Variable Geo (ヴァリアブル・ジオ, Variaburu Jio), also known as V.G., is a Japanese 2D fighting game / eroge series developed and published by TGL under their Giga brand. Their Giga brand was used for their home computer games while their TGL brand was used for their console games. The game series focuses on an all-female martial arts competition where participants are required to promote various family restaurants by acting as waitresses when not fighting. Takahiro Kimura was responsible for designing the characters in V.G. and V.G. II.
Variable Geo | |
![]() Front cover of V.G.: Variable Geo for the PC-9801, the first title of the series. | |
ヴァリアブル・ジオ (Variaburu Jio) | |
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Genre | Action, Family saga |
Game | |
Developer | Giga (home computers) TGL (consoles) |
Publisher | Giga (home computers) TGL (consoles) |
Genre | Fighting game, bishōjo |
Platform | PC-9800 series, PC Engine CD-ROM² System, Super Famicom, PC, PlayStation, Sega Saturn |
Released | July 9, 1993 (PC-9800 series) July 22, 1994 (TurboGrafx-16) July 21, 1995 (Super Nintendo) April 19, 1996 (PlayStation) March 14, 1997 (Sega Saturn) February 19, 1999 (PC) |
Original video animation | |
Directed by | Tooru Yoshida |
Produced by | Masato Ebina Ayumi Enomoto |
Written by | Yōsuke Kuroda |
Music by | Harukichi Yamamoto |
Studio | Chaos Project |
Licensed by | NA ADV Films |
Released | January 29, 1997 – June 27, 1997 |
Runtime | 30 minutes (each) |
Episodes | 3 |
Original video animation | |
Variable Geo Neo | |
Directed by | Ryuuichi Nozaki |
Written by | Michiko Hattori |
Studio | Jam Studio Studio Lagoon |
Released | February 25, 2004 – January 25, 2005 |
Runtime | 30 minutes (each) |
Episodes | 3 |
Set in a near-future version of Japan, the games tell the story of a martial arts tournament created to determine the country's strongest woman. The tournaments are sponsored by a number of family restaurants, who in exchange for their sponsorship, are given promotion in the form of having a tournament entry work as a waitress. As a result of the popularity of the tournaments, the restaurants experience a boom in patronage.
The winner of the tournament is awarded the title "Virgin Goddess", as well as a large cash prize of ten billion yen, and a house erected anywhere on the planet they should choose. However, when a given waitress is defeated, they are required to publicly strip themselves of their clothing (self-fondling and public masturbation may be forced upon the loser, and in the most extreme cases, the loser is raped/gang-raped, either in private or in front of an audience), in order to teach the so-called "true" shame of defeat. In spite of such humiliation, the tournaments often draw many competitors, each placing their pride and their dreams on the line as they battle for the top.
Title | Platform | Publisher(s) | Release date | Premise |
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V.G. - Variable Geo | PC-9800 series | Giga | July 9, 1993 | The first game in the series largely ignored a major storyline in favor of focusing more on the fighting system and hentai sequences. Players take control of one of six V.G. waitresses and battle the other five in order to win the tournament. Kaori Yanase and Reimi Jahana serve as the game's sub and final boss characters respectively unless the player is controlling one of them, in which case Yuka takes the place of the player-controlled character. |
Advanced V.G. | PC Engine CD-ROM² | TGL | July 22, 1994 | An updated version of the first game which adds three new playable characters, a storyline which features Yuka as the main character (who has a clone), and includes a pair of "True" bosses, the genetically engineered "Hybrid" warriors K-1 and K-2. This game would later be re-released on the Sega Saturn and PlayStation with updated graphics and sound. The only major difference between the two versions is that the Saturn version retains the "Graphic Mode" setting which allows the viewing of the hentai scenes. This option was omitted from the PlayStation version. |
V.G. II - THE BOUT OF CABALISTIC GODDESS | PC-9800 series | Giga | November 25, 1994 | Kotoe Kashima, a childhood rival of Reimi, creates her own V.G. tournament in order to prove once and for all that she is far stronger and more beautiful than the Jahana Heiress. All of the previous fighters return and must face each other through a series of bouts. After defeating the other characters, the player must then face Kotoe's bodyguards before fighting Kotoe herself in a final match. This game was later declared non-canon by TGL.
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Super Variable Geo | Super Famicom | TGL | July 21, 1995 | A stripped-down version of Advanced V.G. that removes Yuka clone, the Hybrids and Graphic Mode option. |
Advanced V.G. | PlayStation | TGL | April 19, 1996 |
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Advanced V.G. | Sega Saturn | TGL | March 14, 1997 | |
Advanced V.G. 2 | PlayStation | TGL | September 23, 1998 | The sequel to Advanced V.G. centers around a plot-driven "Story Mode" which features new protagonist Tamao Mitsurugi facing all of the previous competitors, as well as new faces Kyoko Kirishima and Saki Shinjou before going on to face the new boss characters Material and Miranda Jahana, Reimi's mother.
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V.G. Custom | PC | Giga | February 19, 1999[1] | Another remake of Advanced V.G., this game features the same cast as Super V.G., but includes the same style of graphics and sound used in Advanced V.G. 2, along with reusing all Humiliation sequences from V.G. II: Bout of Cabalistic Goddess (though the dialogue was changed) and (non-canon) endings. Tamao Mitsurugi is a hidden character in the game and playable in versus and practice modes once unlocked. |
V.G. Max | PC | Giga | September 10, 1999[1] | A game in which the V.G. waitresses are rendered as super deformed style characters akin to Pocket Fighter. Includes the original six V.G. contestants, as well as Satomi Yajima from Advanced V.G., Tamao Mitsurugi from Advanced V.G. 2, Yumiko Watanuki from V.G. II and new character Masako Houjouin. |
V.G. Adventure | PC | Giga | March 17, 2000[1] | A text-based adventure game featuring the V.G. waitresses. The player takes control of Tamao Mitsurugi as she attempts to locate the missing Yuka Takeuchi and foil Miranda's latest plot. Fights are executed in a rock-paper-scissors fashion. With each successful attack, energy is added to a super meter that appears under the fighter's lifebar. Once full, the fighter can unleash a powerfully (in most characters' cases) unblockable attack. While Tamao is the only playable character in the storymode, there is a CPU versus mode that allows the player to pick from any character in the game. |
V.G. Rebirth | PC | Giga | September 28, 2001[1] | A visual novel game in which the player plays the part of a reporter working on a story about the V.G. competition. The game also introduces the new character Hiyori Sakuragi. Depending on the choices the player makes, he/she will be paired with Yuka, Tamao or Reimi. |
V.G. Rebirth Dash | PC | Giga | March 23, 2002 | An update to V.G. Rebirth which includes nearly every other non-boss character (Ayako Yuuki is absent as she is a lesbian) as an option to pair with the player. It also introduces the new character Keiko Hatano. |
V.G. NEO | PC | Giga | December 19, 2003 | The last visual novel returns the series to its roots as a fighting tournament and features an entirely new cast. The game received an OVA adaptation in 2004 titled V.G. Neo: The Animation. |
There is a three-part anime OVA series based on the games.[2] The OVA loosely follows the same plot as Advanced V.G., although with several facts changed: Miranda is dead and her spirit is seeking a new host body, the Hybrids do not exist, and the matches are ranked at different "levels" (Levels 1–5, with the implication that the penalties for losing differ, depending on the level of a given match), among other things. The voice actors for every character was changed for this series.
On November 29, 1996, KSS released the first chapter of the OVA. The second chapter was released on March 14, 1997 and the last chapter was released on June 27, 1997. In 1998 ADV Films released the animation subtitled and dubbed on VHS, and later re-released in 2003 on DVD, as part of the celebration of the 10th Variable Geo Anniversary.[3] Also, a new OVA series was released in Japan during 2004 called Variable Geo Neo (or V.G. NEO) released by Milky Studios, based in the new Giga game for the 10th Variable Geo Anniversary, with new characters but with the same storyline and in the same VG universe. Unlike the previous OVA, V.G. NEO contains sexually explicit content in line with the game series.
Gameplay in Variable Geo utilizes a four-button layout, with two buttons each for punches and kicks of differing strength and speed. Special moves are initiated by keying in various movements using the control pad or joystick and punctuated with the press of one of the punch or kick buttons.
Later games would add a special meter that would fill as the player inflicts or receives damage. Filling the bar would result in a stock of "Energy" being acquired, which could either be used for one of a number of enhanced super special attacks, or saved for later use in the match. Some moves also require more than one Special Stock to be acquired before being able to use them.
Both characters begin any given fight with a full health bar that is depleted as they take damage from attacks. The first character to have her health completely depleted is the loser. In a single player game, defeating a CPU-controlled character yields a reward, showcasing the defeated character in an imaginary situation where she is either forced to commit an embarrassing (usually sexual) act in public or private, or is raped by an unseen assailant or assailants.
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Writing in Viz Media's online magazine, Ted Thomas reviewed Advanced VG and recommended that the game is not worth importing.[4] J-pop reviewed the series, noting that the series includes various lesbian characters, along with themes about "DNA manipulation, demonic possession, mind control, and body altering drugs." The review also said that the animation is sparse and said that while they enjoyed the series, it is "full of all the guilty pleasures only anime can provide."[5]