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August 15, 2025

MSXALL

Everything about MSX, and more…

RPG

A demo will be available later this year.

Fans are currently hard at work translating the 1990 MSX2 version of the classic Riverhill Soft title Burai into English, according to the MSX enthusiast and programmer Max Iwamoto.

Burai (or Burai Joukan, as it is also called) is an RPG title that was originally released for the PC-88 in 1989, and was later ported to other platforms such as PC-98, FM-Town and MSX2 computers. It focuses on the story of eight warriors spread across the world who are suddenly entrusted with the task of saving the land from the followers of an evil god named Daar, and features a top-down perspective and turn-based battles typical of RPGs of the day.

Read the full article on timeextension.com

Riverhill Soft’s BURAI Joukan will be released in Japan early this Summer.

Earlier this month, the Tokyo-based developer and publisher Mebius announced a new series of MSX reissues for the Nintendo Switch, in Japan, with the first of these scheduled to be a rerelease of the MSX2 version of the RPG BURAI Joukan (thanks Famitsu!)

BURAI Joukan, in case you’ve never heard of it, is a title that focuses on the story of eight warriors spread across the world who are suddenly entrusted with the task of saving a land from the followers of an evil god named Daar. It was initially released for the PC-88 and PC-98 in 1989 and was later ported in 1990 to the MSX2 and FM Towns.

Read the full article on timeextension.com

“By chance, the CEO and producer of a game company called Nippon Telenet saw my plan”.

The Japanese author Aya Nishitani has recently been sharing some amazing stories about the Megami Tensei series on Twitter/X, which includes the fascinating story behind why it received two drastically different versions for the Nintendo Famicom and Japanese home computers.

If you’re familiar at all with Atlus’s Megami Tensei games, you’ll likely already know that the series originally evolved from a trilogy of books by Nishitani, which were released in Japan in the 1980s under the title Digital Devil Story. However, what you might not have realized — unless you’ve done a bit more digging into the history of the series — is that Atlus’s Nintendo Famicom title wasn’t actually the first game adapted from the novels to be released in Japanese stores, with the developer Nihon Telenet also creating its own game in 1987 for home computers (including the MSX and the PC-8801mkII SR), which was released a few months prior.

Read the full article on timeextension.com

Moai-Tech magazine has just launched a new issue, specifically number 13. And it does so with a farewell after more than 25 years of journey first in paper and then in format…

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