Kemonokko Tssushin The Animation Portable -
Executive Summary
Project Report: Kemonokko Tsuushin: The Animation Portable
The Hook:
Bell offers him a special type of "milk" that promises results, leading to the series' various supernatural and adult encounters. Key Characters kemonokko tssushin the animation portable
Rating:
[Insert rating, e.g., 7/10]
- Surprisingly wholesome. Despite the "kemonokko" tag, the game avoids the usual adult tropes of its PC parent. It’s rated CERO B (12+).
- The animation engine is technically impressive for 2009.
- Voice acting is solid—featuring early roles for Kana Hanazawa as the shy rabbit-girl Mimi Usako.
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- The rhythm typing is brutal for non-Japanese speakers. You need to type Hiragana quickly.
- No official English translation (though a fan patch was started in 2016 and abandoned at 40%).
- Load times. Every. Single. Transition.
- Art: soft watercolor backgrounds, expressive character sprites with subtle texture to suggest age and memory.
- Animation: mostly limited animation for portable performance, with key cinematic full-animation scenes for major deliveries.
- Sound: ambient field recordings (city hum, cicadas), gentle piano and shakuhachi motifs; kemonokko voices are chimes or layered breaths rather than speech.
Pocola (Pokora):
A tanuki girl who struggles with her transformation skills and is helped by the character Takeshi. Production Details Surprisingly wholesome
The "Portable" version of the game, released for the PlayStation Portable (PSP), offers: The rhythm typing is brutal for non-Japanese speakers