The subtitle, "A piece of blue glass moon," evokes the ethereal, melancholic tone of the game. It reflects the fragile beauty of the vampire princess Arcueid and the shining, yet broken, nature of the memories within the story.
For decades, the name Tsukihime has carried immense weight in the world of visual novels. Originally released in 2000 by the doujin circle Type-Moon, the game was a raw, atmospheric masterpiece that laid the foundation for the modern supernatural mystery genre in Japanese gaming. It introduced the world to Kinoko Nasu’s intricate writing and Takashi Takeuchi’s iconic art style, eventually giving rise to the billion-dollar Fate franchise. Tsukihime A piece of blue glass moon
Kinoko Nasu has rewritten and lengthened the story to cinematic proportions. The Story: Death, Perception, and the Supernatural The subtitle, "A piece of blue glass moon,"
And in the park, Shiki Tohno suddenly turned, his knife hand trembling. For one impossible second, he saw the line of death not just in Arcueid—but in the moon itself. Originally released in 2000 by the doujin circle
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