[pc][sengoku Musou 2 [jap]
Kamal Khan Maa Song Mp3 Free Download. The story takes place during the 4th Sengoku (warring states) era of Japan, an area of the Rance World which parodies medieval real-world Japan. Sengoku Rance picks up where Rance 6 left off.
Rance, after saving the nation of Zeth from destruction, ran away so he won’t have to marry the princess. He and Sill ended up in Japan for a hotspring trip, upsetting the power balance of Japan, and sets the unification of its provinces in motion. Meanwhile, an ancient evil power stirs from its slumber Meet the alternate reality versions of Oda Nobunaga, Uesugi Kenshin, Takeda Shingen, Tokugawa Ieyasu, Mori Motonari, One Eyed Masamune, Hojo Soun, Sakamoto Ryouma, Yamamoto Isoroku, Saint Francis Xavier, and many more famous Japanese historical figures in the world of Rance! I’m having the same issue as Manwa a few posts up: I’ve downloaded all the parts, 1-15, and extracted them. No problems there.
Download [pc][sengoku musou 2 [jap]. Samurai Warriors 2 Message Board for PC - GameFAQs. Samurai Warriors 2 Koei Wiki FANDOM powered by Wikia. Sengoku Musou 2 (Japan) ROM Playstation 2 /PS2 m. Samurai Warriors 2 / Shin Sengoku Musou 2 - PC Game Trainer. Tokugawa, Odani Castle Oda vs. Samurai Warriors 2 (戦国無双2, Sengoku Musou 2) is the sequel to Samurai Warriors. Platform(s):, PlayStation 2, Xbox 360, PC. The concepts from the first game by removing the 'pose' attacks from the returning characters' movesets and adding two new unique special abilities (AKA 'Unique Arts' in the Japanese script).
I’ve mounted the rance iso and used the English Patch 1.01 to install the game. Again, no problems with the installation or any other error-messages there. When I run the game though, I get the intro with the girl and the company logo – along with the music – to show, after that though, the window goes black and a message pops up in non-intellible letters (not japanese) and I’m given the option of “ok” and “cancel”. If I press “Ok”, the mssage repeats infinetely, if I press “cancel”, the game shuts down. I’ve tried unsintalling and re-installing, as well as using both Custom Installation and Quick Installation, I’ve also tried installing it into different folders – nothing has thus far worked though. If anyone has had a similar problem and know of a way to solve it, I’d be very happy because I really want to try the game..
Well, I could try^^ (Though be warned, there is no such thing as a failproof download method; there are individual differences depending on your machine and something always goes wrong) 1. If you don´t have it yet, you need “WinRar” (search google, first result, download, install, it´s free). If you don´t have it yet, you need “Daemon Tools” (check the FAQ on this site for download link and detailed installation guide; it´s also free if you choose the lite version, which is more than enough for this) 3. Now for the actual download: Scroll upward->click DA-free: Game Download ->click the first link.
You will have to enter a captcha and wait two minutes until you can start the download;(make sure you chose WinRar archiver to open it; it should be default though) depending on your net connection that may take a while, the files are not exactly small. Now I hope you brought some time, because you will be repeating step 3 with all the other 14 links as well. Only once you got all of them, you can procceed. Now comes the tricky part: You got the entire game on your hard drive. You just have to “put the 15 pieces together” to make it work: Open WinRar->search for the “SengokuRance.part01.rar” file you just downloaded (if you can´t find it just double click it in your browser´s download list to jump directly there) ->right click ->choose “Extract files.” ->choose an nice place to extract them to (maybe create a desktop folder called “Sengoku Rance” and put it there; you can also just click ok to use default location) ->drink tea and wait. The folder you extracted them to should now contain a file that ends.iso Time to open “Daemon Tools” (basically a program that creates virtual disc drives)->click “Add Image” ->search for the folder you just extracted the stuff to and double click the.iso file ->it should now be in your “image library” in daemon tools ->just double click again to mount it.
Your computer is now officially fooled into believing you actually own the Sengoku Rance CD. The rest ist relatively easy; come back to this website, click the “DA-free: English patch download” directly beneath the game download and repeat step 3 with the “Sengoku_Rance_English().exe.” After you successfully downloaded it, double click in your download list to run it (sometimes it runs automatically, nevermind). A setup will appear and you can just install the game like you would with any normal game. After that, just click the desktop icon, start the game, play, enjoy. If for some reason it still won´t work (as I mentioned, something always goes wrong)welljust hope it doesn´t.
Still, this website has a pretty amazing community, so if you run into problems, just read the comments above, 9 out of 10 cases it was already asked about and solved. Well, that was a rather lengthy comment^^ I hope it is somewhat understandable; at the end of the day, getting this thing to work without any experience is a tough job and I don´t have enough space to go into more detail. Just try to follow those directions closely and write another comment if you got questions. Hey all, I’m having trouble with installing the English patch to sengoku rance. I think I mounted the game correctly as I get to the Japanese untranslated setup menu.
The first time I tried the English patch it installed correctly and started up, it went to a small intro with a girl then it stopped and said system40 error with untranslated words below it, with no other option but to press ok. I tried to re install the English Patch but I am now getting a System40.exe error with this “The program can’t start because ijl15.dll is missing from your computer” I’ve tried to re install again and it keeps coming up, any suggestions on how to fix this? Can someone PLZ post me a link to a good guide/walkthrough for this game. I tried the version 1.11 walkthrough on gamefaqs, but from turn 14 the walktrhough isn’t worth anything anymore, since in the old version you could supposidly have an extra “action fan (extra turn)”, when you got “rance sattisfaction bonus +10”, but i only get this option around “rance statisfaction bonus +50” in this version, so it’s immposible to follow that walktrhough. I need some help with this, cause when i tried the game without a guide i did conquer some territories but some girl i didn’t wanted to die(and didn’t die in walkthrough), died, and another girl got raped by some fuckin monster and i HATE NTR and i am completely grossed out by it. I’m not goin to touch this game anymore untill i have a good walktrough.
So if anyone could help me, i’d appreciate it. Compared to FSN or Family Project (etc.) not really. The story is Rance – defeat your enemies, H all the pretty girls and enjoy life.
There is continuation of character and some events throughout the Rance series and in Sengoku, there are some minor character stories, but the main draw is the battle to conquer (and save ultimately) JAPAN. Still, if you want your VN to be story driven, this might not be for you. What’s amazing about this VN is the re-playability. Once you get done with the 1st playthrough, not only is there a 2nd playthrough (albiet very similar but you can recruit some other NPCs), 3 alternative routes (Kenshin, Ran & Isoroku), a “kill the monkey route” (see the wiki to avoid spoilers) and a free for all where you can start off as another house and try to conquer from another perspective.
Well, all games I have played so far of this category (Utawarerumono, Koihime Musou) are not a great story and much options, but choices to spend the time of the protagonist with determined girls at the end of the day. About the story, I dunno, Utawarerumono had a nice story, although it wasn’t something awesome. Still, those kind of game are enojyable in their own way. Of course, if you want a good story, there are another ones, like FSN, Family Project, Clannad, G-Senjou no Maou, Sharin no Kuni, Saya no Uta, etc. AWESOME game – most fun/addicting eroge I’ve played. FSN has an great story, but this is actually challenging. It would be fun even if it was all ages.
Definitely recommend getting the walkthrough & checkig out the Wiki since attacking places randomly won’t work. Install was a bit tricky for me. I don’t have Daemon Tools, so I just burned the DVD (single layer is cheap anyway), and then installed using the english patch. If using Vista/Win 7 (I’m running Win 7 64bit, install into a “C: Games” folder – not “Programs” or Programs (x86). You DO have to run it with Applocal when you play.
I made a shortcut using Applocal, put it on my desktop & then right click/run as Admin to play. Never had an issue or needed the DVD post install. Hi thanks so much for providing this game it’s one of the most enjoyable games I’ve played in a long time. It’s a lot like Romance of the Three Kingdoms with a adult theme to it ^_^. I was able to get this game to work on Win 7 x64, This is what I did. Steam Client With Full Steam Cache. I downloaded the game but did not install it, First I installed a program called Applocale, This program is provided free by windows.
If your using windows 7 like me then it’s very easy to use and install. Once that was installed I opened the cd and ran als_inst.exe using the Applocale program not the cd itself.
Once that was finished I installed the game. I hope this helps. I haven’t had any issues I see all movies and the game runs great. Thanks again everyone ^_^.
I Hope somebody can help me. I have this Problem with this Game and Utawarerumono ( Also downloadet from here ). Both Games are Working. But in Both Games i have the “Intro Bug”. Game starts, Intro starts, you hear the Sound and Music from the Intro but the Screen shows only Black. After the Intros are finished, the Menue pops up and Game works Fine.
I know this is a minor Problem but i would be Happy if this Case was solved. And yes i tried to load the Video Files of both games Manually in external players like Media Player Classic or Video Lan Player. An in BOTH Players the Videos are fine and playing normally. So ists not a codec Isssue. Sengoku Rance with English Translation Patch 1.01 After Using AppLocale Once to get over the the Start Bug after the Mini Intro/Logo it starts now without it. Not played Yet but it starts, and goes to the Menue.
Problem with the Setting, only 800*600 seems to work. Everytime i Try to set another Resolution and click on okay, it resets to the 800*600 reoslution for Fullscreen.
Utawareumono with English Translation Patch 1.01 and Voice Patch 0.4. Working Fine with the Workaround ( Setting Windows to 800*600 16 bit and Running Game in Window Mode because of the Super Speed Bug with 32 bit and Fullscreen ) Also Bug Crashing everytime you save. Only One Crash during Normal Gameplay.
Game almost finished, 95% of CG and ALL Scenes Unlocked so far. Both Games Installed via the English Patches and not from Disk itself. For Both Games and the Bugs tryed Running as Administrator, and with Compatible Modes 95 / 98 / XPSP2 / XPSP3. Not working antyhing of it.
System: Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit. CCCP Codec Pack Summary: Games working Videos working in external Players Videos NOT Working in the Games. As i said, outside of the Games the Videos working in any Player like VLC or MPC. I’m out of ideas to get them working in the Games.
Are there more Videos for Both Games like ingame or Endings? When not okay then i must Life with this. And any Ideas why i cannot Change Resolution for Sengoku Rance?
I’m Using the ingame Options for Fullsceen. Theres a Huge List of Resolutions for Direct Draw, but nothing else but 800*600*32 is working. Nothing changes after clicking ok and the Option resets to that Resolution. ( Desktop runs at 1280*1024*32 ). Easily the best Eroge game I’ve ever played. I rank it along the top 10 games I’ve played in all.
Amazing story, amazing characters, amazing gameplay, amazing H-Scenes, and an amazing time sink. This game needs a lot put into though. It can be considered incredibly hard if you don’t know what to do, but the pay off is well worth playing it for. The other Rance games are being translated by another group, they recently finished 1 and are moving on to 3. Though those games are much different than the strategic overlay type of game SR is.
They’re more of dungeon crawlers. Story:A Art:A Gameplay:A- Audio:B+ Eroness:A Sengoku Rance has many interesting characters and plenty of backstory from previous Rance games.
The art is very nice and detailed. The gameplay consists of turns and a battle system that are both pretty good and the game pushes you to engage in “extreme gaming” where you try to do as much as possible in a set time period. The sounds are a bit overused but the music is very good. The erotic quality is very good even without voices because of the kinky situations Rance gets into.
This article needs additional citations for. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2009) () Samurai Warriors 2 Director(s) Hisashi Koinuma Series,,,,, Release PlayStation 2 •: February 24, 2006 •: September 19, 2006 •: September 22, 2006 •: September 28, 2006 PlayStation Network •: September 19, 2012 •: January 30, 2013 Xbox 360 •: August 17, 2006 •: September 19, 2006 •: September 22, 2006 •: September 28, 2006 Windows •: June 27, 2008 •: June 27, 2008 •: July 11, 2008 PlayStation 3 & PlayStation Vita •: October 24, 2013 Mode(s). North American Cover Art Samurai Warriors 2 ( 戦国無双2, Sengoku Musō 2, Sengoku Musou 2 in Japan) is a sequel to the original, created by and. The game was released in 2006 for the and, and ported to in 2008.
Like the series, an Empires expansion was released as well, and an Xtreme Legends expansion followed on August 23, 2007 in Japan. The game, alongside its two expansions, Xtreme Legends and Empires also receive a HD-enhanced port for and under the name Sengoku Musou 2 with Moushouden & Empires HD Version., the sequel to SW2 and the third game in the series was released in December 2009 for the. Contents • • • • • • • • • • • Gameplay [ ] The gameplay of Samurai Warriors 2 builds on the first Samurai Warriors by adding new characters and new features, such as the removal of the traditional range attacks in favor of the addition of two unique special abilities that differ from character to character.
For example, can either summon new soldiers to the battlefield or improve the combat abilities of nearby allies, can either whistle to call his mount to his side or perform a flaming charge, and can either increase the strength of her weapon or summon lightning to stun nearby enemy soldiers. In addition, characters movesets can evolve in a larger variety as they level up, elaborating on either their combo, charge or special attacks, with the progression of each character being different from the next. This leads to the characters having 1 of 3 different button combos.
A returning element from the original Samurai Warriors is the (Infinite Castle in the Japanese version). In this mode, the player chooses a character and fights through an endless castle. After choosing the character, 4 random missions will be given to the player to choose from. To choose a mission the player must pay a fee to perform the mission, though there are certain missions that do not require a fee. After that, the player enters the castle, and a mission will be triggered. After succeeding in the mission, the stairway to the next floor opens, and the player will be able to proceed to the next floor where there will be another mission to complete in order to proceed to the next floor, and so on. Playable characters in the game (except for and ) have their own stories.
Each story contains five stages (except for and, who both have six stages), plus a 'Dream Stage' or 'Gaiden' (Side Quest) in the Japanese version, that effectively asks 'what if'. For example, Yukimura Sanada's Dream/Gaiden stage () puts him into a battle that took place historically between his fourth and fifth stages ( and respectively).
Correspondingly, since and both have endings where they won their historically final battles and survived, their Dream stages have them mopping up their gathered opposition. This game also contains a mini-game as an additional feature. Up to four players can participate in this mode, and each player has to choose a character. The game's goal is to collect the requested amount of gold (depending on the player's settings).
At the beginning of the game, three flags for each player will be divided in the map, and players can earn gold and raise their ranks by collecting their respective flags and returning to their home square. Additionally, a player can buy territories on the map, or challenge another player for the control of a territory. There are six types of challenges in the game: Annihilate (requires the players to defeat as many enemies as possible), Chase (requires the players to defeat as many fleeing Fire Ninjas as possible), Destroy (requires the players to destroy as many boulders as possible), Race (requires the players to break through the doors to reach the end before the opponent does), Reveal (requires the players to uncover as many Sky Ninjas as possible), and Steal (requires the players to collect as much gold as possible). The CAW (Create-A-Warrior) mode from the original Samurai Warriors has been removed, but it was reintroduced in Samurai Warriors 2 Empires. Characters [ ]. Main article: The game features a total of 26 characters, compromising of 16 characters returning and 10 new, some of them were former unique from previous game. Almost all characters from previous game (including Xtreme Legends additions) return with the exception of,, and, although the new character seems to be a replacement for Kunoichi due to similarities in combat characteristics and skills.
Two returning characters, and do not have their own story mode, although they still can be played in other modes. Similar to previous games, the game also features two unique NPCs: and that can be unlocked as unplayable special bodyguards.
Characters marked with * are starting characters Characters marked with ** were made playable in expansion games Characters marked with *** are unique NPCs throughout the installment and its expansions Characters are arranged by the installment they were debuted in. SW SW2 ** * * ** ** * * * ** * ** * The English voice production was provided by Montreal recording studio Agile Sound, with the voice casting provided by their sister company Total Casting. The 6000 lines for the 33 characters were recorded in 33 days using 25 actors. Expansions [ ] Samurai Warriors 2: Empires [ ] Samurai Warriors 2: Empires, Series,,, Release PlayStation 2 •: November 16, 2006 •: February 27, 2007 •: March 16, 2007 Xbox 360 •: February 27, 2007 •: March 16, 2007 PlayStation 3 & PlayStation Vita •: October 24, 2013 Mode(s) 1–2 players Samurai Warriors 2: Empires (戦国無双2 Empires) is an expansion to the original Samurai Warriors 2 and the third Empires expansion by Koei (The first was, and the second was ), available for and, as well as and in a compilation with the original and Xtreme Legends. The game was first released in Japan on November 16, 2006. Very similar to both Dynasty Warriors 4 Empires and Dynasty Warriors 5 Empires, the game features the strategic and tactical Empire Mode that combines the gameplay of Samurai Warriors and several turn-based strategy elements from and.
The Empire mode allows the player to select from some of Japan's greatest battles such as the, the, the incident at and the. In the Create-A-Warrior Mode, the options are limited to 13 models with 10 color patterns each, as well as four different voices. Fortunately, a new feature is added to the mix: the ability to copy movesets of other characters. Unlike Samurai Warriors: Xtreme Legends, the game does not feature new characters for the series. However, and, who were unplayable special bodyguards in the original Samurai Warriors 2, are now playable characters in Samurai Warriors 2 Empires. Samurai Warriors 2: Xtreme Legends [ ] Samurai Warriors 2: Xtreme Legends, Atsushi Ichiyanagi Series,,, Release PlayStation 2 •: August 23, 2007 •: March 18, 2008 •: March 21, 2008 Xbox 360 •: March 19, 2008 •: April 16, 2008 •: April 16, 2008 PlayStation 3 & PlayStation Vita •: October 24, 2013 Mode(s) 1–2 players Samurai Warriors 2: Xtreme Legends (戦国無双2 猛将伝: Sengoku Musou 2 Moushouden) was first released on August 23, 2007 in Japan for the. It is the fifth Xtreme Legends expansion by Koei, and also the first and only Xtreme Legends expansion since to be released after Empires (Other Xtreme Legends expansions are released shortly after the release of the original game).
It shares the same achievements with the parent game on the Xbox 360. The expansion introduced new characters to the series, including, and. From returned in the expansion with an updated character design, and and from Samurai Warriors 2 Empires are also playable and have new weapons. Shibata Katsuie wields two, while Sasaki Kojirō still carries a nodachi, but can now summon an ex-dimensional sword during battle. Because Imagawa Yoshimoto was put back into the game, the previously omitted Battle of Okehazama is brought back, and Hideyoshi's Shikoku campaign against Chosokabe Motochika is also included.
A new mode known as Mercenary Mode is in the game. It resembles Xtreme Mode from.
Playable characters can now be upgraded to level 70; in the original the highest level was 50. Bodyguards can also level up to 30, when in the original 20 was the highest level. Fifth weapons are present in the game, however, unlike the first game, the weapons has the same attack base as the original (before, the fifth weapon would have a higher attack base). Some considered it as an 'alternative fourth weapon'. In Samurai Warriors 2, the highest upgrade is fourth weapons. In order to play the full functionality of this game the original is required.
'Import' selected on the main menu will guide you though a disk switching process. Xbox 360 players must download the expansion via the Xbox Marketplace as there is no stand alone disc available in stores.
As for the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita players, the game is bundled along with the two other versions of this game (the original and Empires), thus the players are no longer required to use the 'Import' feature. Reception [ ] Samurai Warriors 2 [ ] Samurai Warriors 2 Review scores Publication Score N/A 4.5/10 4.5/10 N/A N/A 7/10 N/A 36/40 N/A N/A 6/10 6/10 N/A D− D− N/A 6/10 5.4/10 N/A N/A N/A 6.8/10 5.3/10 N/A 5.8/10 5.5/10 N/A 5/10 N/A N/A N/A 6.5/10 47% N/A N/A N/A C C N/A Aggregate scores 49% 61.97% 55.89% 43/100 58/100 52/100 Reviews of Samurai Warriors 2 ranged from very mixed to negative. And gave it a score of 62% and 58 out of 100 for the PlayStation 2 version; 56% and 52 out of 100 for the Xbox 360 version; and 49% and 43 out of 100 for the PC version. The only positive review came from, which gave the PS2 version a score of 36 out of 40.
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External links [ ] • • at (in Japanese) • • • • • • • at Gamecity (in Japanese) • at Gamecity (in Japanese) • at • at •.