Kisaku: Reiwa Ban is a well-crafted but deliberately abrasive remake. It preserves the original’s punk-like defiance of polite society while sanding off the roughest technical edges. As a piece of eroge history, it’s valuable. As a “game” by modern standards, it’s a niche curiosity. Elf’s revival didn’t last (no new titles after 2021), but for those who remember the Bakky and Kisaku era, the Reiwa Ban is a fond — and very uncomfortable — trip back in time.
Rating (for genre fans): 7/10
Rating (general audience): 3/10 (due to content)
Note: No official English release exists. Play only if 18+ and aware of the extreme adult themes.
For newcomers, Kisaku Reiwa Ban plays like a dark mirror of Sekiro or Hitman, but inside an office building. The game is structured into 10 in-game weeks, split into daytime (office work) and nighttime (investigation/delivery). kisaku reiwa ban
If you are a researcher, a retro gaming historian, or an adult looking to understand this cultural artifact, here is how to obtain Kisaku Reiwa Ban:
Warning: Do not attempt to stream this game on Twitch or YouTube. Your channel will be terminated immediately. Even "censored" versions violate platform policies on sexual coercion simulation.
The game takes place in 2000 (or the early Reiwa era, reimagined). You play as Kisaku Kuki (鬼作 久貴), a slovenly, unattractive, yet highly intelligent and determined man. After being released from prison (for a prior incident involving his brothers, the protagonists of Bakky), Kisaku decides to “reform society” by infiltrating the powerful Kishimoto Pharmaceutical Corporation. His goal is not noble — he seeks money, power, and sexual domination. But the game frames his grotesque methods as a twisted form of justice against the hypocritical elite. Kisaku: Reiwa Ban is a well-crafted but deliberately
The plot unfolds through a time-management simulation:
Key themes: corruption of the powerful, social hypocrisy, revenge of the downtrodden, and black comedy. Unlike modern “nice guy” protagonists, Kisaku is proudly vile — yet the game never pretends he’s a hero. It’s a satire of corporate Japan’s 1990s bubble-era excesses, updated for the 2020s.
Kisaku: Reiwa Ban is a point-and-click adventure + life sim: Note: No official English release exists
Compared to the original, the remake streamlines the UI, adds a hint system, and reduces some of the more tedious trial-and-error.
“Kisaku Reiwa Ban” (企作令和版) reads like a modern cultural project title: a creative, contemporary reimagining of kisaku (企作 — planned creation or crafted works) set within the Reiwa era (令和, Japan’s current imperial era, 2019–). Below is a focused, evocative write-up that treats the phrase as a concept for art, literature, and cultural practice, with concrete details and suggestions for practitioners and audiences.