I know ef – a fairy tale of the two has gotten an anime adaptation, probably several manga adaptations, and a light novel adaptation. However, I’ve just finished the original visual novel, and am basing all my knowledge of the series off that. Yes, the visual novel! I’ve read them for a while, and hope to review some more in the future. Ef: A Fairy Tale of the Two. Is the overall title of a two-part Japanese adult visual novel series by Minori for the PC as a DVD.1 The first game in the series, Ef: The First Tale., was released on December 22, 2006, and the second game, Ef: The Latter Tale., was released on May 30, 2008. .= Gameplay =. Ef: A Fairy Tale of the Two consists of two parts. The first part is titled Ef: The First Tale and primarily consists of prologue and two main chapters with Miyako Miyamura as the focus for the first chapter, and Kei Shindo for the second. Ending Guideline. Ef: A Fairy Tale of the Two consists of two parts. The first part is titled Ef: The First Tale and primarily consists of prologue and two main chapters with Miyako Miyamura as the focus for the first chapter, and Kei Shindo for the second. This is followed by the second part of the story, Ef: The Latter Tale, which consists of. Ef - the latter tale. (All Ages) Oct 17, 2019 In this direct continuation of 'ef - the first tale', Yuu tells the tale of a young woman who has lost one of her eyes due to an accident, but who may have lost so much more beneath the surface.
Overview
Ef: A Fairy Tale of the Two is a two-part visual novel series, consisting of Ef: The First Tale and Ef: The Latter Tale, developed and published by Minori. The two games were initially released as eroge titles for the PC with the The First Tale being published in 2006 and The Latter Tale in 2008. Eventually a compilation of both games was released in 2010 by Comfort for the PlayStation 2, which removed all of the adult content from both titles. MangaGamer published an English version of Ef: The First Tale in 2012 with an English edition of Ef: The Latter Tale being released the following year and finally a collection of both games was made available in 2014.
English Release
During the late 2000s a Canadian fansubbng group called No Name Losers began work on an unofficial fan translation of both Ef: The First Tale and Latter Tale. After several years of work, and the release of a demo patch, No Name Losers received a cease and desist letter from Minori just as they had finished their translation. However, despite the C&D, NNL ended up releasing their patch for both The First Tale and The Latter Tale on April 30, 2010. The group received a second C&D from Minori when they announced plans to translate Eden*, another Minori title, which lead to a negotiation between the two parties. The exchange, surprisingly, lead to No Name Losers and Minori creating a partnership with MangaGamer to publish an official English release of Ef. This partnership eventually lead to MangaGamer localizing several other Minori titles, including Eden*, Supipara and Trinoline.
MangaGamer.com - Ef – A Fairy Tale Of The Two. - Deluxe ...
Story
Each installment is broken down into a prologue and two chapters which follow a different protagonist each time.The story takes branching pathways and work towards the conclusion of one of four overarching story conclusions- one for each girl.
ef - the first tale.
- The Prologue takes place a year after the events of the game, and bookends each chapter with the conversations of a dapper gentleman (Yu Himura) and a nun (Yuko Amamiya) reminiscing of the events in upcoming chapters
- Chapter 1 revolves around the protagonist Hiro Hirono- an established manga author and highschool student, and his interactions with schoolmate Miyako Miyamura
- Chapter 2 takes place a few months after the events of the first, and focuses on a friend of Hiro's named Kyosuke Tsutsumi- a budding filmmaker infatuated with a mysterious girl and fellow student he catches a glimpse of one Christmas night.
ef - the latter tale.
- The Prologue once again opens with Yu and Yuko, this time speaking of the events of the first game. Once again, their conversations bookend each chapter, revealing more of the story as it progresses
- Chapter 1 follows a half-German/half-Japanese man named Renji Aso, who meets and falls for Chihiro Shindo- a quiet girl with an eyepatch while sitting at a quiet abandoned train station
- Chapter 2 introduces us to Shuichi Kuze- an older man, and professional violinist who has recently returned from studying abroad in Germany. He is the neighbour of the previous protagonist Renji Aso
Other Media
The story has been adapted into a series of manga, and novels, and has been re-imagined with 4 Drama CDs, a 12-episode Anime, and 2 Internet Radio Shows.
Trivia
Visual Novel Official Website (Japanese)
- Famed director Makoto Shinkai, who is known for films such as 5 Centimeters Per Second, created the opening animation for Ef: A Fairy Tale of the Two. The game's music was also composed by Tenmon, who has worked on all of Shinkai's film soundtracks. Shinkai animated the opening videos for all of Minori's novels up to Ef, which was the last game he worked on, and Tenmon continued to work with Minori on Eden*.