Kinoko Nasu

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Kinoko Nasu
Native name 奈須 きのこ
Born (1973-11-28) 28 November 1973
Residence Japan
Nationality Japanese
Occupation Writer, video game designer
Years active 2000–present
Employer Type-Moon
Known for Co-founder of Type-Moon
Author of successful prose and visual novels
Notable work(s) Tsukihime
Fate/stay night
Kara no Kyōkai
Website
www.remus.dti.ne.jp/~takeucto/

Kinoko Nasu (奈須 きのこ Nasu Kinoko, male,[1] born 28 November 1973) is a Japanese author, best known for writing the novels Kara no Kyōkai and visual novels Tsukihime and Fate/stay night.

Biography

Together with junior high school classmate and friend, Takashi Takeuchi, Nasu formed Type-Moon in 2000, originally as a dōjin group to create the visual novel Tsukihime, which soon gained immense popularity, much of which is attributed to Nasu's unique style of storytelling. A sequel to Tsukihime, Kagetsu Tohya, was released in August 2001.

Following the success of Tsukihime, Type-Moon became a commercial organization. On 28 January 2004 Type-Moon released Fate/stay night, written by Nasu; it, too, gained great success, becoming one of the most popular visual novels on the day of its release. A sequel to Fate/stay night, Fate/hollow ataraxia, was released on 28 October 2005. Both of Nasu's visual novel works (Tsukihime and Fate/stay night) have been adapted to rather popular manga and anime series.

Works

Among Kinoko Nasu's earlier works are the novels Kara no Kyōkai, originally released in 1998 and re-printed in 2004, Angel Notes, Mahōtsukai no Yoru and Kōri no Hana.

Novels

  • Kara no Kyōkai also called Garden of Sinners - originally released in 1998 and re-printed in 2004. It was also re-released in a three-volume format with new illustrations in 2007.
  • Angel Notes
  • Mahōtsukai no Yoru
  • Kōri no Hana (氷の花 Ice Flowers)
  • Decoration Disorder Disconnection: Junk the Eater
  • Decoration Disorder Disconnection: HandS
Note: "Kara no Kyōkai" featured illustrations by Takashi Takeuchi, while the "DDD" series featured art by Koyama Hirokazu

Visual novels

Other

  • Melty Blood - The original Melty Blood fighting game, released in December 2002, features an extensive Story Mode, which is essentially a visual novel where story branches are chosen based on the outcome of battles. Nasu also writes the dialogue for Arcade Mode, which was first featured in Melty Blood ReACT, released in May 2004.

References

  1. Nasu, Kinoko (2004-07-23). "And so I became a girl。". Retrieved 2013-09-22. 
  2. "Gpara.com". 12 October 2008. Retrieved 24 December 2008. 

External links

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