
Update []:
Since we reported on the successful preservation of TRIPITAKA 玄奘三蔵求法の旅, YouTuber Eastern Mind has posted a three-hour playthrough of the game.
"Played with Basilisk II emulator running MacOS 8," says the YouTuber. "The game was saved multiple times during playthrough due to previous issues emulating the program. No noteworthy issues were verified while playing the game using the above software."
Original Story: When you're talking about obscure video games, they don't come much more obscure than 1993's Cosmology of Kyoto, developed by Japanese studio SoftEdge. A nonlinear CD-ROM adventure, the game was lucky enough to get a Western release in 1994, and while it wasn't commercially successful, it has since gained a cult following online.
However, as leftfield as Cosmology of Kyoto undoubtedly is, its sequel is even more unknown—in fact, until very recently, it wasn't even known if it had actually been physically released. Entitled TRIPITAKA 玄奘三蔵求法の旅, the game sold on Yahoo Japan in 2023 for almost $300—and video game academic Bruno de Figueiredo has successfully managed to get it preserved online.
"For years, it was uncertain whether TRIPITAKA 玄奘三蔵求法の旅, by SoftEdge, had ever been published," explained de Figueiredo back in 2023, when the game sold on Yahoo. "Knowledge of the Win/Mac CD-ROM comes solely from the online CVs of producers Hiroshi Ōnishi and Mori Kōichi."
The producers list it as a 1995 production, but it is believed that the game was actually published in 1999 and intended to be available for sale at museums hosting the 'Silk Road Journey To The West' exhibition. This appears to be the only known copy, and de Figueiredo reveals that "after years of appeals", he has finally convinced the current owner to share it online.
"Yesterday I uploaded the ISO image of one of the rarest videogames in history, of which a single copy is known to exist in the online world," says de Figueiredo. "After years of appeals, its owner finally agreed to share it with me so that I could in turn share it with the world."
[source x.com]
Comments 6
Wonderful. I wonder if Monkey stars in this interpretation of Journey to the West.
Return To Monkey Magic.
Cosmology of Kyoto is an amazing game. It should have been a part of the greater template for cultural preservation and educational gaming. I had no idea a sequel existed in any form, this is really quite exciting news!
This is absolutely fantastic, while game preservation is not currently important to the mainstream and and even some game companies against it.
But I think they will come to regret not taking it seriously as they should as the market continues to grow and grow well other media shrinks massively.
I say well done for this preservation and giving people access to it.
Also a heart to all the comments above as they are all great replys to the subject matter.
While I'm ecstatic this game has been preserved, it feels kind of selfish of the owner to just let this game rot completely forgotten. Many people probably worked very hard on this game for many long hours, and their effort would have been essentially for nothing if the owner never eventually caved and agreed. I guess I just want to wonder why? Why would someone repeatedly refuse keep a piece of history preserved? Were they eventually going to release it themself? I guess I just want to understand... Sorry if I'm coming across as harsh, I'm just passionate about all art forms, and hate how easily some of them can be lost to time due to simple things like this. I'm very happy the owner finally agreed to release it to the world.
There's a lesson in here for modern platforms and publishers, somewhere. There's a price ceiling, beyond which one should not go. Either that, or Tripitaka didn't have many 'true fans'.
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