The Anime of the Game: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* ''[[Cosmic Fantasy (Video Game)|Cosmic Fantasy]]''
* ''[[Cosmic Fantasy (Video Game)|Cosmic Fantasy]]''
* ''[[Comic Party]]''
* ''[[Comic Party]]''
* ''Cosmo Warrior Zero'': Based on a [[First Person Shooter]] in the [[Leiji Matsumoto|Leijiverse]].
* ''Cosmo Warrior Zero'': Based on a [[First-Person Shooter]] in the [[Leiji Matsumoto|Leijiverse]].
* ''[[Da Capo]]'' and its sequels.
* ''[[Da Capo]]'' and its sequels.
* ''[[Danball Senki (Video Game)|Danball Senki]]''
* ''[[Danball Senki (Video Game)|Danball Senki]]''
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* ''[[Suika]]''
* ''[[Suika]]''
* ''[[Super Mario Bros]]''
* ''[[Super Mario Bros]]''
** ''Super Mario Bros.: The Great Plan to Rescue Princess Peach'' - a Japan-only theatrical film released around the same time as ''Super Mario Bros. 2 (Lost Levels)''. It was notorious for pairing Peach with a [[Canon Foreigner]] named [[Creators Pet|Prince Hal]] ([[Die for Our Ship|needless to say Mario/Peach shippers were not happy]]).
** ''Super Mario Bros.: The Great Plan to Rescue Princess Peach'' - a Japan-only theatrical film released around the same time as ''Super Mario Bros. 2 (Lost Levels)''. It was notorious for pairing Peach with a [[Canon Foreigner]] named [[Creator's Pet|Prince Hal]] ([[Die for Our Ship|needless to say Mario/Peach shippers were not happy]]).
** There were also a trilogy of [[OVA]] tie-ins to ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' that adapted the Japanese folktales of Momotaro and Issunboshi, as well as an adaptation of "[[Snow White (Literature)|Snow White]]" (with Bowser in a drag as the evil queen).
** There were also a trilogy of [[OVA]] tie-ins to ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' that adapted the Japanese folktales of Momotaro and Issunboshi, as well as an adaptation of "[[Snow White (Literature)|Snow White]]" (with Bowser in a drag as the evil queen).
* ''[[Super Robot Wars Original Generation]]''
* ''[[Super Robot Wars Original Generation]]''
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** ''Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars'' - TV series re-telling of the first game from one protagonist's perspective.
** ''Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars'' - TV series re-telling of the first game from one protagonist's perspective.
** ''Super Robot Wars Original Generation: The Inspectors'' - A 2010 TV series based on the second game.
** ''Super Robot Wars Original Generation: The Inspectors'' - A 2010 TV series based on the second game.
* The [[Tales Series]] has a ''[[Tales of Symphonia (Video Game)|Tales of Symphonia]]'' [[OVA]] series, a ''[[Tales of Phantasia (Video Game)|Tales of Phantasia]]'' [[OVA]] series and a [[Twelve Episode Anime]] of ''[[Tales of Eternia (Video Game)|Tales of Eternia]]''. There's also ''[[Tales of the Abyss (Video Game)|Tales of the Abyss]]'', which aired in the fall of 2008. ''[[Tales of Vesperia (Video Game)|Tales of Vesperia]]'' is getting a [[Prequel]] [[The Movie|movie]].
* The [[Tales Series]] has a ''[[Tales of Symphonia (Video Game)|Tales of Symphonia]]'' [[OVA]] series, a ''[[Tales of Phantasia (Video Game)|Tales of Phantasia]]'' [[OVA]] series and a [[Twelve-Episode Anime]] of ''[[Tales of Eternia (Video Game)|Tales of Eternia]]''. There's also ''[[Tales of the Abyss (Video Game)|Tales of the Abyss]]'', which aired in the fall of 2008. ''[[Tales of Vesperia (Video Game)|Tales of Vesperia]]'' is getting a [[Prequel]] [[The Movie|movie]].
* ''[[Tayutama]]''
* ''[[Tayutama]]''
* ''[[Tears to Tiara]]''
* ''[[Tears to Tiara]]''
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* ''[[The Tower of Druaga]]: The Aegis of Uruk'' and ''The Tower of Druaga: The Sword of Uruk'' are based on the ''Tower of Druaga'' series of dungeon crawlers and set sixty years after the first one. One episode even focuses on references to the game and old style gaming arcades.
* ''[[The Tower of Druaga]]: The Aegis of Uruk'' and ''The Tower of Druaga: The Sword of Uruk'' are based on the ''Tower of Druaga'' series of dungeon crawlers and set sixty years after the first one. One episode even focuses on references to the game and old style gaming arcades.
* ''[[Triangle Heart 3 Sweet Songs Forever]]''
* ''[[Triangle Heart 3 Sweet Songs Forever]]''
** And while we're at it, ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'', adapted from a [[Spin Off]] of the above [[Adaptation Displacement|that most fans don't even know exists]].
** And while we're at it, ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'', adapted from a [[Spin-Off]] of the above [[Adaptation Displacement|that most fans don't even know exists]].
* ''[[Tsukihime (Visual Novel)|Tsukihime]]'' [[media:there_is_no_tsukihime_anime.png|(What is this doing here?)]]
* ''[[Tsukihime (Visual Novel)|Tsukihime]]'' [[media:there_is_no_tsukihime_anime.png|(What is this doing here?)]]
** Don't deny it! If [[Disgaea]] and ''[[Viewtiful Joe]]'' are enough to be listed here then surely [[Tsukihime]] anime would make the list.
** Don't deny it! If [[Disgaea]] and ''[[Viewtiful Joe]]'' are enough to be listed here then surely [[Tsukihime]] anime would make the list.
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* ''[[Donkey Kong Country]]'', unique in that its adaptation was French (though granted, the games themselves were British at the time)
* ''[[Donkey Kong Country]]'', unique in that its adaptation was French (though granted, the games themselves were British at the time)
** And it was the Japanese that created Donkey Kong. Case of [[Germans Love David Hasselhoff]]?
** And it was the Japanese that created Donkey Kong. Case of [[Germans Love David Hasselhoff]]?
* ''[[Double Dragon]]'' - 26-episodes in 1994 and 1995. It barely had anything to do with the original games as Billy and Jimmy were turned into twins separate from birth and were given [[Family Friendly Firearms|beam-shooting swords]] and dragon masks. It had a [[Recursive Adaptation|tie-in fighting game]] for the SNES, Genesis, and Jaguar.
* ''[[Double Dragon]]'' - 26-episodes in 1994 and 1995. It barely had anything to do with the original games as Billy and Jimmy were turned into twins separate from birth and were given [[Family-Friendly Firearms|beam-shooting swords]] and dragon masks. It had a [[Recursive Adaptation|tie-in fighting game]] for the SNES, Genesis, and Jaguar.
* ''[[Dragons Lair]]''
* ''[[Dragons Lair]]''
* ''[[Dungeons and Dragons]]''
* ''[[Dungeons and Dragons]]''
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[[Category:Videogame Culture]]
[[Category:Videogame Culture]]
[[Category:The Anime Of The Game]]
[[Category:The Anime Of The Game]]
[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:Trope]][[Category:Pages with comment tags]]

Revision as of 00:26, 9 January 2014

In the same vein as The Film of the Book: when a popular game is adapted into an anime. Extremely common in the case of Visual Novels. A sister to Animated Adaptation, only the source is Video Games instead of Live Action TV or Film. The difference being that video games, by their very nature, are already animated.

May involve Bleached Underpants depending on the source. RPGs in particular tend to have sprawling plotlines narrowed or cut entirely.

If you're looking for the reverse of this trope--that is, the game derived from the anime--see Licensed Game.

Examples of games adapted to Anime:


Examples of games adapted to Western Animation

Examples of games adapted to Live Action TV:

Examples of games adapted to Web Animation:

  • The popular Arfenhouse Flash movies were loosely based on a series of freeware spoof RPGs using the OHRRPGCE engine.
  1. all of which save two, were based on previously existing arcade games