

In the past and is told by Yuuji himself as one long flashback to his and Kazuki's childhood and history. And as it turns out, that was actually all that was needed because what we have here is actually a perfectly legitimate and very well made adaptation of Grisaia no Meikyuu. Personally I don't think there was any reason to have faith in 8bit at this point, but the sequels come with the one advantage of being extremely short in comparison and thus being almost impossible to rush. Response to the game was so positive, the campaign reached its goal in less than a day.After the absolute disaster that was Studio 8bit's adaptation of Grisaia no Kajitsu, I'm sure the question on everybody's mind was whether or not the sequels would face the same treatment as well. In order to bring the two sequel games, the company started up a Kickstarter campaign. The Fruit of Grisaia’s game was licensed for release in the West by Sekai Project. The series will also stream on video sharing site Niconico. The website streamed the first series as it aired in Japan, and will most likely do the same for the next two. Sentai Filmworks licensed the anime for North America, but the series can also be watched on Crunchyroll. The Eden of Grisaia continues where The Fruit of Grisaia left off, and is premiering April 20. The third game, The Eden of Grisaia, will be a series like the first adaption. The plot is a collection, containing a prequel for the main hero, sequels for the five female characters, and other short stories. The second, The Labyrinth of Grisaia, will premiere on April 13 and act as a 60-minute special rather than a series. After it was received well by audiences, the studio 8-Bit went ahead with plans to adapt the other two games as anime. The 13-episode anime adaption premiered in October 2014. As with all visual novel games, the plot branches off into multiple possible endings depending on which of the five girls’ paths the player chooses. The story of the game follows the romantic escapades of Yūji Kazami, a young man who transfers to a school with only five female students. The game also inspired two sequel games, titled The Labyrinth of Grisaia and The Eden of Grisaia.

After quickly gaining popularity, the game was developed into a manga and later, an anime. The Fruit of Grisaia began as a Japanese visual novel in 2011. Two sequel anime to last year’s The Fruit of Grisaia anime have been announced: a short film titled The Labyrinth of Grisaia and the series continuation The Eden of Grisaia.
