an unexplained grudge against Reimi and frequently expresses a desire to kill her.
  • Material: The latest model of Hybrid designed by Miranda. There are two of these units, and both are programmed to express no emotions of their own since Miranda believed emotions to have been the ultimate downfall of the K-series. Both are defeated separately by Yuka and Tamao and die.
  • Miranda Jahana: Reimi's mother and the true head of the Jahana Group, which supervises the V.G. tournaments. She had hoped to create the ultimate fighting machine using data collected from the fighters in her tournaments. After the Material units are disabled, she engages Yuka, who is able to match her in strength. After being somewhat weakened by this exchange, she is attacked by Tamao, who is barely able to defeat her. Following this, she is caught in a combined attack by both Yuka and Tamao and is presumed dead, although she makes a cameo appearance in a background in V.G. Max.

[edit] From V.G. Max

  • Masako Houjouin: A mercenary who enters the competition with the selfish desire of winning the prize money and becoming fabulously rich. Although she practices no specific martial art, she is a master of using a number of weapons, which she keeps concealed until they are needed. Among her various arms are a knife, chain whip, guan dao, spiked mace, and a seemingly endless supply of grenades.

[edit] From V.G. Rebirth / V.G. Rebirth Dash

  • Hiyori Sakuragi: A shy, constantly depressed young woman who was forced to enter V.G. due to a number of mishaps that had occurred at the restaurant where she works. Although not a fighter by nature, she is capable of a staggering amount of strength when angered or upset.
  • Keiko Hatano: Nearly the polar opposite of Hiyori, Keiko is upbeat, cheerful, and outgoing. During a bout with Yuka, the latter expressed surprise that Keiko had enough power to apparently rival her own.

[edit] From V.G. Neo

  • Yu Asuka: The new main heroine/senshi. Yuu lives with her older brother in a restaurant which doubles as their own home (Her brother is the manager.). Upon an accident involving the restaurant she was in desperate need to find a way to fix the damage. She decided to risk it all by taking part of the Variable Geo tournament without letting her brother know.
  • Sanari Misumi: Yuu's long-time close friend, rival and classmate. A very energetic girl. Since their dojo days, Sanari has wished to have one real fight against Yuu, and thus picks a fight with Yuu every time they meet. Sanari did not work in a restaurant until she found out about Yuu's participation in the Variable Geo tournament and enters at the last minute.
  • Ayumi Okamoto: A girl who is often very frightened and clumsy. Despite this, she becomes a capable fighter. Although she has no specific style, she copies other warriors' moves (it is rumored that she is trying to replicate moves of a legendary V.G. fighter).
  • Diane Ryan: Diane is a skilled martial artist from America. A girl with a rather bright personality and has a big appetite for food. Her motives for joining the tournament are unknown.
  • Kei Sagara: A warrior skilled in aikido and carries the elemental power of lightning. She joins to test her strength.
  • Yui Zhenzhu: Zhenzhu hails from China and specializes in Chinese martial arts. She lives a very poor life with her old master and 18 brothers. Due to a past relationship, she has lost her faith in love. Like many before her, she has her eyes on the prize money.
  • Anna Fairgold: The current Variable Geo champion. A feared cold-blooded fighter who is sometimes driven insane. She fears the penalty because she had been through it once before.

[edit] Anime

Main article: Variable Geo (anime)

There is a three-part anime OVA series based on the games that loosely follows the same plot as Advanced V.G., although with several facts changed: Miranda is dead and her spirit is seeking a new host body, the Hybrids do not exist, and the matches are ranked at different "levels" (Levels 1–5, with the implication that the penalties for losing differ, depending on the level of a given match), among other things. The seiyuu for every character was changed for this series, something that is rare in video game–based anime.

[edit] Trivia

  • The designer and creator of the game series, Takehiro Kimura, is also behind various other all-girl fighting games, such as the Asuka 120% series.
  • Many of the restaurants represent, are parodies of real-life restaurant chains, the most prominent being Hanna Miller's, which is based on Anna Miller's.

[edit] External links

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