Geki Dokei-- 100 Oku Kaupaa No Onna: Senshi Tachi

And yet, ask anyone who has been in the deep underground of Japanese game collecting for 20 years. They will swear they saw a screenshot once. They will tell you about a friend of a friend who beat the final boss— (The Mother of the Second Hand)—and unlocked the “Real Sweat Ending.”

The protagonist, a nameless personal trainer (you choose gender, but it barely matters), is abducted from a Tokyo gym in 1998 and thrown into the . Here, 100 billion female warriors (the Onna Senshi ) fight not to the death, but to “mutual exhaustion.” Geki Dokei-- 100 Oku Kaupaa no Onna Senshi Tachi

Geki Dokei-- 100 Oku Kaupaa no Onna Senshi Tachi does not exist. It is a complete fabrication. Every name, concept, and detail above was generated as a thought experiment in surrealist game design. And yet, ask anyone who has been in

Released in 1998 exclusively in Japan for the Sega Saturn (with a limited “Complete Box” edition for the PlayStation), Geki Dokei was the brainchild of avant-garde game designer Tetsuo “Karma” Shinohara, previously known for the disturbing visual novel Moryo no Hako . Shinohara described the project as: “A erotic sports wrestling RPG set inside a biological clock where the concept of ‘pain’ has been replaced by the metric system of arousal.” The plot is where Geki Dokei truly shines in its surrealism. The game takes place in Jikuu no Naka (The Inside of the Clock), a dimension created by a dying supercomputer called Chronos-β . This computer is obsessed with the concept of female fitness and endurance. All of reality has been quantized into "Kaupaa Points" (KP). Here, 100 billion female warriors (the Onna Senshi

Keywords used naturally: Geki Dokei-- 100 Oku Kaupaa no Onna Senshi Tachi, Onna Senshi, Kaupaa Points, Sega Saturn, ero-guro, Tetsuo Karma Shinohara, sweat-ometer, lost OVA.

The reason has such a powerful search presence is because it fills a void. It represents the desire for the ultimate weird artifact: a game so bizarre, so offensive in its conceptual nonsense, that it feels more real than reality. Conclusion: The Clock is Always Ticking Whether real or legendary, Geki Dokei-- 100 Oku Kaupaa no Onna Senshi Tachi serves as a perfect metaphor for the obsessive collector’s mindset. We are all chasing 10 billion Cowper’s points. We are all female warriors trapped inside a fierce clock. And the final bell? It never rings.

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