Angels of Death (video game)

Angels of Death
Cover of Satsuriku no Tenshi volume 1 by Media Factory
殺戮の天使
(Satsuriku no Tenshi)
Genre Horror[1]
Game
Developer Hoshikuzu KRNKRN
Publisher Den Fami Nico Game Magazine
Genre Adventure, horror
Engine RPG Maker VX
Platform Microsoft Windows, Nintendo Switch,[2] Android,[3] iOS,[4] Steam[5]
Released
  • August 14, 2015 (Win)
  • December 20, 2016 (Steam)
  • October 11, 2017 (Android)
  • October 11, 2017 (iOS)
  • June 28, 2018 (NS)
Manga
Written by Makoto Sanada
Illustrated by Kudan Nazuka
Published by Media Factory
English publisher
Demographic Shōjo
Magazine Monthly Comic Gene
Original run January 27, 2016 – present
Volumes 8
Manga
Angels of Death Episode.0
Written by Makoto Sanada
Illustrated by Kudan Nazuka
Published by Kadokawa Shoten
Demographic Shōjo
Original run March 3, 2017 – present
Volumes 2
Manga
Satsuten!
Written by Makoto Sanada
Illustrated by negiyan
Published by Media Factory
Demographic Shōjo
Magazine Monthly Comic Gene
Original run February 27, 2017January 27, 2018
Volumes 2
Novel series
Written by Kina Chiren, Makoto Sanada
Illustrated by negiyan
Published by Kadokawa
Demographic Shōjo
Original run July 30, 2016April 27, 2018
Volumes 3
Anime television series
Directed by Kentarō Suzuki
Produced by Alpha Alan
Written by Yoshinobu Fujioka
Music by Noisycroak
Studio J.C.Staff
Licensed by
Original network AT-X, Tokyo MX, KBS Kyoto, TV Aichi, Sun TV, BS11, TVQ
English network
Original run July 6, 2018 – present
Episodes 16 (12 episodes aired on TV, last 4 episodes online)

Angels of Death (殺戮の天使, Satsuriku no Tenshi, lit. "Angels of Slaughter") is a Japanese horror adventure game by Hoshikuzu KRNKRN (Makoto Sanada) for Microsoft Windows and Nintendo Switch.[6] It was created using RPG Maker and was originally released as freeware via the Den Fami Nico Game Magazine website on August 14, 2015.[7] It launched on Steam in Japanese, Chinese, Korean and English on December 19, 2016.[8]

Two manga adaptations, one based on the game and one on the prequel, written by Makoto Sanada and with art by Kudan Nazuka, began serialization in Media Factory's shōjo manga magazine Monthly Comic Gene in 2015 and Kadokawa Pixiv in 2016, respectively. The first manga has been collected in seven tankōbon volumes and has over 1 million volumes in print while the prequel has been collected in two volumes. Following the adaptations, a two-volume 4-koma manga series titled Satsuten! and the three-volume novel series are published with art by negiyan and written by Kina Chiren.

The series is licensed in North America by Yen Press, who published the first volume on November 14, 2017. A 16-episode anime television series adaptation by J.C.Staff began airing from July 6, 2018.[9]

Synopsis

13-year-old Rachel "Ray" Gardner is taken to a hospital for counselling after witnessing a murder. However, she wakes up to find herself on basement Floor B7 instead with no memories apart from her name and the reason she came to the hospital. A series of mysterious broadcasts and scribbled messages on the wall set the scene as a game where each participant is designated a floor of their own, and anyone who trespasses on another participant's floor has the chance to be killed.

Ray, ignorant of the details, is almost killed by serial killer Issac "Zack" Foster, the owner of Floor B6, and captured by Daniel "Danny" Dickens, the owner of Floor B5 and the doctor who examined her. Danny, who has a maniacal obsession with eyes, desires Rachel's blue, once-blank eyes. During this time, Ray recovers her memory during the night when the murder occurred, just as Zack kills Danny for her, but spares Ray after losing interest in her lack of emotions. As Zack has killed someone that was not on his floor, the broadcast designates him as a "sacrifice" along with Ray, where they can freely be killed by any floor master. The two, in the same situation, form an alliance where Zack can use her intelligence to escape, and upon doing so will fulfil Ray's desire to be killed by him.

Ray and Zack continue to go to the upper floors to find a way out, defeating the two other floor masters, Edward "Eddie" Mason at B4, a young boy with an unhealthy obsession with graves, and Catherine "Cathy" Ward at B3, a sadomasochistic former jail guard, in the process. When Zack gets injured during the fight against Cathy, Ray encounters a reverend Abraham Gray at B2 who reveals himself to be the one who designed the game in order to figure out the definition of "religious faith" in people's hearts, appointing the various floor masters as "angels" that are not afraid to kill without hesitation. Although Gray lets Ray return to B5 to get medicine, she must pass through a trial to determine her identity before she can proceed to the next floor. Meanwhile, back on B2, Zack discovers that Danny is still alive, the latter having faked his death.

Ray is forced to confront her selfishness in the trial, but survives through it to save Zack, convincing herself that he is her God. When the duo arrive at B1 though, they come to a house filled with fake flowers and the stitched corpses of a couple, driving Ray hysterical and desperate for Zack to kill her immediately. Zack tries to look for clues about her sudden change of behaviour until Danny arrives and locks the room with her, forcing him to search the floor in order to discover the truth. With help from Gray, Zack realises that Ray suffered in the midst of her parents' terrible relationship, and subsequently killed them and stitched their corpses together to form her new "perfect family". Counselling her at the hospital, Danny then took an interest in her blank blue eyes and used his authority as an "angel" to bring her to B1, making her the final floor master. As Zack finds out the truth, Ray, disillusioned from the trial and her twisted faith in God, shoots Danny and attempts to kill Zack by leading him around the traps of her floor, but he convinces her to go through with the oath they made, and Ray comes to terms with her actions.

Just as they reach the exit, Danny lights the building on fire and critically wounds Ray with a gun. Unable to move with his fear of fire, Ray uses the last of her strength to attempt to get Zack out, intending to take the burden of the oath on herself. Gray, having completed his experiment, appears and kills Danny, allowing Zack and Ray to escape just as the building burns down. The police promptly arrive and Zack lets himself be arrested to save Ray's life.

Zack is sentenced to death for his murders of Ray's parents as well as Ray's kidnap, while Ray is taken to a rehabilitation centre due to her apparent delirium and attachment to him. Never losing faith, she pretends to get better while clinging to the hope of the oath they made. A few days later, Zack escapes from prison and breaks into Ray's room to fulfill his end of the oath. The two escape together, with Ray once again asking him to kill her. By the time the police arrive, the room is already empty with the window broken and a trail of Zack's blood.

Characters

Main characters

Rachel Gardner (レイチェル・ガードナー, Reicheru Gādonā) / Ray (レイ, Rei)
Voiced by: Haruka Chisuga[10] (Japanese); Meg McClain[11] (English)
The 13-year-old female protagonist of the story. After witnessing a murder, she is taken to a hospital for counselling, only to wake up on Floor B7 with no memories from her past. She later recovers them after a scuffle with Danny, the doctor responsible for counselling her, and reverts to an apathetic character. Believing death will be her salvation, she requests Zack's help to kill her in exchange that he can use her intelligence to help him escape the building. Under her emotionless and calm exterior though, Ray harbours a morbid interest in stitching up animals or people she deems imperfect and a twisted perception and blind faith in God.
Her interests stemmed from her parents, who hated each other. Ray then witnessed her father kill her mother, and in terror, killed her own father with a gun, before deciding to stitch up their corpses to reincarnate them as her "perfect" parents. Taken to the hospital, Danny develops an interest in her blank blue eyes, and uses his authority to make her the floor master of B1. Ray's floor is modelled after her house, and is filled with many deadly traps with the exception of her bedroom and living room where the stitched corpse of her parents are placed.
Isaac Foster (アイザック・フォスター, Aizakku Fosutā) / Zack (ザック, Zakku)
Voiced by: Nobuhiko Okamoto (Adult)[10], Ryo Nishitani (Child) (Japanese); Dallas Reid[11] (English)
The male protagonist of the story. Once an infamous serial killer, he is now the floor master of B6. He is noticeable for his body being completed covered in bandages and wields a grim-reaper-like scythe. Bloodthirsty, Zack delights in destroying the happiness of his victims and filling them with despair. As Ray showed a severe lack in emotions, he found no interest in killing her and let her stay alive for him to use her intelligence to escape the building, in return that he will kill her once they escape.
Zack grew up only knowing how to kill due to being treated abusively as a child. Abandoned by his parents, his father tried to burn him and his mother to death, wounding his body with burns that he covered up with bandages and causing him to develop an intense fear of fire. His mother then left him in the care of an illegal orphanage that trafficked children, where he faced subsequently more abusive treatment, becoming a tool of labour. Upon watching a slasher horror movie left by the head of the orphanage, Zack was inspired to go on a murder spree, with the heads of the orphanage being his first victims. He is subsequently found by Gray, and became a floor master. His floor is modelled after a deserted, dirty network of alleyways.

Supporting characters

Daniel Dickens (ダニエル・ディケンズ, Danieru Dikenzu) / Danny (ダニー, Danī)
Voiced by: Takahiro Sakurai[12] (Japanese); Derick Snow[11] (English)
A counsellor who has an insane obsession with eyes, especially Ray's blank, blue ones. Due to being born without a right eye, he was bullied for most of his childhood. His missing eye also caused fights between his parents until they divorced and his mother committed suicide. From there, Danny began to find blank, dead eyes like his mother's beautiful, becoming a counsellor to search for eyes that could satisfy him.
Prior to the series, he was a counsellor for prisoners and met Gray, who offered him the chance to become the floor master of B5. Believing it could satisfy him, Danny took on the offer and subsequently used his authority to bring Ray into Gray's experiment and make her the floor master of B1, hoping that he could live close to her eyes. He is ultimately killed by Gray in his pursuit for Ray. In the prequel manga Episode.0, he becomes the main character.
Edward Mason (エドワード・メイソン, Edowādo Meison) / Eddie (エディ, Edi)
Voiced by: Natsumi Fujiwara[12] (Japanese); Brittney Karbowski[13] (English)
A young boy characterised by his pumpkin mask and love for making graves. His floor is modelled after a graveyard and made completely out of stone. Born a child of grave-makers, Eddie was proud and skilled at his job, but became discontent with the fact that he was never given anything that could truly belong to him, for most of his things were hand-me-downs passed from one child to the next. He then began to kill his pets and bury them in his own graves, feeling that things only truly belonged to him once they were put in graves dug by him.
When he was invited by Grey and became the floor master of B4, he began building graves for those killed by the other floor masters, hardly ever killing anyone himself. However, he took it upon himself to kill Ray and bury her in a beautiful grave after falling in love with her at first sight. Due to constantly building graves in the dark, Eddie got used to seeing in a dark environment, which gives him the advantage when he kills. He is killed by Zack when Ray turns on the lights, and buried in the grave originally meant for her.
Catherine Ward (キャサリン・ワード, Kyasarin Wādo) / Cathy (キャシー, Kyashī)
Voiced by: Mariya Ise[12]
The floor master of B3, who is known widely as the "Condemner" due to her past as a former jail guard, with Danny as her prisoners' counsellor. A sadomasochistic woman, Cathy delights in uncovering her criminals' crimes and delivering punishment to them through torture, often killing them. Those who survive are then confined as her playthings.
She is the most formidable of all the floor masters due to her wide range of death traps and torture instruments. Viewing Zack as an exemplary sinner, she attempts to punish him thoroughly to her amusement but is killed when Ray catches her off guard with a gun. Her floor is modelled after a huge jail cell, along with her private room where she controls the various traps on the rest of the floor and monitors her victims.
Abraham Gray (エイブラハム・グレイ, Eiburahamu Gurei) / Gray (グレイ, Gurei)
Voiced by: Hōchū Ōtsuka[14]
The floor master of B2 and a reverend who created the facility as an experiment to determine the definition of "religious faith", including gathering all the various floor masters and providing them with victims. He is extremely eloquent, able to mesmerise his listeners through words, and harbours a cold and logical heart without mercy. Gray also employs the use of drugs to make his victims hallucinate in order to see their true inner selves. His floor is modelled after a church, with the stained glass window concealing the exit of the building.

Other characters

Lucy (ルーシー, Rūshī)
A character introduced in the manga adaptations, Lucy is Cathy's best friend who harbours a borderline insane admiration for her. After graduating school together, the both of them became jail guards that specialised in punishing criminals, often with Lucy dealing the finishing blow. When Cathy is invited to become a floor master by Danny, Lucy becomes her first victim, deeming her a sinner as well for all the prisoners she had killed.
Shin (シン, Shin)
A character in Episode.0 and the original floor master of B1 before Ray was placed there. Shin was originally a pair of twin brothers who owns a furniture store selling furniture made from human flesh. Deeming that the twins fit the criteria to become an angel for Gray's experiment, Danny invites them. However, Gray would only accept either one of them, deeming their dependency towards each other as imperfect. Driven by the idea that only one being is perfect, each twin decided to kill the other. It is unknown which twin succeeded killing the other as the survivor reappears and reintroduces himself as the "one complete" Shin.

Media

Manga

A manga adaptation by Kudan Nazuka and Makoto Sanada began its serialization on the Monthly Comic Gene magazine on January 27, 2016.[15] The prequel of the game, Episode.0, also by Kudan Nazuka and Makoto Sanada began its serialization on the MFC Gene Pixiv series on March 3, 2017.[16] A two-volume 4-koma manga series titled Satsuten! by Makoto Sanada and Negiyan began its serialization also on the Monthly Comic Gene magazine on February 27, 2017.[17]

Novel

A novelization of the game written by Kina Chiren and Makoto Sanada and illustrated by negiyan is published by Kadokawa label, Enterbrain. The novel series consisted of three volumes.

No.TitleRelease date ISBN
1Until Death Do Them PartJuly 30, 2016[18] ISBN 978-4-04-734115-9
2Blessing in DisguiseApril 24, 2017[19] ISBN 978-4-04-734437-2
3Once in A Blue MoonApril 27, 2018[20] ISBN 978-4-04-734930-8

Anime

A 16-episode anime television series by J.C.Staff premiered in July 6, 2018.[14][21] The anime is directed by Kentarō Suzuki with scripts overseen by Yoshinobu Fujioka, music composed by Noisycroak at Lantis and character designs handled by Miki Matsumoto who is also serving as chief animation director.[10] Masaaki Endoh performed the opening theme titled "Vital," while Haruka Chisuga performed the ending theme titled "Pray" under her character name Rachel. The series is also streamed on Crunchyroll with English subtitles, and Funimation in an English dub.[22]

Reception

Game

In November 2017, it was announced that the game had achieved 1M downloads in Japan.[23]

In a review of the game's PC version, Hardcore Gamer rated it a 4 out of 5, while noting the ’wonderfully odd chemistry’ between Rachel and Zack. The game's creativity, storyline and gameplay were praised while its brevity, belated character development and low resolution graphics were criticized.[24]

Manga

Roundups of the first volume from ANN note that it is short on tension, suspense and horror and somewhat confused in its delivery; its characters seem unnatural and are perhaps more appropriate to a game than to this format; and while the environment art often works well, overall the illustrations do not serve the story.[25]

Anime

First impressions from ANN found the early episodes to be a campy romp while appreciating the show's connection to its video game roots, and while lauding the voice acting performances expressed concerns over the show's pacing.[26]

References

  1. "Angels of Death". Yen Press. December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  2. "Psychological Horror Adventure Angels of Death Is Headed To Switch This Month". Nintendo Life. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  3. "殺戮の天使". 株式会社バカー. October 11, 2017. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  4. "殺戮の天使". vaka, Inc. October 11, 2017. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  5. "Angels of Death". Vaka Game Magazine, AGM PLAYISM. December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 20, 2016.
  6. "Psychological Horror Adventure Angels of Death Is Headed To Switch This Month". Nintendo Life. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  7. "Interview". gamemaga.denfaminicogamer.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  8. "Angels of Death". steam. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  9. "J.C. Staff to Animate Angels of Death Manga for 2018". Anime News Network. December 27, 2017. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  10. 1 2 3 "Angels of Death Anime's 1st Promo Video Reveals Cast, Staff, July TV Debut". Anime News Network. March 20, 2018. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  11. 1 2 3 "Tyler Walker on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  12. 1 2 3 Hodgkins, Crystalyn (April 28, 2018). "Takahiro Sakurai, Natsumi Fujiwara, Mariya Ise Join Angels of Death Anime's Cast". Anime News Network. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
  13. "Our Summer 2018 SimulDub lineup is just for you!". Funimation. Retrieved July 30, 2018.
  14. 1 2 "Angels of Death Anime Listed With 16 Episodes". Anime News Network. June 28, 2018. Retrieved June 28, 2018.
  15. 殺戮の天使 1 [Angels of Death 1] (in Japanese). Media Factory. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  16. 杀戮的天使Episode.0 1 [Angels of Death Episode.0 1] (in Japanese). Amazon Japan. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  17. さつてん! 1 [Satsuten! 1] (in Japanese). Monthly Comic Gene. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  18. "殺戮の天使 until death do them part" (in Japanese). Enterbrain. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
  19. "殺戮の天使 2 BLESSING IN DISGUISE" (in Japanese). Enterbrain. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
  20. "殺戮の天使 3 ONCE IN A BLUE MOON" (in Japanese). Enterbrain. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
  21. "Angels of Death Anime's 2nd Promo Video Reveals July 6 Premiere". Anime News Network. June 10, 2018. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  22. Ressler, Karen (June 21, 2018). "Crunchyroll, Funimation to Stream Attack on Titan 3, Overlord III, How NOT to Summon A Demon Lord, Angels of Death". Anime News Network. Retrieved June 29, 2018.
  23. tenshi, strk (March 2, 2017). "100万DL御礼:さつてん! 特別回". Twitter. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  24. Estrada, Marcus (January 6, 2017). "Review: Angels of Death". Hardcore Gamer. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
  25. "Angels of Death - The Fall 2017 Manga Guide". Anime News Network. December 14, 2017. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
  26. Jones, Steve (July 22, 2017). "Angels of Death Episode 1-3 Review". Anime News Network. Retrieved August 8, 2017.
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